The Krutitsy (Patriarchal) metochion, the Krutitsy hierarch's house, 13th century, was the residence of bishops of Sarai and Podolsk to minister to the Russians during the time of the Tatar Horde. The name Krutitsy meant the steep bank of the Moskva river downstream of the confluence with the Yauza river. It has been a metochion of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia since 1991.01.03.1996#729397
The Krutitsy (Patriarchal) metochion, the Krutitsy hierarch's house, 13th century, was the residence of bishops of Sarai and Podolsk to minister to the Russians during the time of the Tatar Horde. The name Krutitsy meant the steep bank of the Moskva river downstream of the confluence with the Yauza river. It has been a metochion of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia since 1991.01.03.1996#727440
Ukrainian SSR. St. Yura Cathedral in Lvov. A sculpture of St. Athanasius by sculptor Johann Georg Pinsel (1707-1761).01.06.1988#5735114
Ukrainian SSR. St. Yura Cathedral in Lvov. A sculpture of St. Leo by sculptor Johann Georg Pinsel (1707-1761).01.06.1988#5735112
Ukrainian SSR. St. Yura Cathedral in Lvov of the Russian Orthodox Church (currently St. Yura Archicathedral, a Greco-Roman cathedral of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church). The iconostasis of the house church in the metropolitans chambers.01.06.1988#5735109
Ukrainian SSR. St. Yura Cathedral in Lvov. A sculpture of St. George by sculptor Johann Georg Pinsel (1707-1761).01.06.1988#5735108
Ukrainian SSR. St. Yura Cathedral in Lvov of the Russian Orthodox Church (currently St. Yura Archicathedral, a Greco-Roman cathedral of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church). From left: Metropolitan of Krutitsk and Kolomna Yuvenaly, Patriarchal Exarch of Ukraine Metropolitan of Kiev and Galicia Filaret and Metropolitan of Lvov and Ternopol Nikodim talk in the Metropiltan's Chambers of the Orthodox St. Yura Cathedral.01.06.1988#5735105