Church of St Paraskeva, Sofia
| Church of St Paraskeva | |
|---|---|
църква "Света Параскева" | |
Church of St Paraskeva | |
Church of St Paraskeva Location of the church in Sofia | |
Church of St Paraskeva | |
| 42°42′4″N 23°19′44″E / 42.70111°N 23.32889°E | |
| Location | Georgi Rakovski Street, Sofia |
| Country | Bulgaria |
| Denomination | Eastern Orthodox |
| Tradition | Bulgarian Orthodox |
| History | |
| Status | Church |
| Dedication | Saint Paraskeva |
| Consecrated | 1930 |
| Architecture | |
| Architect | Anton Tornyov |
| Architectural type | Church |
| Completed | 1940 |
The Church of St Paraskeva (Bulgarian: църква "Света Параскева", tsarkva "Sveta Paraskeva") is a Bulgarian Orthodox church in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. The church, dedicated to Saint Paraskeva, is located on 58 Georgi Rakovski Street in the centre of the city. It is the third-largest church in Sofia.
Overview
Plans to build a church at the site date to 1910, when Stuttgart-educated Bulgarian architect Anton Tornyov (1868–1942) won a competition for the church's design. Due to the Balkan Wars and World War I, however, the construction was postponed. In 1922, the church board of trustees announced another competition, which was again won by Tornyov. The construction of the Church of St Paraskeva was complete by 1930, but the finishing works on the porticos did not cease until 1940.[1]
St Paraskeva has a somewhat unusual design for an Eastern Orthodox church. For example, the cella is in practice a round chamber over 20 metres (66 ft) in diameter. The cella gradually disintegrates into the surrounding apses.[1]
Gallery
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Night view of the church
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A memorial plaque
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The mosque interior
See also
References
- ^ a b Банков, Явор (July 16, 2005). ""Св. Параскева" съперничи на Пантеона в Рим ("St Paraskeva rivals the Pantheon in Rome")" (in Bulgarian). Стандарт. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved March 5, 2009.