The Imperial Orthodox Palestinian Society

The Imperial Orthodox Palestinian society,
 a charitable scientific organization. It was created in 1882 on the 
initiative of Grand Prince Sergei Alexandrovich (president for life) 
with the purpose of supporting Orthodoxy in the Holy Land (including 
Syria and Lebanon), acquaintance of Russians with the Palestine and 
pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
The Palestinian Society erected churches 
and hostels in the Holy Land, supported teacher seminaries, schools, 
ambulance stations and hospitals. The Society negotiated preferential 
passing duties for pilgrims due to which many thousands of Orthodox 
believers from Russia could visit the Holy Land annually. The 
Palestinian Society also carried out archaeological excavations, 
scientific expeditions, published hagiographies of Palestinian saints, 
descriptions and guides of the Holy Land. The Orthodox Palestinian 
Anthology was published from 1881, (known as the Palestinian Anthology 
since 1918), and Reports of Imperial Orthodox Palestinian Society from 
1891. Many outstanding scientists were members of the society, including
 V. V. Bartold, S. F. Oldenburg, I. Y. Krachkovsky, V. V. Latyshev, N. 
Y. Marr, and V. V. Struve. 
The Administration of the Palestinian 
Society, which had sections in many eparchies, was located in St. 
Petersburg at 36 Voznesensky Avenue. In 1885, the Chapel of St. 
Alexander Nevsky in Old Alexander's Market, which had raised money for 
the restoration of the Church of St. Nicholas of Mira in Turkey was 
transferred into the ownership of the Palestinian Society. In 1905, the 
chapel was sanctified as St. Nicholas’ Church. In 1913-15, the church 
dedicated to St. Nicholas of Mira was erected in its place in the 
Neo-Russian style. At the same time the Palestinian Society started 
building the Russian representative office with a church in the City of 
Bari in Italy, but the project was not completed on account of the 
Russian Revolution. 
In 1918, the Russian Palestinian Society was 
transferred to the Russian Academy of Sciences; its Russian properties 
were nationalized. 
The society now functions abroad under the original 
name along with the Jerusalem Spiritual Mission of the Moscow 
Patriarchate taking care of Russian Churches and Institutions in the 
Holy Land. In 1992, it was restored to its former status in Russia.
