Panorama of the Old Christian Cemetery (Odessa). Virtual tour of the Old Christian Cemetery (Odessa). Attractions, map, photos, videos. Second Christian cemetery of Odessa Odessa cemetery

Have you ever visited a Christian cemetery in a Muslim country? But last summer I managed to take a short excursion around to the old Christian cemetery, located almost in the center of Ashgabat. This walk left me with a whole lot of impressions, mostly unpleasant and even a little creepy: the devastation that I saw against the background of new white marble buildings gave rise to only question marks and signs in my head (if only such existed, of course) bewilderment. A little later, some details and nuances became clear, which, in principle, began to put things in their place, but what I saw and experienced then, while walking through the cemetery, remained with me, perhaps, forever.

If you move from the city center along Neutrality Avenue (Bitarap Shayoly) to the north, then soon, after crossing the railway, you will see something like the following picture: on the left side of the road there will be beautiful modern buildings, among which you can see the headquarters of the Turkish company Polimex (the office that builds all the most expensive monuments in the city and country), and on the right side there is a high concrete fence enclosing a decent piece of territory, deep in which the domes of an Orthodox church (one of two in Ashgabat) are hidden. It's behind this fence an old Christian cemetery opened in 1880, the same year when Ashgabat arose.

On the night of October 6, 1948 The Turkmen capital experienced a terrible 8-magnitude earthquake, which destroyed more than 90 percent of buildings and killed 2/3 of the city's population. A significant part of the victims of that earthquake were buried here, as today a marble tablet installed at the entrance to the territory reminds of this.

We look and read under the cut about what this “memorable” cemetery looks like today and how I ended up in those places.


There is no entrance to the cemetery from Prospekt Neutrality; in order to get here, you need to enter from the side of a residential courtyard of one of the houses in the Khitrovka district

Commemorative marble plaque at the entrance to the cemetery. It was clearly not the Russians who wrote: "On this Cemetery site buried victims of the Ashgabat earthquake Isenia 1948"

I go to the cemetery. I decided to devote this evening to one family matter. In the 1960-70s, my cousin Yegor Yegorovich lived and worked in Ashgabat. He worked as a driver in some road construction office. He lived alone, had no family, and died in 1974. This is all the information I know about the guy.

It is clear that with such initial data it is unlikely to find the burial place of my relative, but I still decided to at least, if not find his grave, then at least go somewhere near this place. Now, standing in this cemetery, I realized that I had come to the wrong place.

Photos are clickable



The priest I met on the way told me that The last burial in this cemetery dates back to 1962, that is, my uncle’s grave is not here and cannot be. However, I’m in no hurry to leave, because in front of me there is a large piece of land that is in an absolutely neglected state - I need to look at it.

Most graves either do not have fences, or these fences are broken or bent.

Many monuments have been broken, crosses have been ripped out of the ground.

In November 1998, through the efforts of three diplomatic missions (Russia, Ukraine and Armenia), an improvement campaign was carried out at the cemetery. The event was timed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the devastating Ashgabat earthquake. Then, in 1998, the press attache of the Russian embassy indicated another reason for holding this event: "...the extremely neglected state of the cemetery, which today is a haven for the city's homeless."

I don't know if anything like this has been done since then. but in the summer of 2015 the oldest cemetery in Ashgabat looks like this

And just like that

Immediately behind the fence there is a two-story residential building, the residents of which apparently quite simply solved the problem of disposing of various household waste. Or maybe the homeless people are to blame for everything again?

On the fences are pieces of plastic siding that someone left behind after repairs; on the crossbars you can find old car tires, rubber drive belts or even three-liter glass jars.

On the graves, among other things, you can find: plastic paint buckets, shoe boxes, worn-out shoes themselves, potato peelings, rags and, of course, many, many plastic bottles. What I saw made me feel so disgusted, I just kept thinking in my head “how can this be?”, but still I wasn’t going to give up right away.

The depressing state was intensified by the very sharp and strong smell of marsh calamus (I can’t stand this stench), the thickets of which were somewhere nearby.

Most crosses have an unusual configuration for my perception - an elongated oblique crossbar. It was already during the August trip to Armenia that I knew that Such crosses are placed on the graves of Orthodox Armenians.

It turns out that there has always been a fairly large Armenian community in Ashgabat. Many, of course, died on the night of October 5-6, 1948. I don’t know how things stand with the Armenians in Ashgabat today, but there is clearly no one here to look after the graves of relatives.

Again, after my excursion, I found out what it was the cemetery was heavily damaged by extremist actions during the May "Armenian pogroms" in 1989, the underlying reason for which was the division of spheres of influence in the then emerging free market.

Many graves of Armenians in Ashgabat were desecrated and this happened on May 2, 1989. At the same time, we all know thatalready in January 1990 Turkmenistanreceived ferries with Armenians fleeing the terrible pogroms in Baku .


