Resurrection Cathedral

The Resurrection Cathedral was built in 1995 in honour of the victory day of the Second World War. It is the largest religious building in the city of Brest and one of the largest in Belarus. In 2011 and 2012, the upper parts of the domes were decorated with gold leaf instead of silver according to the orthodox tradition of religious architecture.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture

Visitors information

  • Parking within 250m
  • Café within 500m

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/Natallia muramur

St. Brother's Cathedral

St. Brother's Cathedral, also known as St. Nicholas' Cathedral, was built in 1904-06 in brick on the site where, in 1596, the Union of Brest was adopted. Between World War II and 1991, the building housed the storage of the State Archives of the Brest region. The church was rebuilt in 1996 thanks to donations from parishioners and the city's businesses.

Wikimedia Commons/Alena Levai

St. Simeon's Cathedral

Saint-Siméon Cathedral was built between 1865 and 1868 in brick, according to the project of the architect of the city of Brest V. Polikarpov. The cathedral was built on a former monastery church, which burned down several times and finally closed together with the monastery in 1824. In 1865 the relics of St. Athanasius were brought to the new church. During the Soviet era, the church was abandoned and had to be restored in 1988.

Wikimedia Commons/Мікола Кузіч

St. Paraskieva Church

St. Paraskieva Church is a wooden church built in 1610 as a United Church. It was given to the Orthodox in 1886, returned to the Catholics in 1920 and restored in 1925. After the Second World War, it was again transferred to the Orthodox Church. The church consists of a simple wooden house with four walls under a hipped roof with an onion-shaped spire.