Old St. John's Cemetery
| Old St. John's Cemetery | |
|---|---|
![]() Teller Chapel in Tartu Vana-Jaani Cemetery  | |
| Details | |
| Established | 1773 | 
| Location | |
| Country | Estonia | 
| Coordinates | 58°23′36″N 26°43′41″E / 58.39321°N 26.727957°E | 

Old St. John's Cemetery (Estonian: Vana-Jaani kalmistu) lies in the southeastern part of Raadi Cemetery in Tartu, Estonia. It was entered into the National Register of Cultural Monuments on 23 May 1997.[1]
Following a ukase of Russian Empress Catherine II forbidding burials in churches, Old St. John's Cemetery was founded in 1773 under the ownership of St. John's Church, and formally opened on 5 November that year. It served as the burial location for St. John's German and Estonian congregations and the Tartu Russian church.[2] However, its name dates to the foundation of New St. John's Cemetery on Puiestee Street.[2]
There are several buildings of historical value in the cemetery: the family chapel of Mayor Jacob Friedrich Teller, the Rauch-Seidlitz chapel, and the Carl Klein chapel.
Notable burials
- Aleksander Adojaan
 - Villem Alttoa
 - Betti Alver (1906–1999), Estonian poet
 - Endel Ani
 - Ülo Arend
 - Paul Ariste (1905–1990), Estonian linguist
 - Lauri Aus (1970–2003), Estonian professional cyclist
 - Karl Ernst von Baer (1792–1876), Baltic German scientist and explorer
 - Valeri Bezzubov
 - Rem Blum
 - Erdmann Gustav von Broecker
 - Wilhelm Gottfried Eisenschmidt
 - Henn Elmet
 - Villem Ernits
 - Johann Philipp Gustav Ewers (1779–1830), German legal historian and the founder of Russian legal history
 - Friedrich Robert Faehlmann (1778–1850), Estonian writer, medical doctor and philologist
 - Harald Haberman
 - August Matthias Hagen (1794–1878), Baltic German painter and graphic artis
 - Julie Wilhelmine Hagen-Schwarz (1824–1902), Baltic German painter
 - Traugott Hahn
 - Samuel Gottlieb Rudolf Henzi (1794–1828), Swiss linguist, professor at the University of Tartu (stone removed by the Soviets)
 - Kaarel Ird
 - Aino Järvesoo
 - Epp Kaidu
 - Ants Kallikorm
 - Gunnar Kangro
 - Paul Kard
 - Elmar Karu
 - Arnold Kask
 - Paul Kenkmann
 - Aksel Kipper
 - Johann Wilhelm Krause
 - Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald
 - Fred Kudu
 - Olevi Kull
 - Eerik Kumari
 - Grigori Kuzmin
 - Kuno Kõrge
 - Bernhard Eduard Otto Körber
 - Valter Külvet
 - Roland Laasmäe
 - Leo Leesment
 - Mart Lepik
 - Artur Lind
 - Juri Lotman
 - Johannes Lükki
 - Jaan Maramaa
 - Otto Wilhelm Masing
 - Uku Masing
 - Johann Karl Simon Morgenstern
 - Oleg Mutt (1920–1986), linguist and translator
 - Pent Nurmekund
 - Salme Nõmmik
 - Uno Palm
 - Harald Peep
 - Urmas Petti
 - Rudolf Põldmäe
 - Leo Päi
 - Valter Pärtelpoeg
 - Richard Ritsing
 - Karl August Senff
 - Rudolf Säre
 - Kulno Süvalep
 - Evald Tordik
 - Gustav Teichmüller
 
References
- ^ "4317 Tartu Vana-Jaani kalmistu" (in Estonian). National Register of Cultural Monuments. 6 January 2011. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
 - ^ a b "Vana-Jaani kalmistu" (in Estonian). City of Tartu Register Office. 17 May 2004. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
 
External links
 Media related to Old St. John's Cemetery at Wikimedia Commons
