• View of the Resurrection Monastery from the Uglich Hydroelectric Power Station. For a long time, all monastery buildings and temples were made of wood.
  • Close to the bank of the Volga is the Resurrection Monastery with its huge cathedral, refectory, belfry and summer church dating back to 1674-77.
  • Much of this turbulent history is reflected in a chronicle of the Resurrection Monastery, which now exists as a rare jewel of a unified architectural ensemble.
  • The Resurrection Monastery or New Jerusalem Monastery is a major monastery of the Russian Orthodox Church in Moscow Oblast, Russia.
  • The Resurrection Monastery located not far away from the Volga bank in Luzhniki was established in the 14th century.
  • The main temple of the monastery is the Cathedral of the resurrection, which is very close in appearance to the churches of Rostov the Great.
  • In 1674-1677, Rostov Metropolitan Jonah Sysoevich, who built the Rostov Kremlin, began the construction of stone churches in the Resurrection Monastery.
  • The largest building of the monastery is the Resurrection Cathedral, which is connected by a gallery with the Church of Hodegetria and the refectory.
  • In the northeastern side of the city of Murom, the Resurrection Orthodox Monastery operates under the Vladimir-Suzdal diocese.
  • Downstairs was previously the main gate where you entered to get into the resurrection monastery, Uglich. Now this is a basement with a ladder.