1948- most often mentioned on local tombstones

According to the story of the local priest, in the cemetery, in addition to Christian ones, there are also Muslim burials.

In the frame St. Nicholas Orthodox Church- one of two operating in Ashgabat.



Glistens in the distance spire of Ashgabat railway station, and even further away the Kopetdag mountains are visible

Armenian burials

Quite recently, I corresponded with a person who a couple of years ago moved from Ashgabat to Grodno for permanent residence. He advised me to look for my uncle’s grave in an old cemetery in the area of ​​Vatutina Street, which is very close to the airport. People were buried in that cemetery until the mid-90s, it is newer, but the man assured me that visiting it, I would experience an even greater shock - everything there is so neglected. There is nothing to do - I will visit him too. Or maybe they will demolish it altogether for the Asian Games.

This was the oldest burial complex in the city, reflecting how national composition, and the religious affiliation of the residents of Odessa. It included Christian, Jewish, Muslim and Karaite cemeteries.

By highlighting the military and plague (“Chumka”) cemeteries, the necropolis reflected the characteristics of the city as a sea gate and a significant concentration of troops. A special area was allocated for suicides.

During its existence, the cemetery was expanded several times, reaching an area of ​​34 hectares by the beginning of the 20th century. At first, the cemetery was surrounded by a ditch, and later surrounded by a stone wall. On August 25, 1820, the consecration of the cemetery church in the name of All Saints, founded in 1816, took place. “The temple’s simple but beautiful architecture attracted the attention of worshipers,” noted contemporaries. In 1898, at the expense of Countess E.G. Tolstoy built a stone vestibule at the main entrance to the church, protecting pilgrims from draft winds and dust.

In 1829, not far from the church, an almshouse was established with donations from Odessa residents, the foundation of which was laid with a contribution of 6 thousand rubles by the widow of an eminent merchant, one of the first city mayors, Elena Klenova. In her honor, one of the departments was called Eleninsky. In memory of Emperor Alexander II, at the expense of G. G. Marazli, according to the design of the architect A. Bernardazzi, a new beautiful almshouse building was built (Mechnikova, 53), and in 1888, according to the design of the architect Yu. Dmitrenko, a building for an orphanage was built (Novoshchepnoy Ryad, 23) .

When describing the cemetery, contemporaries always noted “a whole forest of magnificent monuments,” most often belonging to people whose names resurrect the glorious past of our city. The crypts of the hereditary honorary citizen Alexei Pashkov, who was the mayor of the city in 1863, were particularly elegant;

Portuguese Consul in Odessa Count Jacques Porro;

the family of the merchant of the 1st guild Osip Biryukov, where besides him his wife Alexandra and son Nikolai were buried, as well as a complex of burials of the Lessar family, well known in Odessa.

One of the most outstanding in beauty and wealth was the crypt of the Anatra family. It was located at the entrance to the cemetery on the right side on the second alley. It was a large, elegantly decorated Roman-style chapel made of black and pink polished granite. Immigrants from Italy in 1876 in Odessa officially registered trading house"The Anatra Brothers" The Anatra family was engaged in the transportation of goods, mainly grain from the Dniester, Bug and Dnieper.

Nearby were the chapel-crypts of famous Odessa businessmen Rodokonaki. All descendants of Panteleimon Rodokonaki, who died in 1871, were merchants of the 1st and 2nd guilds, hereditary honorary citizens. The children, grandchildren and great-grandson of Panteleimon Amvrosievich were buried in the family crypt.

The family crypt of Count Tolstoy, located opposite the church, differed sharply from others in its rich decoration. The head of the family, Mikhail Dmitrievich Tolstoy, was buried there. In 1847, a retired colonel of the guard, a participant in many military campaigns and battles, an active state councilor, a wealthy landowner, owner of distilleries and sugar factories, vice-president, and then president of the society, came to our city agriculture Southern Russia, chairman and member of many commissions and charitable organizations, a respected and revered person in Odessa.

In a newly decorated house on Sabaneev Bridge, where is now the House of Scientists, in May 1898, a memorial service was served for the deceased 63-year-old Count Mikhail Mikhailovich (senior). He was a trustee of the City Theater and invested enormous amounts of money in the construction of a new theater. Spouses M.M. and E.G. The Tolstoys, in memory of their son Konstantin and his wife buried in the crypt, opened a children's canteen in the summer of 1891.

