fbpx
Wikipedia

15th–16th century Moscow–Constantinople schism

The schism between the Ecumenical Patriarchate and part of its Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus (which later became the Moscow Patriarchate) occurred between approximately 1467 and 1560.[a] This schism de facto ended supposedly around 1560.

15th–16th century Moscow–Constantinople schism
Dateapprox. 1467–1560
Also known as"Schism of the Church of Moscow of 1467–1560" (by V. M. Lurie [ru])
TypeChristian schism
Cause1. Decision of the Ecumenical Patriarchate (July 1439) to enter in union with the Catholic Church at the Council of Florence
2. Fall of Constantinople
Participants1. Ecumenical Patriarchate
2. Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
3. Popes Eugene IV and Calixtus III
OutcomeGrand Prince Ivan III of Russia refused to recognize Gregory the Bulgarian as head of Moscow's Church, which led to a rupture of communion between the Churches of Moscow and Constantinople in 1460. This break was mended by around 1560.

On 15 December 1448, Jonah became Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus' without the agreement of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, which made the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' de facto independent. In response, in 1458 a rival Metropolitan Gregory the Bulgarian was appointed and consecrated by the Pope of Rome as the Byzantine Catholic Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus'.[2] Metropolitan Gregory was then recognised by Patriarch Dionysius I of Constantinople in 1466; since Constantinople maintained the Union with the Catholic Church until 1484, Kiev returned under Constantinople's jurisdiction.[2] Dionysius therefore demanded in 1467 that all the hierarchs of the Muscovy submit to Gregory, but Moscow peremptorily refused. On the same year, Grand Prince Ivan III of Moscow declared a complete rupture of relations with the Patriarchate of Constantinople.

Relations were gradually restored and in 1560 the Patriarch of Constantinople considered the Metropolitan of Moscow to be his exarch. In 1589–1591, the Church of Moscow was recognized as autocephalous, and the Patriarch of Moscow later became the fifth Patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

Background edit

Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' edit

The Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' was a metropolis of the Eastern Orthodox Church that was erected on the territory of Kievan Rus'. It existed between 988 AD and 1596 AD. Canonically, it was under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. The episcopal seat (cathedra) was located in the city of Kiev.

Ecumenical Council edit

 
Grand Prince Vasily II
 
Isidore of Kiev

An Ecumenical council of the Church — the Council of Florence — took place from 1431 to 1449.[3] Although he resisted at first, the Grand Prince of MoscowVasily II of Moscow — eventually permitted the Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus'Isidore of Kiev — to attend the council on condition that Isidore should return with "the rights of Divine law and the constitution of the holy Church" uninjured.[4] The council healed the Great Schism by uniting the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. The union was proclaimed on 6 July 1439 in the document Laetentur Caeli [5][b] which was composed by Pope Eugene IV and signed by the Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund and all but one of the bishops present.[3] Some Greek bishops, perhaps feeling political pressure from the Byzantine Emperor, reluctantly accepted the decrees of the council. Other Eastern bishops, such as Isidore, did so with sincere conviction.[6] Sylvester Syropoulos[7] and other Greek writers charge Isidore with perjury because he accepted the union, despite his promise to Vasili II.[8]

Following the signing of the bull, Isidore returned to the Grand Duchy of Moscow. In the Kremlin's Dormition Cathedral, Isidore read the decree of unification aloud. He also passed a message to Vasili II from the Holy See, containing a request to assist the metropolitan in spreading the Union in Rus'. Three days later, Isidore was arrested by the Grand Prince and imprisoned in the Chudov Monastery. He arranged for certain Rus' clergy to denounce the metropolitan for refusing to renounce the union with Rome. As a result, the Great Prince of Moscow voided the union in his lands and imprisoned Isidore for some time.[8] Having adjudged Isidore to have apostatized to Catholicism, he was deposed by a local synod.[9]

Premises of the schism edit

The Council of Bishops of Moscow condemned Isidor and imprisoned him. They later sent a letter to the Patriarch of Constantinople in which they listed Isidore's faults and requested that his case be considered. They also asked to be allowed to ordain a Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus' by themselves; apparently, they had no doubt that Isidore would be deprived of his dignity. This letter has been interpreted in two ways. According to the historian Golubinsky, Moscow offered Constantinople a kind of compromise: Moscow gets the opportunity to ordain a Metropolitan and in return it does not raise the issue of the Union, while remaining in formal dependence on the uniate Patriarch of Constantinople. According to the historian Florya, the Eastern Orthodox of Moscow were sure of the imminent failure of the Union supporters, and were hoping for this failure.[10]

