was made in the monastery in the early 15th century The monastery was established in 1357 by
Metropolitan Alexis as a way of giving thanks for his survival in a storm. Its first
hegumen was Saint , one of
Sergii Radonezhsky's disciples. The extant four-pillared Saviour Cathedral was constructed from 1420–1427. The great medieval painter
Andrei Rublev spent the last years of his life at the monastery and was buried there. In addition, one of the largest
mass graves for
lay brothers (called ,
skudelnitsa) was located on the
cloister's premises. In the second half of the 14th century, a monastic quarter formed outside the walls of the Andronikov Monastery, which started producing
bricks for the ongoing construction of the
Moscow Kremlin (1475). From its beginning, Andronikov Monastery was one of the centres of book copying in
Muscovy.
Manuscript collection of the cloister included most of the works by
Maximus the Greek. In August 1653, archpriest
Avvakum was held under arrest at this monastery. Andronikov Monastery has been ransacked on numerous occasions (1571, 1611, 1812). In 1748 and 1812, its archives were lost in fires. In the 19th century, there were a theological
seminary and a
library on the cloister's premises. In 1917, there were seventeen
monks and one
novice in the monastery. ==Soviet period and beyond==