Following Monomakh's death, the church was long associated with his family. At least three Monomachids were buried underneath the baptistery:
George I of Kiev (the founder of Moscow), his son Gleb and his daughter
Eufemia. The church was damaged in 1240 when
Batu Khan sacked Kyiv and again in 1482, when
Khan Meñli I Giray ravaged the neighbourhood. Its walls collapsed and it stood in ruins until the 17th century. It was the
Metropolitan Petro Mohyla who started to restore the Kyivan churches, long neglected during the Polish-Lithuanian rule. He had the Berestove church restored in the
national Ukrainian ("proto-Baroque") style. The new church was under construction in 1640–1642. Incorporating the western wall of Monomakh's structure, Mohyla's church is smaller and differs considerably from its predecessor: there are five towers arranged on a four-petaled plan and surrounded by five massive pear-shaped domes. Two years later, a team of Greek masters painted the interior with frescoes. The most famous of these, known as ''Petro Mohyla's Gift'', features a portrait of Mohyla kneeling before Christ to whom he presents a model of the church. The interior was renovated in 1751–1752 and again in 1813–1814, when Fedor M. Korobka carved an elaborate
altar. At the same time, a two-
tier belltower was constructed to
Andriy Melenskyi's
provincial Neoclassical design which is out of keeping with the rest of the church. In 1909, Academician
Pokryshkin (who specialized in ancient Orthodox architecture) was called upon to restore the church to its medieval appearance. Pokryshkin's restoration works lasted for five years but did not result in any fundamental changes. The foundations of Monomakh's original church were uncovered and may still be seen to the east from the extant structure. The
façade of the church was cleaned so as to highlight the surviving parts of the 12th-century building, which had been scraped of stucco. s. On 7 September 1947, in the course of the celebration of the 800th anniversary of the foundation of Moscow, in the former Vladimir chapel of the church, a large granite sarcophagus was installed by architect P.Ostapenko over the place where it is believed
Yuri Dolgoruky, the founder of Moscow, had been buried. In the early 1970s, a fragment of the 12th-century fresco
Miraculous Fishing, depicting
Christ walking on water towards a boat, was uncovered in the church. Since Ukraine's
independence after the
fall of the Soviet Union, the church is part of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra Historical-Cultural Reserve and functions primarily as a museum, holding weekly church services on Sundays.
Research (2002–2004) In 2001, the Getty Institute for Architectural Conservation awarded a grant for a project to prepare the restoration of the Church of the Savior on Berestove to help preserve it as a landmark of world significance. In 2002–2003, as part of the Getty Foundation's grant program, scientific and restoration research was conducted at the church to develop a project for the conservation and museumification of the monument and to carry out urgent work.
Restoration (2017–2019) In 2017, restoration work began at the Church of the Savior in Berestove. The project included the restoration of the church inside and the area around it, as well as a range of conservation and restoration work. During the restoration work, all authentic fragments of the monument were preserved. According to the director of the Kyiv-Pechersk Reserve, Liubomyr Mykhailyna, the frescoes of the church are of particular value. The patron of the project is Viacheslav Moskalevsky, who allocated 50 million
hryven for this project. The restoration work lasted 2 years and was successfully completed in 2019. ==See also ==