Tikhvin Cemetery, Alexander Nevsky Square, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191167
Fyodor Dostoevsky passed away on January 28, 1881, at 8:38 PM. According to Orthodox custom, memorial services were held twice daily at the apartment in Kuznechny Lane. Singers from the nearby Vladimir Church, St. Isaac's Cathedral, and other churches performed. On Saturday, January 31, the body was carried out. Anna Dostoevskaya recalled: “Even the day before the removal, my brother, wishing to please me, said that eight such institutions planned to bring wreaths to Fyodor Mikhailovich’s coffin, but by morning there were already seventy-four wreaths, possibly even more... The funeral procession left the house at eleven o’clock and only reached the Alexander Nevsky Lavra after two o’clock.” The coffin was carried by the writer’s relatives and close friends, including his Petrashevsky Circle comrades Pleshcheev and Palm. The procession was led by students from all St. Petersburg educational institutions, followed by artists, actors, and delegations from Moscow: “a long line of wreaths carried on poles, numerous youth choirs singing funeral hymns, the coffin raised high above the crowd, and a huge mass of people numbering several tens of thousands following the cortege.” Up to sixty thousand people took part in the procession.
The coffin of Dostoevsky was brought into the Holy Spirit Church of the Lavra, where a parastas (solemn all-night vigil) was performed. On February 1, a solemn funeral service took place in the church. The Tikhvin Cemetery was so crowded that “people climbed onto monuments, sat in trees, clung to fences, and the procession moved slowly, passing under wreaths bowed on both sides from various delegations.” Professors and literary figures spoke over the open grave.
To this day, in the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, at the Tikhvin Cemetery, in the so-called Necropolis of the Masters of Arts, lies the grave of Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky—the final resting place of the greatest writer in this world. The writer’s widow, Anna Grigorievna, recalled that the Alexander Nevsky Lavra offered any place in its cemeteries for his burial. A representative of the Lavra said that the monastic community “requests to accept the place free of charge and would consider it an honor if the remains of the writer Dostoevsky, who zealously stood for the Orthodox faith, were to rest within the walls of the Lavra.” The place was found near the graves of Karamzin and Zhukovsky; two years later, a monument was erected based on a design by architect Vasilyev and sculptor Laveretsky (workshop of Andrey Barinov).
In 1968, near Dostoevsky’s monument, the ashes of the writer’s widow, Anna Grigorievna, who died in 1918 in Yalta, and his grandson, A. F. Dostoevsky, were interred. Dostoevsky, who attended Nekrasov’s funeral on December 30, 1877, liked the Novodevichy Cemetery, and the writer’s widow planned to bury him there. However, the Alexander Nevsky Lavra offered any of its cemeteries for Dostoevsky’s burial. Anna Grigorievna chose a place next to Zhukovsky. The name of the great novelist gave special significance to the Lavra necropolis as a National Pantheon, where Lomonosov, Krylov, Karamzin, Glinka, and others were already buried.
The coffin of Dostoevsky was brought into the Holy Spirit Church of the Lavra, where a parastas (solemn all-night vigil) was performed. On February 1, a solemn funeral service took place in the church. The Tikhvin Cemetery was so crowded that “people climbed onto monuments, sat in trees, clung to fences, and the procession moved slowly, passing under wreaths bowed on both sides from various delegations.” Professors and literary figures spoke over the open grave. Among them was the twenty-eight-year-old Vladimir Solovyov...
One hundred and seven years passed, and in 1988 the anniversary of F. M. Dostoevsky’s death was marked by a memorial service at the grave. After decades of silence, prayer once again sounded at the place where one of Russia’s greatest religious writers is buried...
Sources:
https://family-history.ru/material/biography/mesto/dostoyevsky/mogila/
https://www.prlib.ru/item/427544
Fontanka River Embankment, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191187
Moskovsky Ave., 22, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013
Ligovsky Ave., 65, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191040
Karavannaya St., 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023
Grafsky Lane, 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Kuznechny Lane, 5/2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Rubinstein St, 32, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Kazan Street, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
Bolshoy Prospekt Vasilievsky Island, 4a, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034
6 Voznesensky Ave, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000
Bolshaya Podyacheskaya St., 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Nevsky Ave., 18, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
Territory. Peter and Paul Fortress, 14, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197198
Pushkinskaya, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191180
3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 8b, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005
litera A, Kaznacheyskaya St., 4/16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Malaya Podyacheskaya St., 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Stolyarny Lane, 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
27 Voznesensky Ave., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Bolshaya Konyushennaya St., 27, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
3 Rimsky-Korsakov Avenue, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Serpukhovskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013
3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005
per. Ulyany Gromovoy, 8, apt. 36, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036
Sadovaya St., 37A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Dostoevsky St., 2/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Grazhdanskaya St., 19/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Griboedov Canal Embankment, 104d, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Gorokhovaya St., 41, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Mikhailovskaya St., 1/7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186