Many heroes found their final refuge in the cemetery Patriotic War 1812. Immediately behind the church there was the grave of Ivan Vasilyevich Sabaneev with an original marble monument in the form of a coffin. “Clever and educated Sabaneev,” as they said about him in the army, not only managed to graduate from Moscow University, but also distinguished himself in the last battles of the Russian-Turkish War of 1787-1791 during the storming of the outskirts of Warsaw and Prague in the troops of A.V. Suvorov. In the summer and autumn of 1812, the military general covered the southern borders of the empire. He fought at the Berezina, blocking the path of Napoleon's retreating army. He fought in France and more than once took charge of the battle. After the war, from 1816, Ivan Vasilyevich lived in Odessa, in 1825 he purchased a house on Nadezhdinskaya, and was one of the largest donors to the city library. General I.V. died of infantry. Sabaneev August 29, 1829.

Infantry General Ivan Nikitich Inzov, one of the 322 heroes of the Patriotic War of 1812, whose portrait adorns the wall of the Military Gallery of the Winter Palace, died on May 27, 1845 and was also buried in Odessa. Participated in the Turkish, Polish and Italian campaigns of A.V. Suvorov, was an associate of M.I. Kutuzova. Sword of General I.N. Sabaneev is kept in our local history museum, his name - a humanist, educator, statesman, chairman of the Trustee Committee on Foreign Colonists of Southern Russia - is directly related to the name of A.S. Pushkin and is carefully preserved in the memory of Odessa residents. In December 1846, the Bulgarians received highest resolution“to transfer the ashes of the deceased from Odessa to the Bulgarian cemetery” in Bolgrad, where a special tomb was built.

In 1797, the brother of the legendary Admiral Joseph de Ribas, retired Prime Minister Felix de Ribas, came to Odessa. He lived in our city for 48 years, was the first parade major, consul general of the kingdom of the two Sicilies for all ports of the Black and Azov seas and died in 1846 at the advanced age of 86 years. His grave was located near the wall of the horse-drawn depot. And although he did not play the same role as his brother, he worked in Odessa not without benefit: he was an organizer of trade with Podolsk and Galician landowners. On the middle Fontana he had an estate called “Deribasovka”; he was the first to engage in silkworming, plant growing and the development of fishing. For a long time his “grave, together with the gravestone monument, which has a corresponding inscription on a marble plaque, is fenced with a now dilapidated stone plinth”, was in an unsightly state. For the 100th anniversary of Odessa, by decision of the City Duma, “in gratitude for the gift brought to the residents of Odessa,” the grave was surrounded by a cast-iron grate.

The history of Odessa is closely connected with the Decembrists, and this could not but affect the cemetery.

In 1812, Victor Poggio, the father of the Decembrists Alexander and Joseph Poggio, was buried here. A native of Piedmont, he had been in Russian service since 1772. With the rank of second major, he took part in the Russian-Turkish War of 1789-1791 and the capture of Izmail. After retiring, he lived in Odessa, served in a construction expedition under the leadership of engineer E.Kh. Foerster, also buried in the cemetery. Victor Poggio came up with the idea of ​​building a hospital; he also built the first city theater.

In 1860, Lieutenant Alexander Ivanovich Vegelin, a member of the founded in 1822, died. secret society military friends. Sentenced by a military court to death penalty, replaced by 10 years of hard labor. In his declining years after his Siberian exile, he lived in Odessa, was in charge of mineral waters, and was friends with Lev Pushkin, the brother of the great poet, also buried in the First Cemetery.

In 1865, General Pavel Sergeevich Pushchin found his final refuge at the First Cemetery. For his participation in the Patriotic War of 1812, he was awarded a gold sword with the inscription “For bravery.” After the war, he served under General I.V. Sabaneeva. He was a member of revolutionary societies from the moment of their inception, including the Union of Welfare, and was a friend of A.S. Pushkin, who dedicated the poem “To General Pushchin” to him.

The Fadeev-Witte family was well known in Odessa. At the end of June 1842, a new grave, decorated with a white marble column, rose in the cemetery in the block opposite the main gate. The epitaphs were taken from the last work of the late writer Elena Andreevna Gunn, née Fadeeva, “A Vain Gift”: “The power of the soul killed life... She turned her tears and sighs into songs...”. Elena Andreevna was the mother of Helena Blavatsky - famous writer who founded the Theosophical Society. At this place, a family crypt was later built, in which the following were buried: Elena Andreevna’s brother, famous military historian and publicist General Rostislav Andreevich Fadeev; her daughter, writer Vera Petrovna Zhelikhovskaya, next to her mother, uncle and beloved son Valeryan, a 22-year-old student at the Institute of Railway Engineers, who died in May 1888; sister of Elena Andreevna Ekaterina Andreevna Witte, mother of honorary citizen of Odessa S.Yu. Witte and others.

