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== [[Wooden Churches of Ukraine]] ==
== [[Wooden Churches of Ukraine]] ==
[[Image:Pirogiv church.jpg|thumb|200px|Wooden church at the Pyrohiv Museum]]Wooden churches in Ukraine date from the beginning of Christianity in Ukraine and comprises a set of unique styles and forms specific to many sub-regions of the country. As a form of vernacular culture, construction of the churches in specific styles is passed on to subsequent generations. When Ukrainians emigrated to the new world in the late 19th century, many used these forms but adapted their construction to new materials and environmental conditions.
Wooden churches in Ukraine date from the beginning of Christianity in Ukraine and comprises a set of unique styles and forms specific to many sub-regions of the country. As a form of vernacular culture, construction of the churches in specific styles is passed on to subsequent generations. When Ukrainians emigrated to the new world in the late 19th century, many used these forms but adapted their construction to new materials and environmental conditions.


== Wooden Churches of Central and Eastern Ukraine ==
== Wooden Churches of Central and Eastern Ukraine ==

Revision as of 16:58, 19 June 2008

I am a third year art history, anthropology and post-colonialism student at the University of Saskatchewan, in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.

I'm taking a short wikivacation while I am writing finals during April 2006.

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Wooden churches in Ukraine date from the beginning of Christianity in Ukraine and comprises a set of unique styles and forms specific to many sub-regions of the country. As a form of vernacular culture, construction of the churches in specific styles is passed on to subsequent generations. When Ukrainians emigrated to the new world in the late 19th century, many used these forms but adapted their construction to new materials and environmental conditions.

Wooden Churches of Central and Eastern Ukraine

19th century view of village of Trypillia and its wooden church, prior to damming of Dnipro river (Regional Archeological Museum)

Wooden church architecture was prevalent through the first millennium of Christianity in Ukraine, from the time of Volodymyr in Kyiv. While masonry churches were prevalent in urban areas, wooden church architecture continued primarily in Ukrainian villages of central and eastern Ukraine.

Wooden Churches of Western Ukraine

Relatively isolated peasant cultures in western and Transcarpathian Ukraine were able to maintain construction into the early 20th century in wooden styles. Many ethnographic regions maintained specific styles of architecture.

Bukovyna
The traditional Bukovynian church features a tall gabled roof, but often terminates in splayed roof over the polygonal sanctuary. The roofwork features opasannia and was covered in wooden shingles. The stucture was usually built from logs but was often covered in clay and whitewashed, similar to Bukovynian style homes.

Lemko
Lemko churches most often used a three section church with very tall gabled roofs and a tower over each section with the tower over the entrance being the tallest. Topping each tower is a spire, bearing resemblance to Gothic spires, albeit constructed in Ukrainian style.

Hutsul
Hutsul churches most often were 5 section cruciform churches, using spruce logs to form walls with opasannia type arcades. The central dome is formed in an octahedral shape with a splayed roof, instead of an onion dome.

Boiko
Boiko churches are defined by their three section design, with the central nave being the largest. Intricate, multi-tiered and shingled roofwork is the most distinguishing factor in Boiko church design. The structures used the most traditional techniques, being both frameless walls and rafterless roofs as well as using opasannia and piddashshia

Ternopil
Ternopil construction styles are considered a mix of Carpathian style and Kyiv styles. Two styles prevail: Ternopil Nave Style and Ternopil Cruciform Style. The nave style used a long rectangular shape with gabled roofing on opposite ends with a small decorative onion dome, often not visible from inside the church. The cruciform style uses an equidistant cruciform pattern with a structural central onion dome, and gabled roofing over each cruciform section. While constructed in wood in villages, this style often used masonry in urban areas.