Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

140 years since the laying of the foundation stone of St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral

Photo: bulgarianhistory.org

On February 19, 1882, on the highest place in Sofia at that time, southeast of the church "St. Sophia" the foundation stone of the cathedral in the Bulgarian capital was laid.

The monument was built as a tribute to the Russian liberators of Bulgaria from Ottoman rule. The idea belonged to Petko Karavelov – a Bulgarian politician and public figure. On 17 December 1880, the Second National Assembly voted to build a cathedral in Sofia. It was to be named after the Russian prince Alexander Nevsky (canonised as saint in 1547) who was the heavenly patron of the Russian Tsar Alexander II. The actual construction of the cathedral began in 1904, and its bells rang out in Sofia for the first time in 1913.

The temple is a monumental five-aisled cross-domed basilica with an atrium and a bell tower. The architecture is based on the Byzantine-style cathedrals, which were built in Russia in the second half of the 19th century, but it also has medieval Bulgarian elements and other architectural forms. The building spans an area of 3,170 square metres (34122.6 square feet) and it can accommodate up to 5,000 people. The bell tower has 12 bells. It rises to a height of 53 m (174 ft). The largest bell has a mouth diameter of 3 m (9 ft)and weighs 11 748 kg (25899.9 lbs).

The frescoes and icons of the three iconostases are the work of Bulgarian, Russian and Czech artists. The domes of the temple are gilded, and the façade is lined with white Vratsa stoneand decorated with exquisite stone carvings.

In the basement of the temple is the Crypt, where one can see masterpieces of medieval and Bulgarian Renaissance art.

Compiled by: Gergana Mancheva

English: Elizabeth Radkova



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Elena Karageorgieva (first from right to left) with her husband Father Ivan and parishioners at the Bulgarian Orthodox Church in Paris.

Elena Karageorgieva Sineva – the woman beside Bulgarian priest Father Ivan in Paris

Elena is the wife of Father Ivan Karageorgiev, a Bulgarian Orthodox priest based in Paris. She has lived in the French capital since 2010.  Elena grew up in a church-going family, and two of her brothers are priests. She studied iconography at St..

published on 6/23/25 5:59 PM

The Troyan Monastery donates holy relics to the St. Paraskeva Petka Church in Troyan

The Troyan Monastery "Dormition of the Mother of God" will donate relics of the patron saints of the town—St. Paraskeva-Petka and St. Panteleimon the Great Martyr—to the St. Paraskeva Petka Church in Troyan , Archimandrite Stefan, deputy abbot of the..

published on 6/13/25 5:10 AM

All Souls’ Day reminds us of the transience of life

Today, June 7, is one of the special days in the liturgical year, in which we offer prayers for forgiveness of sins and repose of the souls of our deceased loved ones. In the calendar of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, All..

published on 6/7/25 5:50 AM