On December 3, 1855, Your Serene Highness Princess Elena Alexandrovna Suvorova-Rymnikskaya, née Naryshkina, granddaughter of Admiral D.N., died and was buried. Senyavin. In his first marriage to his son A.V. Suvorov Arkady Alexandrovich, in the second - for Prince V.S. Golitsyn. She was a friend of V.A. Zhukovsky, G. Rossini wrote a cantata in her honor, and A.S. Pushkin dedicated the poem “I have long carried the memory of her in the depths of my heart.”

From the early morning of February 19, 1919, Cathedral Square and the surrounding streets were full of people, public transport stopped - Odessa saw off in last path“queen of the screen” Vera Kholodnaya. “Odessa has never seen such a grand funeral,” newspapers wrote the next day. A short film about this ceremony can still be seen today. A funeral meeting took place at the cemetery, at which artist Yuliy Ubeiko spoke prophetic words:

“But believe, oh Vera, you, queen,

The screen will not be forgotten in a thousand years..."

The coffin was placed in the crypt where the previously deceased Russian theater artist M. Stosina rested. At the head of the grave of friend and comrade V. Kholodnaya, buried in 1934 at the 2nd cemetery of Pyotr Chardynin, in the early 70s of the 20th century, a white bas-relief was placed - the profile of the famous artist.

Over the years, many prominent scientists, the flower of Russian science, were buried in the cemetery. Among them:

Ivan Pavlovich Blaramberg (1772-1831) archaeologist, one of the first researchers of antiquities of the Black Sea coast, founder of the Odessa and Kerch museums of antiquities. He took the lead in determining the location of a number of ancient cities, fortresses and settlements, including Tire and Nikonia;

Apollo Aleksandrovich Skalkovsky (1808-1898) - director of the main statistical committee of the Novorossiysk region, one of the founders of the Odessa Society of History and Antiquities, author of widely known studies on the history of Ukraine, the Ukrainian Cossacks, Odessa, including “Chronological review of the history of the Novorossiysk region”, “ The first thirty anniversary of Odessa", "Admiral de Ribas and the conquest of Hadzhibey";

Alexander Alexandrovich Kochubinsky (1845-1907) - Slavic scholar, professor at Novorossiysk University.

How many people are buried in the cemetery, destroyed in the 1930s, is unknown, and it is almost impossible to establish this figure. One can only justifiably assert that its vast territory is a “motley kingdom” of those who founded Odessa and placed it among the largest and most beautiful cities in the world, who glorified it for centuries. Many of the best sons and daughters of the Fatherland found their final refuge here: war heroes, talented administrators and diplomats, industrialists and merchants, architects and artists, scientists and writers, philanthropists.

The task of the current and subsequent generations is to preserve this priceless heritage. Today, the necropolis needs serious study and constant attention to it from both those in power and the public.

Victor Golovan

The Old Christian Cemetery in Odessa (other names - First Christian Cemetery, Preobrazhenskoye Cemetery) is a complex of cemeteries in the city of Odessa, which existed from the founding of the city until the early 1930s, when it was destroyed along with all the monuments and graves. On the territory of the cemetery there was a park of culture and recreation - “Ilyich Park” (later “Preobrazhensky Park”) and a zoo. Burials in the cemetery were carried out until the second half of the 1880s, then they were prohibited due to lack of space; outstanding personalities, with special permission, and the closest relatives of those already buried were buried until the destruction of the cemetery in the 1930s. About 200 thousand people were buried in the cemetery, including the first builders and first residents of Odessa.

Old city cemeteries, divided according to the religion of the deceased - Christian, Jewish (the first burials in the Jewish cemetery complex dated back to 1792), Karaite, Muslim and separate burial sites for suicides who died from the plague and military - appeared in Odessa during its inception at the very end of the Preobrazhenskaya streets. Over time, the territory of these cemeteries merged together and this cemetery began to be called the Old, First or Preobrazhensky cemetery of Odessa. Over the years of its existence, the cemetery constantly expanded, reaching an area of ​​34 hectares by the beginning of the twentieth century, and began to occupy the territory between Mechnikov and Novo-Shchepny streets, Vysoky and Tram lanes, as well as the “Plague Mountain” formed along Vodoprovodnaya Street. At first, the cemetery was surrounded by a ditch, and later surrounded by a stone wall. On August 25, 1820, the consecration of the cemetery Orthodox Church in the name of All Saints, the construction of which began in 1816, took place. In 1829, an almshouse was built, the foundation of which was laid with a contribution of 6 thousand rubles from the widow of one of the first city mayors and a wealthy merchant, Elena Klenova. In her honor, one of the departments was called Eleninsky. An almshouse was built not far from the temple. Later, already at the expense of G. G. Marazli and according to the design of the architect A. Bernardazzi, a new almshouse building was built (at 53 Mechnikova Street), and in 1888, according to the design of the architect Yu. M. Dmitrenko at the address Novoshchepnaya Ryad Street building 23, an orphanage building was built. In March 1840, tenders were held to contract the digging of graves in the cemetery. From June 5, 1840, the following payment was established: for nobles, officials, merchants and foreigners - in the summer 1 ruble 20 kopecks in silver; in winter - 1 ruble 70 kopecks; for children of the indicated classes - 60 and 80 kopecks, respectively; burghers and other ranks - 50 and 75 kopecks, and their children - 40 and 50 kopecks, respectively. The poor were not charged. In the subsequent period of the cemetery's existence, this fee was increased several times. Until 1841, several organizations monitored order in the cemetery - the city order of public contempt, a spiritual shelter Orthodox Church In the name of All Saints and the advice of the Evangelical Church...

