Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940

The demolition of churches is a notorious episode in Soviet political history, normally discussed in the context of the history of church-state relations. Yet which prerevolutionary buildings were meant to fit into a "model socialist city" such as Leningrad and how this was to happen was a...

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Main Author: Kelly, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2012
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author Kelly, C
author_facet Kelly, C
author_sort Kelly, C
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description The demolition of churches is a notorious episode in Soviet political history, normally discussed in the context of the history of church-state relations. Yet which prerevolutionary buildings were meant to fit into a "model socialist city" such as Leningrad and how this was to happen was also a planning issue. Soviet planners (unlike members of the militant atheist movement) drew a distinction between buildings and their (current or possible) functions. The monument protection agencies were often successful in arguing that buildings of "historic and artistic importance" should be preserved, even in the face of considerable pressure from other city departments (for example, the suggestion that Smol'nyi Cathedral be demolished for the bricks). However, they gave preference to churches that lacked an "odiously ecclesiastical appearance," were ruthless about sacrificing churches that they deemed to be of secondary significance, and readily agreed to secular uses for "cultic buildings." As Catriona Kelly shows in this article, most of the local intelligentsia considered these planning decisions to be appropriate; it was not until the postwar decades, and more particularly the Brezhnev era, that attitudes to "cultic buildings" began to change.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6086c3db-01df-4703-b34a-e91f448fc6142022-03-26T17:53:53ZSocialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6086c3db-01df-4703-b34a-e91f448fc614EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Kelly, CThe demolition of churches is a notorious episode in Soviet political history, normally discussed in the context of the history of church-state relations. Yet which prerevolutionary buildings were meant to fit into a "model socialist city" such as Leningrad and how this was to happen was also a planning issue. Soviet planners (unlike members of the militant atheist movement) drew a distinction between buildings and their (current or possible) functions. The monument protection agencies were often successful in arguing that buildings of "historic and artistic importance" should be preserved, even in the face of considerable pressure from other city departments (for example, the suggestion that Smol'nyi Cathedral be demolished for the bricks). However, they gave preference to churches that lacked an "odiously ecclesiastical appearance," were ruthless about sacrificing churches that they deemed to be of secondary significance, and readily agreed to secular uses for "cultic buildings." As Catriona Kelly shows in this article, most of the local intelligentsia considered these planning decisions to be appropriate; it was not until the postwar decades, and more particularly the Brezhnev era, that attitudes to "cultic buildings" began to change.
spellingShingle Kelly, C
Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940
title Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940
title_full Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940
title_fullStr Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940
title_full_unstemmed Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940
title_short Socialist Churches: Heritage Preservation and "Cultic Buildings" in Leningrad, 1924-1940
title_sort socialist churches heritage preservation and cultic buildings in leningrad 1924 1940
work_keys_str_mv AT kellyc socialistchurchesheritagepreservationandculticbuildingsinleningrad19241940