Contacts: Jim Aisner, jaisner@hbs.edu, (617) 495-6157
Kerry Parke, kparke@hbs.edu, (617) 495-6931
NEW RUSSIAN BELL TOLLS AT HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL
HBS Readies for Centennial Year with New Bell from St. Danilov Monastery
Original HBS Bell Lowered
Photo: Neal Hamberg
BOSTON - Harvard Business School (HBS) marked a unique occasion today - the installation of its "Centennial Bell" in the cupola of the School's Baker Library. (Listen to podcast.) The bell replaces one of eighteen bells made in Russia before the Russian Revolution and owned by Harvard University for more than 75 years. In the course of the next year or so, all of them will be returned to Russia's St. Danilov Monastery in an exchange that will restore the originals to the monastery, considered the spiritual home of Russian Orthodoxy.
Old and New: Side by Side
Photo: Neal Hamberg
The new bell bears the inscription "Harvard Business School, 1908-2008," and the words "Leadership-Excellence-Integrity," concepts at the core of the School's mission of educating leaders who make a difference in the world. It also features images of Baker Library, the St. Danilov Monastery, and a Fabergé egg nestled in decorative ivy. Before shipment to the Harvard Business School campus, the bell was consecrated on July 24 by Patriarch Alexey II of Moscow and All Russia.
Harvard's Peter Riley Rings New Bell
Photo: Neal Hamberg
HBS Centennial Bell Rising
Photo: Neal Hamberg
One bell was hung at Baker Library, while the other seventeen were sent to Lowell House, a dormitory for Harvard College undergraduates.
The costs associated with the bell exchange are being funded by the Link of Times Foundation. Cast in the 18th and 19th centuries, the original bells are considered to be among the best pre-Russian Revolution bell sets, or ensembles, in existence.
The original bell will arrive in Moscow on September 12, 2007. The seventeen Lowell House bells will be exchanged in the summer of 2008 and returned to the monastery that autumn.
Facts and Figures:
- The original HBS bell was not included in the Lowell House ensemble because it was regarded as too close in tone to one of the larger Lowell House bells.
- The old bell weighs 4,731 pounds and is 59 inches in diameter.
- The new bell weighs 4,409 pounds, is 57 inches in diameter and 61 inches in height.
- Bells in the Russian Orthodox faith are considered "singing icons" that act as a spiritual intermediary between God and the faithful.
- The bells do not swing but hang in a static position. They are rung with clappers.
- New bell adorned with the Harvard University and Harvard Business School seals, the Baker Library facade, an image of the Danilov Monastery, a Faberge egg, English Ivy, the foundry mark and the words "Leadership - Excellence - Integrity," and "Harvard Business School, 1908 - 2008."
Founded in 1908 as part of Harvard University, Harvard Business School (www.hbs.edu) is located on a 40-acre campus in Boston. Its faculty of more than 200 offers full-time programs leading to the MBA and doctoral degrees, as well as more than 40 Executive Education programs. For almost a century, HBS faculty have drawn on their research, their experience in working with organizations worldwide, and their passion for teaching to educate leaders who have shaped the practice of business around the globe.