Since the founding of Odessa, that is, at the turn of the 18th-19th centuries, far from the primarily developed seaside territory of the city, at the end of the current Preobrazhenskaya Street, a city cemetery arose, later called the First, and in the literature - the Old. As it was formed, the cemetery actually absorbed this a whole series"first » cemeteries, divided, as was customary in that era, on the basis of belonging to religious denominations - Christian, Jewish (called Jewish), Karaite, Mohammedan, as well as a burial plot for suicides and the so-called plague cemetery. Due to its age and period of origin, the Old Cemetery was formed from the burials of the first inhabitants and creators of Odessa. Over time, many outstanding people turned out to be buried here, who wrote the best pages in the history of not only Odessa, but the entire state, who gained worldwide fame - scientists, teachers, artists, military leaders. Those who died from plague, cholera and other epidemic infections were buried here.


The old cemetery was expanded several times (as the needs of the rapidly growing city increased). Judging by the plans of Odessa at the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th centuries, the cemetery finally began to occupy the territory between the current Mechnikov and Novo-Shchepny streets, Vysoky and Tram lanes, as well as the “Plague Mountain” formed along Vodoprovodnaya Street. The largest part of the territory was occupied by the First (Old) Christian Cemetery, which was an almost rectangular quadrangle with an area of ​​over 34 hectares. Opposite the entrance to the cemetery on the side of what is now Mechnikov Street was one of the first Orthodox churches in the city, consecrated in 1820 in the name of All Saints. The entrances to the cemetery from Mechnikov and Novo-Shchepnaya Ryad streets were equipped with gates with arches and wickets, and along the cemetery along these streets a number of charitable institutions were built - an almshouse, an orphanage, a cheap canteen, as well as residential buildings.

The cemetery was distinguished by many highly artistic tombstones over the graves and crypts, including those made of bronze, granite, and Italian “Carrara” marble, and therefore always attracted the attention of not only Odessa residents, but also city guests and tourists who learned about it from guidebooks. The cemetery was an interesting tourist site and served as a place for Sunday walks for townspeople. The most impressive gravestone structure at the Old Cemetery was created over the crypt of infantry general F.F. Radetsky, who died in 1890, and was most famous in the war of 1877 - 1878. for the liberation of Bulgaria from the Ottoman yoke. Contemporaries put this tombstone on a par with the monuments to Prince M.S. in terms of its perfection. Vorontsov, Empress Catherine II and the founders of Odessa, Emperor Alexander II, Duke A. de Richelieu, A.S. Pushkin. The tombstones above the crypts of a member of the commercial council and the Portuguese consul in Odessa, Count Jacques Porro, an elder of the petty-bourgeois class in the Odessa city public administration, a merchant of the 2nd guild, the mayor of A.N. Pashkov, the Anatra, Biryukov, Pototsky, Zavadsky, Keshko families, were distinguished with particular elegance. Rodokonaki, Mavrocordato, Rally. Even in the list of these names, the original multinationality of Odessa is noticeable.


In the 1920s, due to revolutions, wars, famine and the advent of Soviet power, the cemetery began to fall into disrepair due to the lack necessary care, robberies and artificial destruction. The cemetery church of All Saints was closed in 1934 and then dismantled. By decision of government agencies, cemetery gravestones began to be dismantled for the purpose of recycling and freeing up the territory for other needs; accessible burial sites were subjected to organized robbery. In 1937, on part of the territory of the Christian cemetery, the “Park of Culture and Leisure named after. Ilyich", and then the remaining territory was occupied by the zoo. The cemetery has been turned into a place for recreation and entertainment.

Over the past decades, the cemetery has become the object of close attention of professional historians, public organizations, journalists and amateur local historians. The Institute of Ukrainian Archeography and Source Studies took part in the research. M. Grushevsky of the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, the Odessa regional organization of the Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments, special publications were published, and many articles were published.

