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Chesme Palace

Chesme Church
Church of St John the Baptist Chesme
Church of Saint John the Baptist at Chesme Palace
Spb 06-2012 Chesme Church.jpg
Church of St John the Baptist Chesme, Russia
59°51′24″N 30°19′51″E / 59.85667°N 30.33083°E / 59.85667; 30.33083Coordinates: 59°51′24″N 30°19′51″E / 59.85667°N 30.33083°E / 59.85667; 30.33083
Location Chesme Palace between Saint Petersburg and Sumner Palace also in the Red Village
Country Russia
Denomination Russian Orthodox Church
History
Former name(s) Chesme Church
Founded 1780
Founder(s) Catherine the Great
Dedication Russia's 1770 victory over Turkish forces in Chesme Bay
Consecrated 24 June
Architecture
Status Functional
Heritage designation House church for the Chesme Palace
Architect(s) Yury Felten
Architectural type Gothic Revival
Demolished not demolished
Specifications
Materials Brick with white stone

The Chesme Church (Russian: Чесменская церковь; full name Church of Saint John the Baptist at Chesme Palace, also called the Church of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist, Russian: це́рковь Рождества́ Иоа́нна Предте́чи при Че́сменском Дворце́), is a small Russian Orthodox church at 12 Lensoveta Street, in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was built by the Russian court architect Yury Felten in 1780, at the direction of Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia. A memorial church, it was erected adjacent to the Chesme Palace (Russian: : damaged during the Siege of Leningrad and restored in 1946) between Saint Petersburg and Tsarskoye Selo to commemorate the anniversary of Russia's 1770 victory over Turkish forces in Chesme Bay (Turkish: Çeşme) in the Aegean Sea during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774.

The church and Chesme Palace were the earliest Neo-Gothic constructions in the St Petersburg area. Considered by some to be St Petersburg's single most impressive church, it is a rare example of very early Gothic Revival influence in Russian church architecture.


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