Alexander-Svirsky Monastery
0 sources
Alexander-Svirsky Monastery
Summary
Alexander-Svirsky Monastery is an eastern orthodox monastery[1]. It draws 86 Wikipedia views per month (eastern_orthodox_monastery category, ranking #33 of 91).[2]
Key Facts
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's religion is recorded as Eastern Orthodoxy[3].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery is located in Staraya Sloboda[4].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery is in the country of Russia[5].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's instance of is recorded as eastern orthodox monastery[6].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's instance of is recorded as architectural landmark[7].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's founder is recorded as Alexander Svirsky[8].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's Commons category is recorded as Alexandro-Svirsky Monastery[9].
- 1487 marks the founding of Alexander-Svirsky Monastery[10].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 60.779571, 'lon': 33.314109}[11].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's diocese is recorded as Tikhvin Eparchy[12].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's dedicated to is recorded as Holy Trinity[13].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's official website is recorded as http://www.svirskoe.ru[14].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Alexandro-Svirsky Monastery[15].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's described by source is recorded as Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)[16].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[17].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's heritage designation is recorded as federal cultural heritage site in Russia[18].
- Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's appears in the heritage monument list is recorded as Cultural heritage monuments in Lodeynopolsky District[19].
Body
Founding
Alexander-Svirsky Monastery's founder is recorded as Alexander Svirsky[8]. 1487 marks the founding of it[10].
Why It Matters
Alexander-Svirsky Monastery draws 86 Wikipedia views per month (eastern_orthodox_monastery category, ranking #33 of 91).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]