1363–1945 A small
Armenian church was built between 1363 and 1370, founded by an Armenian merchant from
Caffa. Established as the mother church of an
eparchy, it was modelled on the
Cathedral of Ani, the ancient Armenian capital. In 1437, the cathedral was surrounded with an
arcade gallery; the southern part is preserved, and the northern portion has been rebuilt into a
sacristy. In 1527, the cathedral was damaged by fire. A a new stone
bell tower was erected in 1571. In 1630 the main
nave; it was extended when it was rebuilt in 1723. From the 17th century until 1945, the cathedral belonged to the
Armenian Catholic archdiocese of Lviv, when bishop
Mikołaj (Nicolas) Torosowicz in 1630 and his successor
Vartan Hunanyan (1681) united the Armenian and Roman Catholic Churches, over a century before the official birth (1742) of the
Armenian Catholic Church. The cathedral underwent a restoration between 1908 and 1927.
1945–present Lviv was a city in the
Second Polish Republic from 1920 until after the Second World War, when it was annexed by the
Soviet Union. In 1945, the new Soviet authorities abolished the Armenian Catholic Archdiocese of Lviv, and arrested its administrator,
Dionizy Kajetanowicz. Almost all the city's Polish Armenians were expelled to modern-day Poland. The cathedral was closed, and its building was used for storing plundered sacred art. Officially, the Armenian Catholic Archdiocese of Lviv still exists, but it has remained vacant since 1938. After the collapse of the Soviet Union,
Armenian Catholic families attempted to re-establish the parish. Armenians belonging to the
Armenian Apostolic Church who came to Lviv during the Soviet times also sought to acquire the cathedral. Shortly before the visit of
Pope John Paul II to Lviv, the local Ukrainian authorities granted the cathedral to the Armenian Apostolic Church, with the condition that the Armenian Catholic and Armenian Apostolic communities could both use it. An Armenian Apostolic eparchy was established in Lviv in 1997. On 18 May 2003, the cathedral was re-
consecrated by the
Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II and three other Armenian Apostolic bishops. Among the guests who attended the ceremony were the
Speaker of the Armenian parliament Armen Khachatryan, former President of Ukraine
Leonid Kravchuk, the president of the
Union of Armenians in Ukraine, the French-Armenian singer
Charles Aznavour with his son, Armenian actor
Armen Dzhigarkhanyan and the Armenian ambassador to Ukraine, Hrachya Silvanyan. The
Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate was represented by bishop Augustin. The
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church was represented by Mikhail Dymyd. The head of the Religions State Agency Victor Bondarenko represented the Ukrainian government. Neither Polish Armenians nor any Armenian Catholic clergymen were invited. In 2009, the cathedral began a renovation process, fully financed by the
Polish Ministry of Culture in cooperation with the
Foundation of Culture and Heritage of Polish Armenians seated in
Warsaw. The works are being conducted jointly by Polish and Ukrainian specialists. ==Interior and surroundings==