Trinity Church on King George Island - Atlas Obscura

Trinity Church on King George Island

Russian Orthodox church built on an Antarctic island. 

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From the scorching deserts of Sinai to the frozen tundras of Siberia, Orthodox Christianity has a history of building its churches and monasteries in inhospitable places. But only a few can rival Trinity Church on King George Island.

The southernmost Orthodox church in the world, Trinity was built near Bellingshausen Station, Russia’s permanent outpost in Antarctica. In the mid-1990s, Patriarch Alexius II of Moscow gave his blessing for this audacious project. The church was constructed in Russia and transported by a supply ship to its present location. One or two monks from Troitse-Sergiyeva Lavra, considered the most important Russian monastery as it is the spiritual center of the Russian Orthodox Church, volunteer to man the church year-round.

While most of the buildings on this continent are built to hug the ground to reduce their exposure to the polar wind, this church proudly stands 15 meters tall. It is a wooden structure constructed from Siberian pine and carved in the traditional Russian style by master carpenters of Altay.

The priests manning the church take care of the spiritual needs of the staff of nearby Russian, Chilean, Polish, and Korean research stations. Their obligations include praying for the souls of 64 Russians who lost their lives in various expeditions, and the very occasional, very chilly, baptism.

The church is large enough to accommodate 30 visitors, but it is rarely filled to capacity. Recently, however, the church performed its first wedding—the first wedding ever celebrated in a church in Antarctica—between Chilean and Russian researchers.

Know Before You Go

Several tourist agencies organize charter flights from Punta Arenas, Chile, or Ushuaia, Argentina, to King George Island.

In partnership with KAYAK

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