| Church of St. George | |
|---|---|
| Црква Светог Ђорђа Szent György Nagyvértanú szerb ortodox templom | |
Church of St. George | |
![]() Church of St. George | |
| 47°29′22″N19°03′26″E / 47.48944°N 19.05722°E /47.48944; 19.05722 | |
| Location | Budapest |
| Country | Hungary |
| Denomination | Serbian Orthodox |
| History | |
| Dedication | St. George[1] |
| Architecture | |
| Style | Baroque[2] |
| Administration | |
| Archdiocese | Eparchy of Buda |
TheChurch of St. George (Serbian Cyrillic:Црква Светог Ђорђа,Hungarian:Szent György Nagyvértanú szerb ortodox templom) inBudapest,Hungary, commonly known as the Serbian Church, is today the only Serbian Orthodox church in Hungarian capital city.[3] The church belongs to theEparchy of Buda and it is dedicated toSaint George. The Church of St. George is located in the heart of the city, less than 100 meters from theVáci Street, the main pedestrian zone. The building is protected by theHungarian National Office for Cultural Heritage.
On the site of the current church, an older Serbian place of worship was built during the settlement of the Serbs in this area during theOttoman Empire rule over theOttoman Hungary in the 16th and 17th centuries. Some sources indicate that there was a Serbian place of worship at the same site even before the 1526Battle of Mohács.[4] 1655 source indicate that the church had a separate cemetery next to the Kecskemét Gate.[4] In his travelogue from 1660 to 1664, Ottoman travelerEvliya Çelebi mentions that the Serbs in Pest had their own church.[4] In 1685, theHabsburg Empire took over Hungary from the Ottomans with Serbian community remaining in the city but with the destruction of their church in 1686.[4] During the 1690Great Migrations of the Serbs local Serb community in the city increased significantly and in 1695 Habsburg authorities granted the permission for the construction of the new Church.[4] In 1698, the church renovated by PatriarchArsenije III Čarnojević.
In the first half of the 18th century, Serbs constituted a significant portion of the population inPest, which led to the need for a larger and more solid church. Finally, in 1731, a project was prepared for a new church in theBaroque style, which was built in 1733. The church was built according to the plans ofAndrás Mayerhoffer (1690-1771) fromSalzburg. The Baroque bell tower was added in 1752. The original iconostasis for the church was created byStefan Tenecki.
In 1838, Pest was struck by a majorflood, resulting in damage to the oldiconostasis. Therefore, in 1850, the church received a new iconostasis in the spirit ofNeo-Renaissance. The creator of the new iconostasis was a Greek artist. The baroque church's garden is surrounded by a stone wall, and on the side facing the garden, the tombstones of Serbian believers buried in Pest were incorporated. At the corner of Szerb Street and Veres Pálné Street, there is a ceramic image depicting St. George slaying the dragon.
The Church of St. George in Pest has been the second most significant church of the Serbian community in Budapest after theChurch of Saint Demetrius. However, since the aforementioned church was heavily damaged duringWorld War II, it was demolished in 1949. As a result, the church in Pest became the only Serbian place of worship in the city. 1959 archaeological research confirmed that the current building was built at the site of an older church.[4]