The Old Believers in Imperial Russia : oppression, opportunism and religious identity in Tsarist Moscow
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Old Believers in Imperial Russia : oppression, opportunism and religious identity in Tsarist Moscow
(The Library of modern Russia, 21)
Bloomsbury Academic, 2020, c2018
- : pb
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Note
First published: I.B. Tauris, 2018
Includes bibliographical references (p. [246]-254) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
'Two Romes have fallen. The third stands. And there will be no fourth.' So spoke Russian monk Hegumen Filofei of Pskov in 1510, proclaiming Muscovite Russia as heirs to the legacy of the Roman Empire following the collapse of the Byzantine Empire. The so-called 'Third Rome Doctrine' spurred the creation of the Russian Orthodox Church, although just a century later a further schism occurred, with the Old Believers (or 'Old Ritualists') challenging Patriarch Nikon's liturgical and ritualistic reforms and laying their own claim to the mantle of Roman legacy. While scholars have commonly painted the subsequent history of the Old Believers as one of survival in the face of persistent persecution at the hands of both tsarist and church authorities, Peter De Simone here offers a more nuanced picture. Based on research into extensive, yet mostly unknown, archival materials in Moscow, he shows the Old Believers as versatile and opportunistic, and demonstrates that they actively engaged with, and even challenged, the very notion of the spiritual and ideological place of Moscow in Imperial Russia.Ranging in scope from Peter the Great to Lenin, this book will be of use to all scholars of Russian and Orthodox Church history.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: Building Holy Moscow
Chapter 2: Identity in Conflict and Crisis, 1825 - 1856
Chapter 3: Redefining Boundaries, Redefining Identity, 1856 - 1905
Chapter 4: Realizing Holy Moscow, 1905 - 1917
Epilogue
by "Nielsen BookData"