, an icon credited with saving Novgorod from
Andrei Bogolyubsky's troops in 1170. and the Cathedral of Holy Wisdom on a
5-ruble bill The 38-metre-high, five-domed, stone cathedral was built by
Vladimir of Novgorod and Bishop
Luka Zhidiata between 1045 and 1050 to replace an oaken cathedral built by Bishop
Ioakim Korsunianin in the late tenth century. That makes it the oldest church building in
Russia outside the
Caucasus (
Tkhaba-Yerdy in
Ingushetia dates from before the 8th century) and the oldest building of any kind still in use in the country, with the exception of the
Arkhyz and
Shoana churches. It was consecrated by Bishop
Luka Zhidiata (1035-1060) on 14 September 1050 or 1052, the feast of the
Exaltation of the Cross. (A fresco just inside the south entrance depicts Sts. Constantine and Helena, who found the true cross in the fourth century, it is one of the oldest works of art in the cathedral and is thought to commemorate its dedication). While it is commonly known as St. Sophia's, it is not named for any of the female saints of that name (i.e.
Sophia of Rome or
Sophia the Martyr); rather, the name comes from the Greek word for wisdom (, from whence we get words like philo
sophia or philosophy "the love of wisdom"), and thus Novgorod's cathedral is dedicated to the Holy Wisdom of God, in imitation of the
Hagia Sophia cathedral of
Constantinople. Holy Wisdom is a reference to Christ. The main, golden, cupola was gilded by Archbishop
Ioann (1388-1415) in 1408. The sixth (and the largest) dome crowns a tower which leads to the upper galleries. In medieval times, they were said to hold the Novgorodian treasury had library there that is said to have been started by
Yaroslav the Wise. When the library was moved to the
St. Petersburg Spiritual Academy in 1859, it had more than 1,500 volumes, some dating back to the 13th century. The current archbishop,
Lev, has reestablished a library there in keeping with the ancient tradition. As of 2004, it housed some 5000 volumes. A Sunday school is also held in the gallery. The cupolas are thought to have acquired their present helmet-like shape in the 1150s, when the cathedral was restored after a fire. The interior was painted in 1108 at the behest of Bishop
Nikita (1096-1108) although the project was not undertaken until shortly after his death. Archbishop
Nifont (1130-1156) had the exterior whitewashed and had the Martirievskii and Pretechenskaia porches (
papter', more akin to side chapels) painted sometime during his tenure, but those frescoes are hardly visible now because of frequent fires. In the 1860s, parts of the interior had to be repainted, and most of the current frescoes are from the 1890s. When one prince angered them, they told him "we have no prince, only God, the Truth, and Holy Wisdom." On another occasion, they made the cathedral the symbol of the city itself, saying "Where Holy Wisdom is, there is Novgorod". The House of Holy Wisdom (
Дом святой Софии/
Dom svyatoy Sofii) was one of the largest landowners in the Novgorod Land. Its possessions were spread across all parts of Novgorod land and outside of it. In the 16th century, the House had its own court in Moscow, and by the second half of 17th century, it also owned 41 monasteries with their land and peasants. The bishop (later archbishop) headed the House of Holy Wisdom. He was assisted by the head of the chancellery (''d'yak'') and treasurer and about 100 other staff who included scribes, bookbinders, icon painters and silversmiths. The cathedral has long been the city's great necropolis, the burial place of 47 people of prominence in the city's history, including several princes and posadniks and 32 bishops, archbishops, and metropolitans of Novgorod. The first burial there was Prince Vladimir himself in 1052. The first bishop was Luka Zhidiata in 1060. The last burial in the cathedral was Metropolitan Gurii in 1912. Most of the burials are below the floor in the Martirievskaia Porch, on the south side of the cathedral, named for Bishop Martirii (1193-1199). Later burials took place (again below the floor) in the Pretechenskaia Papter' on the north side of the cathedral. Today, there are several burials in the main body of the church. The sarcophagi of Prince Vladimir and Princess Anna overlook the Martirievskaia Porch; Archbishop Ilya (also known as Ioann) (1165-1186) is buried in the northwestern corner of the main body of the church, next to the Pretechenskaia Porch. Bishop Nikita lies in a glass-covered sarcaphogus between the chapels of the Nativity of the Mother of God and Sts. Ioakim and Anne and the sarcophagus is opened on his feast days (30 January, the day of his death and 30 April/13 May, the day of the "uncovering of his relics", i.e., when his tomb was opened in 1558) so the faithful can venerate his relics. Two other princes also lie in the main body of the cathedral and in the Chapel of the Nativity of the Mother of God. The cathedral was
looted by Ivan the Terrible in the 1570s but restored by Archbishop Leonid (1572-1575). He built the Tsar's Pew, which stands just inside the south entrance of the main body of the cathedral near the Martirievskii Porch. Leonid also had several large chandeliers hung in the cathedral, but only one of them survives. During the Soviet period, the cathedral was a museum. It was returned to the Russian Orthodox Church in 1991. An inscription on the north wall of the west entrance attests to its rededication by Bishop Lev and
Patriarch Alexius II. == Features ==