As a result of these works, the history of the cemetery was mainly studied, and the names of hundreds of the most remarkable people buried there became known. Among them:

Kamensky N.M. (1776-1811) - General of the Infantry, Count. At the age of 23, Major General Kamensky participated at the head of a regiment under the command of A.V. Suvorov in the battle of Saint Gotthard against the French, in which his regiment captured the banner, trophies, and 106 enemy soldiers and officers. In 1805, he took part in the battle of Austerlitz with his regiment, commanded a division in the battle of Preussisch-Eylau, for which he was awarded the Order of St. George and the rank of lieutenant general. In 1808-1809 participated in the Finnish campaign. During the siege of Sveaborg, he commanded the corps of General Raevsky, distinguished himself in battles with the Swedes, including hand-to-hand combat. In 1810, he replaced General P.I. Bagration as commander-in-chief of the troops operating against the Turks. As a result, several fortresses along the Danube were taken, Serbia was cleared of the Turks, huge trophies were taken and 5 thousand enemy soldiers and officers were captured. Emperor Alexander I addressed the hero’s mother with the words: “The services of your son to the Fatherland will remain unforgettable.”

F.M. de Ribas (1769 - 1845) - founder of the Odessa branch of the de Ribasov (Deribasov) family - retired prime minister, consul of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies for the ports of the Black and Azov Seas, one of the first residents and entrepreneurs of Odessa, was the first parade major of Odessa, gave Odessa his own garden, which became the city’s first public garden (Kazenny, Deribasovsky or City Garden on Deribasovskaya), and was awarded a medal for his participation in eliminating the plague of 1812. As a sign of respect for his services to the city, the grave of Felix de Ribas (in the 14th quarter near the wall of the horse-drawn depot) was surrounded by a cast-iron fence for the 100th anniversary of Odessa. Buried here are: his son M.F. de Ribas (1807-1882) - honorary consul, historian of Odessa, bibliographer, journalist and editor of the first newspaper published in Odessa "Journal d'Odessa" on French, expert on Odessa antiquities and L.M. de Ribas (1751-1839) - historian of Odessa.

Pushkin L.S. (1805-1852) - poet and officer, retired major, court councilor, served in the department of spiritual affairs of foreign confessions and military service. Brother of A.S. Pushkin. He established himself as a brave officer, was awarded several times, participated in the Russian-Iranian (1826-1828) and Russian-Turkish (1828-1829) wars, the Polish campaign of 1831. In recent years he served in Odessa in the customs department, got married here and became the father of a family. His poetry was highly appreciated by V. Belinsky.

Sabaneev I.V. (1770 - 1825) - retired infantry general, participant in the Russian-Turkish war of 1787-1791, the Italian and Swiss campaigns of A.V. Suvorov, the Russian-French 1806-1807, the Russian-Swedish 1809, Russian -Turkish 1806-1812 and the Patriotic War of 1812, the liberation campaign in Europe in 1813-1814. He received awards from Russia and Prussia. IN recent years commanded the army in Novorossiya. A good friend of A. Pushkin from Chisinau and Odessa. He donated many of his books to the Odessa Public Library, delivered on two huge carts.


In memory of the merits of the valiant general and citizen, at the suggestion of M.S. Vorontsov, the bridge over the Military Descent built in 1836 and the resulting passage were named after him. He was buried in the Old Christian Cemetery behind the church; On the grave there was a tombstone in the form of a marble coffin.

Pushchin P.S. (1785-1865) - retired major general, participant in the Russian-French 1805 and the Patriotic Wars of 1812.

Mavrocordato A.P. (sk. 1871) and his descendants - the founders and owners of a trading company in Odessa, merchants of the 1st and 2nd guilds, hereditary honorary citizens and their spouses.

Rodokonaki P.F. (1840, Odessa - 1899, Paris) - a large landowner, turned his fortune to the development of industry in the southern region - the creator of a number of enterprises; member of the Odessa City Duma, first chairman of the board of the city credit society; founder of the Greek almshouse in Odessa, vice-chairman of the Greek charitable society, honorary member of the society for helping the poor and other charitable organizations, hereditary nobleman (1897).

Rodokonaki F.P. - hereditary honorary citizen, philanthropist, father of P.F. Rodokonaki.

Strelnikov V.S. (1839-1882) - Major General, graduate of the General Staff Academy and the Military Law Academy, comrade of the military prosecutor of the St. Petersburg Military District Court and professor of the Military Law Academy, military prosecutor of the Kyiv Military District Court. He took part in a number of trials in Kyiv against anti-state, revolutionary organizations, and was distinguished by the extreme severity of his decisions. Participated in the development of regulations on state protection, headed the investigation of political crimes in the southwest. He arrived in Odessa on official business and was shot by Narodnaya Volya member S.M. Khalturin.

Stroganov A.G. (1795-1891) - statesman and public figure, count, artillery general, participant in the liberation campaign in Europe in 1813-1814. - fought in Germany and France, took part in the suppression of the 1831 uprising in Poland. He received not only domestic state awards, but also awards from Prussia, Austria, Poland, Greece, Holland, Luxembourg, and Turkey.

