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    • 55,173 Russian Orthodox churches

      • In 1914 there were 55,173 Russian Orthodox churches and 29,593 chapels, 112,629 priests and deacons, 550 monasteries and 475 convents with a total of 95,259 monks and nuns in Russia.
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  1. In 1914 in Russia, there were 55,173 Russian Orthodox churches and 29,593 chapels, 112,629 priests and deacons, 550 monasteries and 475 convents with a total of 95,259 monks and nuns. The year 1917 was a major turning point for the history of Russia, and also the Russian Orthodox Church.

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  3. Many churches were closed after the revolution, and another massive wave of church closings took place under Khrushchev in 1959 to 1962. In 1914, 54,457 churches were registered, but in the late 1970s there were only about 6,800.

  4. In 1914 there were 55,173 Russian Orthodox churches and 29,593 chapels, 112,629 priests and deacons, 550 monasteries and 475 convents with a total of 95,259 monks and nuns in Russia. [3] Following the Bolshevik seizure of power.

  5. There were 50,000 churches in Russia in 1917. After the fall of the czarist government that year the Russian Orthodox church convoked a council to restore independence. During the revolutionary chaos in 1917, the Orthodox church established a patriarch in Moscow, independent from the one on Constantinople (Istanbul).

  6. Around 90 million people out of total population of 125 million identified themselves as Orthodox in the 1897 census and there were approximately 50,000 churches in Russia.

    • How many Orthodox churches were there in Russia in 1914?1
    • How many Orthodox churches were there in Russia in 1914?2
    • How many Orthodox churches were there in Russia in 1914?3
    • How many Orthodox churches were there in Russia in 1914?4
    • How many Orthodox churches were there in Russia in 1914?5
  7. Ethnic ties complicated religious loyalties in Protestant-dominated empires such as the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as Catholic Austria-Hungary, Orthodox Russia, and the Islamic Ottoman Empire. U.S. Catholics of German and Irish heritage, for example, were noticeably reticent about supporting the Allied cause, even after the ...

  8. More than 1,700 martyrs and confessors of the Church of Russia who suffered persecution after the Bolshevik Revolution were canonized in the 1990s and 2000s as Russian Orthodox saints.

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