• Russian chapel in 1916 (built by Russian prisoners of war); the front row are Austro-Hungarian guards. Russian Chapel at the Vršič Pass in 2014.
  • The Russian Chapel on the Vršič Pass is a Russian Orthodox chapel located on the Russian Road on the northern side of the Vršič Pass.
  • How to get to the Russian Chapel? You will have to drive past the Jasna lakes, uphill towards the Vršič mountain pass, and past the Mihov dom mountain lodge.
  • If you’re driving on the Vršič Mountain Pass, just off of one of the hairpins of the winding narrow road is a peculiar chapel in the middle of a forest.
  • Lake Jasna yakınındaki oteller Vrsic Pass - Julian Alps yakınındaki oteller The Russian chapel yakınındaki oteller Zgornjesavska Valley yakınındaki oteller...
  • The Russian Chapel is a Russian Orthodox chapel located on the Russian Road on the northern side of the Vršič Pass in northwestern Slovenia.
  • While the Russian Chapel is undoubtedly the main attraction on the Vršič Pass, the surrounding area offers a plethora of activities for nature enthusiasts.
  • An unusual wooden chapel tells a sad story of the Russian prisoners of war who lost their lives in an avalanche in 1916, while building a road over the pass Vršič.
  • Russian chapel Ruska kapelica on Vrsic pass road in Slovenia Stock Photo - Alamy. ... Russian Chapel on the Vršič Pass in Northwestern Slovenia.
  • Source: Yekaterina Shtukina / TASS Russia's Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev laying a wreath by the Russian Orthodox chapel at the Vršič Pass.
  • 2016 commemoration at the Russian Chapel (Vršič Pass)‎ (12 F). ... Built in Slovenia in 1916. Wooden chapels in Slovenia. Relations of Russia and Slovenia.
  • – Igor Dmitrievich, last year I participated for the first time in the memorial program, dedicated to the Russian chapel at Vršič Pass.
  • Monday, June 10, 2013. Russian Chapel - Vrsic Pass, Slovenia. During World War I, the Battles of Isonzo were a series of 12 battles between the...
  • ...the 100th anniversary of a Russian chapel built near the Vršič Pass in memory of Russian soldiers who died there during the First World War.