Trinity Cathedral, Pskov

The Trinity Cathedral (Russian: Троицкий собор) is located in the Pskov Krom or Kremlin on the east bank of the Velikaya (Great) River.

The first wooden Trinity Cathedral (the Russian term sobor, translated as "cathedral" can mean any major church irrespective of it being a cathedral church of a bishop) was built in the tenth century, allegedly under the patronage of Princess Olga, but this seems unlikely as Olga's conversion was personal, and the conversion of the Rus Land did not occur until 988, almost two decades after her death.

The cathedral was destroyed and rebuilt several times over the centuries; for example, the Novgorodian First Chronicle mentions that in 1365, Archbishop Aleksei of Novgorod (r. 1359-1388) blessed the reconstruction of a stone church on the foundations of the original Trinity church; it was completed in 1367 under the direction of Master Kirill (who appears to have died in the plague of 1390).

[2] In the Soviet period, the cathedral was part of the schismatic Living Church movement in the 1920s before its closure in the 1930s, at which time it was turned into a museum.

The current bishop of Pskov, as of February 1993,[update] is Archbishop Evsevii (Nikolai Afanas'evich Savvin).

View of the Trinity Cathedral in the Pskov Kremlin
Interior of the cathedral