Church All Saints Sunday (1819- 1930)
It is believed that this very church in the town has been built the longest – just over 100 years! It is also the church that is most often visited by parishioners – it is located at the entrance to the Central (also called Armenian) Cemetery.
The present appearance of the church consists of a circular volume crowned by a dome, to which a high bell tower is attached to the west by a lower room. The cylindrical part is the old one and represents the chapel of the Orthodox cemetery founded on this site in 1814.
The construction of the chapel began in 1818, dedicated to St. Nicholas, with Elena Matasariță as the founder. The construction plan was chosen by Metropolitan Gavriil Bănulescu-Bodoni himself.
It was a building that was part of the structural type of the rotunda, characteristic of the necropolis built at the turn of the 18th-19th centuries.
Transformed into a parish church, it became too small and in 1863 a bell tower and an intermediate space were added. The gaps between the columns of the outer gallery were built up, leaving only half the thickness of the columns open to view, interspersed with window openings and a doorway.
In 1880 the belfry in front of the entrance was added. The building has achieved a look typical of Russian churches, which were erected in the gubernias of south-eastern Russia.
Among the objects of worship here, undoubtedly the most important is the Icon of Our Lady of Poceyev.