A.G. Stroganov graduated from the Corps of Railway Engineers. Served in the Life Guards Preobrazhensky Regiment (1829-1830). Occupied positions: comrade of the Minister of Internal Affairs (1834-1836), Chernigov, Podolsky, Kharkov Governor-General (1836-1838), Minister of Internal Affairs (1839-1841), inspector of reserve artillery (1850-1851), member of the State Council (1841 -1891), military governor of St. Petersburg (1954), Novorossiysk and Bessarabian governor-general (1855-1862).

Made a great personal contribution to the economic and cultural development Northern Black Sea region. After retiring, he lived continuously in Odessa for 28 years, while holding the modest but honorable title of a member of the Odessa City Duma. He was the president of the Odessa Society of History and Antiquities, which studies the history of the region. On the day of celebration in 1869 of the 50th anniversary civil service Count A.G. Stroganov was elected the first “eternal citizen”, i.e. an honorary resident of Odessa, and the largest stone bridge in old Odessa, opened in those days, over the Quarantine beam, was named after him.

Count A.G. Stroganov owned one of the most valuable libraries in Europe (more than 10 thousand volumes), which was collected by several generations of the Stroganovs. Nowadays the rare Stroganov Fund is located in scientific library Odessa National state university named after I.I. Mechnikov. A.G. Stroganov donated a significant part of the library to Tomsk University in 1880 (121 boxes of books, total weight about 3 thousand pounds).

In one fence at the Old Christian Cemetery there were two monuments made of labradorite and pink granite - over the grave of the count and his sister Poletika I.G. (1807-1890).

Radetsky F.F. (1820-1890) - General of Infantry. Active participation in Russian-Turkish war 1877-1878 on the territory of Bulgaria for the liberation of the peoples of Europe from the Ottoman yoke brought him world fame. The 8th Army Corps, under the command of Lieutenant General F.F. Radetsky, which included the 4th Infantry Brigade of the Odessa Military District, fought its way to the Balkans, where it took over the world-famous defense of the Shipka Pass. This pass became the key to the entire campaign of 1877-1878. The result of the united action of all detachments under the general leadership of Radetzky was the capture of the Shipka army of Wessel Pasha. This was the end of the entire campaign, the rest was just a further development of the Shipka victory: not only the defensive line of the Balkans was broken, but also the entire position of the Turks. The Turkish government, fearing for the fate of its capital, ordered its troops to hastily retreat to Constantinople. For this brilliant operation, Radetzky was promoted to infantry general on December 29 and awarded the Order of St. on January 4, 1878. George, 2nd degree for No. 116 (for the five-month brave defense of the Shipka Pass and the capture of the entire army of Wessel Pasha on December 28, 1877). In April 1878 - appointed adjutant general to His Imperial Majesty and chief of the 55th Podolsk infantry regiment.

As a result of the war, according to the Berlin Treaty of July 1 (13), 1878, broad autonomy was granted to Bulgaria, independence to Serbia, Montenegro and Romania, and freedom of religion was ensured in their territories. Part of Bessarabia (now part of the Odessa region) and Batum with its port were transferred to Russia. Duty-free transit of goods through Bulgaria was established, decisions regarding the expansion and freedom of commercial shipping on the Black Sea were confirmed, which had the most favorable consequences for the development of Odessa and its port.

General Radetzky was elected honorary citizen of the cities of Poltava and St. Petersburg. Radetzky's merits were even recognized by foreign states, which granted him their orders. The war hero became extremely popular - he was greeted and celebrated everywhere as a national hero.

On May 10, 1882, Radetzky was appointed commander of the troops of the Kharkov Military District, and in 1888 he was transferred to the same position in the Kiev Military District. In 1889, Radetzky was appointed a member of the State and Military Councils.


At the end of November 1889, Fyodor Fedorovich went to Odessa, where he planned to move with his family. On the morning of January 12, 1890, F.F. Radetsky and his family arrived in Odessa, where he settled in house No. 2 on Preobrazhenskaya Street (a memorial plaque was installed on the house), but at 23:55 on the night of January 14, 1890, he died suddenly , and on January 19 he was buried at the First Christian Cemetery, near the northern wall of the Church of All Saints. The funeral of F.F. Radetsky had unprecedented solemnity for Odessa.

Boltin A.A. (sk. 1901) - captain 1st rank, explorer Far East, discoverer of Nakhodka Bay, fire major of Odessa, died after an injury received while putting out a fire.

