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Contents

   



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1 History  





2 External links  





3 References  














Dominican Church, Lviv






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Coordinates: 49°5034N 24°23E / 49.84278°N 24.03417°E / 49.84278; 24.03417
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Dominican Church
Dominican Church and Monastery
Домініканський костел і монастир
The church's main facade
Dominican Church is located in Lviv Oblast
Dominican Church

Dominican Church

Dominican Church is located in Ukraine
Dominican Church

Dominican Church

49°50′34N 24°2′3E / 49.84278°N 24.03417°E / 49.84278; 24.03417
LocationLviv
CountryUkraine
DenominationUkrainian Greek Catholic Church
Previous denominationCatholic Church
History
Founded1749
Founder(s)Józef Potocki
Consecrated1764
Architecture
Architectural typeBaroque
Interior

The Dominican Church and Monastery (Ukrainian: Домініканський костел і монастир, romanizedDominikanskyi kostel i monastyr, Polish: Kościół i klasztor Dominikanów we Lwowie) in Lviv, Ukraine is located in the city's Old Town, east of the market square. It was originally built as the Roman Catholic church of Corpus Christi, and today serves as the Greek Catholic church of the Holy Eucharist.

History[edit]

The Dominican Order first arrived in Lviv during the 13th century and the first wooden church is said to have been built in 1234 within the Low Castle, founded by the wife of Leo I of Halych. That church burned down during a war in 1340. A new Gothic church, resembling the parish church in Kazimierz Dolny, was built on the present site in 1378 and later rebuilt after a fire in 1407 along with the monastery buildings. During the 16th century the complex was ravaged by several fires, nevertheless it continued to gradually rise in prosperity. In the 18th century the church's ceiling started cracking and it was decided in 1745 that the church had to be taken apart and replaced with a new one.

In 1749 Józef Potocki laid the cornerstone for the present day Baroque church, commonly attributed to Jan de Witte. Between 1756 and 1761 Mikołaj Bazyli Potocki donated 236,000 złoty to the church and the Dominican monastery in Lviv, where his mother was buried.[1] These donations funded the Potocki chapel in the church. The church was consecrated in 1764 by the Latin archbishop of Lviv Wacław Hieronim Sierakowski.

The Dominicans managed to survive the reign of the Austrian emperor Joseph II, who closed many other monasteries. In 1865 a neo-baroque bell tower was added to the complex. In the years 1885–1914 a controversial renovation of the facade and interior was carried out.

After World War II, the complex was occupied by the Soviets, used as a warehouse, and in the 1970s changed into a museum of religion and atheism. With the collapse of the Soviet Union the church was given to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and now serves as a parish church. The monastery, however, has not yet been returned and still serves as a museum (renamed The Lviv Museum of History of Religion).[2]

The church resembles the Karlskirche. It is built on the plan of the Greek Cross inscribed in an ellipsoid and topped with a monumental dome.

Before 1946, the church contained a miraculous icon of the Blessed Virgin Mary, crowned by Pope Benedict XIV in 1751, which can be found today in the Dominican Basilica of St. Nicholas [pl]inGdańsk, and an alabaster figure brought by St. Hyacinth from Mongol-sacked KievtoHalych and later to Lviv, which now resides in Church of St. GilesinKraków.

In 2019, the Dominican Church was the location for the Gregorian's music video for their song Viva la Vida.[3]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sadok Barącz. Pamiątki buczackie, Lwów, Drukarnia «Gazety narodowej», 1882, 168 p., P. 57. pl
  • ^ "Home". museum.lviv.ua.
  • ^ Gregorian "Viva La Vida" (Official Music Video) – Album out November 22nd (Youtube).

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dominican_Church,_Lviv&oldid=1218963706"

    Categories: 
    Churches in Lviv
    Church buildings with domes
    Dominican churches in Ukraine
    Monasteries in Lviv
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    Articles containing Ukrainian-language text
    Articles containing Polish-language text
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