The New Jerusalem Monastery was founded in 1656 by
Patriarch Nikon as a patriarchal residence in the vicinity of
Moscow. The monastery took its name from the concept of
New Jerusalem. This site was chosen for its resemblance to the Holy Land. The River Istra represents the
Jordan, and the buildings represent the 'sacral space' or holy places of Jerusalem. In his time, Patriarch Nikon recruited a number of monks of non-Russian origin to populate the monastery, as it was intended to represent the multinational Orthodoxy of the Heavenly Jerusalem. By the patriarch's death in 1681, however, the building remained unfinished. His cleric Ioann Shusherin records that the royal family, in particular
Tsarevna Tatyana and
Regent Sophia, then oversaw the building work and ensured the buildings completion, finalised with its consecration in 1685. In the 17th century, the New Jerusalem Monastery owned a large
library, compiled by Nikon from
manuscripts taken from other monasteries. By the time of the
secularization of 1764, the monastery possessed some 13,000 volumes. In 1918, the New Jerusalem Monastery was closed down. In 1920, a museum of history and arts and another of regional studies were established on the premises of the monastery. In 1935, the Moscow Oblast Museum of Regional Studies was opened in one of the monastic buildings. In 1941, the
German army ransacked the New Jerusalem Monastery. In 1959, the museum was re-opened to the public. == Restoration and buildings ==