PLACES OF WORSHIP
SAINT GREGORY THE ILLUSTRATOR CATHEDRAL
Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church is the mother Cathedral of Yerevan, built in 1996–2001, designed by architect Stepan Kyurkchyan, to commemorate the 1700th anniversary of the proclamation of Christianity as the state religion in Armenia.
Saint
Gregory the Illuminator Church is located in the southeastern part of the Ring
Park, opposite the "Russia" cinema, on an elevated site.
This
complex structure consists of a church, the chapels dedicated to the Armenian
King Trdat Arshakuni and Queen Ashkhen, who adopted Christianity as the state
religion in 301, the narthex and the atrium attached to the church from the
west. There is also a monastic building.
The
church houses part of the relics of the first Catholicos of All Armenians, St.
Gregory the Illuminator, brought from the St. Gregory the Illuminator Church in
Naples (San Gregorio Armeno), which were presented to Catholicos of All
Armenians Karekin II by Pope John Paul II on November 11, 2000, in the Vatican.
The
St. Gregory the Illuminator Church was built with the donation of Richard and
Louise-Simon Manoogian, in memory of their parents, Alex and Marie Manoogian.
The two chapels were built with the donations of Nazar and Artemis Nazarian,
Gevorg and Linda Gevorgian, and the bell tower was built with the donations of
Eduardo Eurnekian.
The
Church of St. Gregory the Illuminator, while having a characteristic features
of classical Armenian architecture, is at the same time modern and unlike
medieval Armenian churches.