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St. Sophia Cathedral (Novgorod)

1 byte added, 19:06, May 15, 2008
correction: wrong Ivan, should be III not IV.
Through the years the cathedral was often damaged by fires. After a fire in the 1150s the helmet shaped cupolas are thought to have been added. Frescos in the interior were painted during the eleventh and twelfth centuries but now are barely visible due to damage from fires and painting of the interior in the nineteenth century.
A stone bell-tower for five bells was built during the fifteenth century. Its largest bell now stands on the ground near by after its “ears” were removed as “punishment” by Ivan IV III for warning the people of Novgorod of Ivan’s approach to the city during Ivan’s conquest of the independent Republic in 1570. The “ears” are the stubs at the top of a bell from which it is hung in a belfry, and without the “ears” the bell cannot be hung and rung. Ivan had silenced the bell.
During World War II, while the Novgorod Kremlin was seriously damaged during the Nazi occupation of the city, St Sophia Cathedral escaped serious damage. Spanish infantry, however, took the cross from the main dome of the building. After being displayed in the museum of the Military Engineering Academy in Madrid for over sixty years, the cross was returned to the [[Church of Russia]] on [[November 16]], 2004.
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