The Renovationist Schism in the Don Region and the Activities of «Archbishop» Melchizedek (Nikolayev) [PDF]
The article deals with the history of the renovationist schism in the Diocese of Don and Novocherkassk and with the role played in that process by “Archbishop” Melchizedek (also known as Nikolayev, Nikolev, or Nikolin).
Shadrina Alla
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Formation of prerequisites for the renovationist schism among the liberal nobility and clergy of Orel guberniya in 1900–1917 [PDF]
Based on the analysis of the periodicals of Orel guberniya of the early 20th century, as well as information on the public utterances of provincial public fi gures on the Church question in the pre-revolutionary period, the author reconstructs the ...
Timofey Balyko
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The origin and activity of Yelets autocephaly in Orel diocese in the early 1920s: a history of resistance to the Renovationist Schism in the Russian Orthodox Church [PDF]
The article discusses the process of creation in 1922-1923. Yelets autocephaly, whose leaders - as well as the leaders of the Petrograd, Ufa, Belev and Nizhny Tagil autocephalies - refused to recognize the authority of the renovationist "Supreme Church ...
Timofey Balyko
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What Compromise with the Renovationists Agreed Patriarch Tikhon to in 1923–1924? Part 1: Negotiations with the “Holy Synod” of Evdokim (Meshchersky), 1923 [PDF]
The proposed article, based on the sources of various types (official, clerical, journalistic, and personal ones) and origins (ecclesiastical, schismatic, and state), examines attempts — under the guise of church reconciliation — to impose on Patriarch ...
Priest Alexander V. Mazyrin
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Orders of admission to the Orthodox Church from the Renovationist Schism. Documents of Patriarch Tikhon and Patriarch’s locum tenens Petr, 1923‒1925 [PDF]
This publication introduces the earlier unknown documents of Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus’ Tikhon (Bellavin) and his Holy Synod, as well as of his successor, Patriarch’s Locum Tenens Metropolitan of Krutitsy Petr (Polyanskiy). They deal with admission
Alexander Mazyrin, Sergey Nikolaev
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WHAT COMPROMISE WITH THE RENOVATIONISTS AGREED PATRIARCH TIKHON TO IN 1923–1924? PART 2: NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE “LIVING CHURCH” OF VLADIMIR KRASNITSKY. 1924 [PDF]
The proposed article, based on the sources of various types (official, clerical, journalistic, and personal ones) and origins (ecclesiastical, schismatic, and state), examines attempts — under the guise of church reconciliation — to impose on Patriarch ...
Priest Alexander V. Mazyrin
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“Archbishop” Vladimir (Ivanov) and the renovationist schism in Kuban in 1941–1945 [PDF]
The appeal to this topic is conditioned by the following factors: the increased interest of the Russian state and society in the Church and the frequent attempts to bring schism and disorder into the Church.
Toporov Maxim, Priest
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The Soviet Renovationist Schism and the Problem of the Transition to the New Calendar in the 1920s [PDF]
The paper is devoted to the attempts of the God-fighting communist government to impose a Western calendar alien to the Russian Orthodox Church, with the assistance of the Renovationist schism inspired by this government.
Priest Alexander V. Mazyrin
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Leaflet “Memo for Churchmen” as the Source for the History of Renovationist Schism in Altai (1924)
One of the plots in the history of the Russian Orthodox Church of the time of Patriarch Tikhon is considered, when in 1924 the renewal group “Living Church” headed by priest V. D. Krasnitsky had a try to join the supporters of the patriarch. It was established that this plot was repeatedly considered in literature, but its comprehensive study became ...
openaire +3 more sources
ON THE HISTORY OF THE RENOVATIONIST SCHISM IN TRANSCAUCASIA AND UNSUCCESSFUL PROJECTS OF RECONCILIATION BETWEEN THE RUSSIAN AND GEORGIAN ORTHODOX CHURCHES (1922–1923) [PDF]
The article is devoted to the initial history of the Renovationist schism in the Soviet Transcaucasia, mainly in the Baku diocese. The main sources of information became letters written in July 1923 to the Holy Patriarch Tikhon by the last governor of ...
priest Aleksandr V. Mazyrin
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