Kazan Cathedral in the
city of St.Petersburg
Pencil Drawing by
Shakir Sameen

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Kazan Cathedral encircles a
small square with a striking double row of
beautiful columns. The architect Andrei
Voronikhin, who built the church in 1801-1811,
was inspired by St. Peter's Basilica in
Rome.
After the War of 1812, the
church became a monument to the Russian victory
over Napoleon. Captured enemy banners were put
in the cathedral and the famous Russian field
marshal Mikhail Kutuzov, who won the most
important campaign of 1812, was buried inside
the church.
The cathedral was named after a
"miracle-making" icon of Our Lady of Kazan,
which the church housed till the early
1930s.
The Bolsheviks closed the
cathedral for services in 1929, and from 1932
it housed the collections of the Museum of
History of Religion and Atheism.
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