At the First (Old) CemeteryParticipants of the Eastern (Crimean) War of 1853-1856 were buried:

retired Major General Baranovich Yakov Stepanovich (1825-1888),
Lieutenant General Gaines Alexander Konstantinovich (1878-1880),
Colonel Krestinsky Nikolai Gavrilovich (1832-1877),
retired infantry general Leaders Alexander Nikolaevich (1790-1874) - the Odessa defense headquarters was located in his house,
Lieutenant General Petrov Viktor Alexandrovich (1820-1885),
Lieutenant General Plekhnevich Leonid Andreevich (1829-1886),
retired major general Fadeev Rostislav Andreevich (1824-1883),
Lieutenant General Shostak Andrey Andreevich (18166-1876),
Lieutenant General Engelhardt Nikolai Fedorovich (1799-1856),

with them are the defenders of Sevastopol:

retired lieutenant colonel Ilya Petrovich Voronich (11835-1906),
priest Kalashnikov Ioann Silinich (?-1877),
Lieutenant General Mikhailov Leonid Kondratyevich (1834-1898),
retired Major General Georgy Ivanovich Shestakov (1804-1882).

The following were also buried at the First Cemetery:

Orlay I.S. (1771-1829) - actual state councilor, first director of the Richelieu Lyceum.

Murzakevich N.N. (1805-1883) - Privy Councilor, one of the founders of the Odessa Society of History and Antiquities. In Odessa he worked in customs, then entered the Richelieu Lyceum, and in 1853 he became its director.

Blaramberg I.P. (1772, France-1831) - court councilor (1808), prosecutor of the commercial court in Odessa. In 1810-1811 - customs inspector of the Odessa customs district, since 1825 - official on special assignments under Count M.S. Vorontsov.


He was engaged in archeology and in 1825 an archaeological museum was opened in his house (Kanatnaya St., 2).

Skalkovsky A.A. (1808-1898) - archaeologist, statistician of the Novorossiysk region, historian of Odessa in the first decades, who was also called “Herodotus of Novorossiya.” One of the founders of the Odessa Society of History and Antiquities, the Society of Agriculture of Southern Russia. He devoted 70 years of his life to the “living history” of Odessa and Novorossia, which he reflected in many of his books.

Ligin V.N. (1846-1900, France) - Privy Councilor, professor at Novorossiysk University. For teaching, he created an office equipped by mechanic-inventor I.A. Timchenko. In 1882-1887. headed the Odessa branch of the Russian Technical Society. Since 1884 - dean of the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics. In 1895 he was elected mayor. Since 1897 - trustee of the Warsaw educational district.

Trachevsky A.S. (1838-1906) - professor general history and rector of Novorossiysk University, author of a large number of popular science works and textbooks.

Vera Kholodnaya(1893-1919) - a widely known and popular actress of pre-revolutionary cinema, achieved fame that no other actress of that time had. She starred in many films.


Gann E.A. (1814-1842) - a popular writer, the epitaph for the posthumous complete edition of whose works was written by V.G. Belinsky. The grave was located opposite the main gate of the cemetery, where a family crypt was later built in which her relatives were buried:

Fadeev R.A. (sk. 1883) - general, major military historian, writer and publicist,

Zhelikhovskaya V.P. (sk. 1886) - famous writer,

Witte E.A. (born 1898) - mother of honorary citizen of Odessa S.Yu. Witte,

Witte B.Yu (born 1902) - senior chairman of the Odessa Court Chamber.

Skarzhinsky V.P. (1787-1861) - participant in the Patriotic War of 1812, a forestry scientist who developed and transformed the steppes of New Russia into forests and gardens. Public figure. A monument to him was erected in the City Garden.

Andreevsky E.S. (1809-1872) - doctor of medicine, epidemiologist, organizer of the first mud bath in Europe on the Kuyalnitsky estuary. A monument to him by B. Edwards was erected in front of the mud baths in 1891.

Petrov A.G. (1803-1887) - director of the Richelieu Lyceum, trustee of the Odessa educational district.

Sokalsky P.P. (1832-1887) - Ukrainian composer and music critic, organizer of the Odessa branch of the Russian Musical Society.

And many thousands of other famous and now unknown people...

In a short article it is impossible to give any full description Odessa Old Cemetery and a list of famous people buried here.

The study and popularization of its history should be the task of a museum and a special exhibition specially created for this team, which will make it possible to show the enduring value of this historical and memorial place, to remind of the worthy creators of Odessa and its history, of the heroes of the Fatherland, of our predecessors. All this will make it possible to create a unique memorial historical and cultural center of our city, region, and country.

P.S. "Mouthpiece of Odessa"

In addition to the article by Gennady Kalugin about the past of the Odessa First (Old) Cemetery, we offer to the attention of visitors to our website a photo report from Preobrazhensky Park (formerly the Ilyich Park of Culture and Leisure), located on the burial site of the creators of Odessa (