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In the very center of Moscow and just a few steps from Red Square
stand the remains of the Zaikonospassky Monastery, founded in 1600
and the birthplace of Russia's first higher educational institution.
The monastery supported its upkeep by selling icons on the street
outside, from which its name Behind the Icon of The Savior or
Zaikonospassky derives. In 1665 a school was opened in the monastery
to educated clerks for government service, headed by the monastic
scholar Simeon Polotsky. With the encouragement of Tsar Alexei
Mikhailovich, Polotsky developed the school into a Slavonic, Greek
and Latin Academy - the first institute of higher education in the
country. The academy's alumni included many significant Russian
cultural and literary figures, including Leon Magnitsky the
publisher of the first Russian textbook, Volkov the founder of
Russian theater, the architect Bazhenov, and Mikhail Lomonosov, the
son of a peasant from the White Sea area who traveled on foot to
Moscow to study at the age of 19 but 25 years later was responsible
for the founding of the country's first university. In later years
the academy was used to prepare entrants for the priesthood and was
transferred to the St. Sergei Monastery outside Moscow and the
academy's original buildings were mostly knocked down. Today all
that remains of the monastery is part of its main cathedral,
including the restored red and white octagonal bell tower and the
adjacent monks quarters.
Just around the corner from the Zaikonospassky visitors will find
the imposing facade and intricate ornamentation of the Epiphany
Cathedral, part of the monastery of the same name. Although the
cathedral was constructed in the last decade of the 17th century,
the monastery was founded by Prince Daniil in the 13th century,
making it the second oldest in Moscow. Services are still held in
the cathedral and its gift shop helps to fund the ongoing
restoration of the building's interiors. The adjacent monks'
quarters now serve as offices. |