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St. Nicholas Serbian Church, Timișoara

Coordinates: 45°45′56″N 21°12′26″E / 45.76543°N 21.20736°E / 45.76543; 21.20736
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St. Nicholas Serbian Church
Biserica sârbească „Sf. Nicolae” (Romanian)
Српска црква Св. Никола (Serbian Cyrillic)
The church in 1916
Religion
AffiliationSerbian Orthodox
PatronSt. Nicholas
StatusActive
Location
Location13 Avram Iancu Square, Timișoara
Geographic coordinates45°45′56″N 21°12′26″E / 45.76543°N 21.20736°E / 45.76543; 21.20736
Architecture
Groundbreaking1786
Completed1793
MaterialsBrick

The St. Nicholas Serbian Church (Romanian: Biserica sârbească „Sf. Nicolae”; Serbian: Српска црква Св. Никола, romanizedSrpska crkva Sv. Nikola) is a Serbian Orthodox church in the Avram Iancu Square in the Mehala district of Timișoara, Romania. There are two other churches in this square, the Romanian Orthodox Church of the Ascension and the Roman Catholic Church of St. Mary. The St. Nicholas Church is together with the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral in Cetate's Union Square and the St. George Church in Fabric's Trajan Square one of the three Serbian Orthodox churches in the city.

History

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The first settlers of Mehala, the Rascians, belonged to the Orthodox religious community. In 1744 they founded their then joint Serbian-Romanian parish. The St. Nicholas Church is the oldest documented building of the Mehala district and was built of brick between 1786 and 1793. Its tower houses an old clock mechanism and five bells.[1] In the 19th century, the interior carpentry and the iconostasis were executed.[2] The chairs were made by Gheorghe Liblaitner, the furniture of the iconostasis by Mihajlo Janić, and the icons are the work of the painter Sava Petrović.[1][3] The painting of the interior walls was done by Nicolae Alexici.[4] The church saw gun firing during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 and was later used as an animal shelter for six months.[5] It was rehabilitated in 1870 from donations from parishioners.[5] In 1887 the Orthodox parish split into a Romanian and a Serbian denomination, and the church was given to the Serbian Orthodox believers. The Romanian Orthodox believers built their own church in Avram Iancu Square, which had to be replaced after 25 years due to dilapidation. At the same place, in 1925, the foundation stone was laid for the largest building of Mehala, the Romanian Orthodox Church of the Ascension.

The St. Nicholas Church has had a huge impact on the Serb community in the area. It once had a denominational school, a football team that played matches in Croatia and Serbia and an active choir called Zora. In the past, each member of the choir wore a special badge.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Biserica Ortodoxă Sârbă din Mehala, Timișoara". Welcome to Romania.
  2. ^ Eichler, Martin; Ciobotaru, Dan Leopold; Rill, Martin (2010). Temeswar/Timișoara: Eine Perle des Banats. Munich: Wort+Welt+Bild. ISBN 978-3-9810825-6-2.
  3. ^ Cosma, Aurel (1940). "Pictura bănățeană" (PDF). Luceafărul. 6 (5–6): 52.
  4. ^ Cuțara, Alexandru (1998). Timișoara: monografie artistică. Timișoara: Amarcord. ISBN 973-9244-35-1.
  5. ^ a b c "Lăcașul care a unit sârbii și românii". Digi 24. 15 January 2018.