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Theotokos of Kursk

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ghirlandajo (talk | contribs) at 12:00, 25 April 2013 (Ghirlandajo moved page Kursk Root Icon to Theotokos of Kursk: Курская Коренная is not used outside Russia). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Kurskaya Korennaya icon

The Kursk Root Icon (also Our Lady of Kursk) ([Богоматерь Курская Коренная] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help), Bogomater Kurskaya Korennaya, literally Theotokos of Kursk, Found Among the Roots) is an icon of Theotokos of the Sign, apparently painted in the thirteenth century and discovered in a forest near Kursk ca. 1300.

The icon was preserved in the Black Hermitage of the Roots (Chornaya Korennaya Pustyn), an abbey founded on the spot of its discovery. It was regularly brought from the abbey to Kursk in a great procession involving thousands of peasants and pilgrims. This ceremony is depicted in the famous painting by Ilya Repin; see Religious Procession in Kursk Province.

The icon actually incorporates as many as twelve figures on it: Theotokos, Infant Christ, God the Father above them (with the Holy Spirit as a dove) and nine Old Testament prophets. The image of Theotokos belongs to the Panagia type. It was regarded as a palladion of the Russian Imperial Army. After the Russian Revolution, the icon was brought by the White Army outside of Russia, where it is now held in New-York by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia.

The monastery near Kursk where the icon was held was formerly very rich and hosted one of the largest fairs in Imperial Russia. During the Soviet period the monastery cathedral (designed by Konstantin Thon) was demolished; restoration works are planned.