However, the situation was different, and the new Patriarch of Constantinople was the uniate Metrophanes II, who continued to follow the decisions of the Council of Florence. The Eastern Orthodox of Moscow did not dare to judge Isidore themselves, so he was expelled from Moscow (it was officially announced that he had escaped); then, he was also expelled from Tver. He was also poorly met in Lithuanian Navahrudak, because Lithuanian Prince Casimir recognized the anti-pope Felix V who had been previously elected by the Council of Basel. In March 1443, Isidore had moved in Buda, possession of the new king of Poland and Hungary Vladislav III, and contributed to the publication of the privilege, which formally equated the rights of Catholic and Eastern Orthodox clergy in kings' lands. Then he went to Rome.[11][10] It is known that at least one of the Eastern Orthodox bishops of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania accepted the ordination from Isidor, and repented of it, but other information on the situation in Lithuania is extremely rare.[10]

Question of the subordination of the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' and the union edit

After the exile of Isidore from Moscow in 1441, the question of the subordination of the Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus' to the Church of Constantinople remained unclear for a long time. In Constantinople itself, there was a fierce struggle between pro- and anti-unionists. In fact, the Union was supported by a narrow group of elite from the capital of the dying Empire. Russian Grand Prince Vasiliy II supported the anti-unionists (those information are preserved his correspondence with the monks of Mount Athos).[10] After the death of the pro-unionist Metrophanes II in 1443, in Constantinople for a long time they did not manage to elect a new Patriarch. In 1444–1445 there were 15 public disputes between supporters and opponents of the Union.[12]

Gradually, the ranks of the pro-unionists were reduced and ten years after the Council of Florence, only four of the members of the Greek delegation remained faithful to the Union. Despite this, the firm supporter of the Union Gregory Mammas became the new Patriarch (in 1444 or 1445). His position remained fragile and he fled Constantinople in 1451 after the death of Byzantine emperor John VIII Palaiologos (one of the initiators of the Union).[12] Information about relations between Moscow and Constantinople during this period is extremely scarce and unreliable.[13]

Election of Metropolitan Jonah of Kiev and all Rus' edit

After Vasily II regained his throne in 1447, Jonah was still officially only the bishop of Ryazan and his name was only in third place.[c] It is only in 1448 that the Council of bishops of North-Eastern Rus' proclaimed Jonas Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus'. This decision was not unanimous – the bishops of Tver and Novgorod (both cities were semi-independent from Moscow) did not sign the Charter of his election.[13]

In support of Jonah's claims, Moscow claimed that the previous Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus', Photios, had proclaimed Jonah as his successor, and that a Patriarch of Constantinople which they did not name had once promised Jonah that he would become Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus' after Isidore. Some modern researchers doubt the validity of these claims.[13]

The election of Jonah was not accompanied by a clear break with Constantinople. For example, Vasily II composed a letter to the new Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos (whom he wrongly considered an opponent of the Union). Vasily justified the unauthorized election of Jonah by extreme circumstances and asked for communion and blessings, but only if there would be an Eastern Orthodox Patriarch in Constantinople:[10]

We have done this from necessity, not from pride or insolence. Till the end of time we shall abide in the Orthodoxy that was given to us; our Church will always seek the blessing of the Church of Tsarigrad[d] and will be obedient in all things to the ancient piety.

However Constantine XI, in a desperate search for allies against the Turks, agreed to the Union. Soon, in 1453, Constantinople fell and the question of recognizing Jonah remained uncertain until his death.[10]

The Ecumenical Patriarchate wrote in an official letter in 2018: "the Holy Metropolitanate of Kiev has always belonged to the jurisdiction of the Mother Church of Constantinople, founded by it as a separate Metropolitanate, occupying the 60th position in the list of the eparchies of the Ecumenical Throne. Later on, the local Synod in the state of Great Russia — upon an unfounded pretext — unilaterally cut itself off from its canonical authority, i.e. the Holy Great Church of Christ (1448), but in the city of Kiev other Metropolitans, authentic and canonical, were continually and unceasingly ordained by the Ecumenical Patriarchate, since the Kievan clergy and laity did not accept their subjection to the center of Moscovy."[14][15]

Schism edit

Gregory the Bulgarian, division of the Metropolis of Kiev, and beginning of the schism edit

After his election, Metropolitan Jonah tried to assert his jurisdiction over the Eastern Orthodox of Lithuania. He succeeded because the Grand Duke of Lithuania Casimir, who was recently (in 1447) elected king of Poland, and Vasily II (his brother-in-law) were able to agree on this. In 1451, Casimir IV sent a charter to the Eastern Orthodox of Lithuania in which he called them to obey Jonah as Metropolitan.[16][17]

In 1454, after they conquered Constantinople, the Ottomans removed Ecumenical Patriarch Athanasius II and imposed a new Ecumenical Patriarch, Gennadios, "who promptly renounced the Filioque."[18]

However, in 1458 the Patriarch-Uniate Gregory Mammas, who had fled from Constantinople to Rome, ordained Gregory the Bulgarian as new Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus'. Previously, also in 1458, Pope Calixtus III had divided the Metropolis of Kiev into two parts: "Superior Russia" centered about Moscow and "Inner Russia" centered about Kiev.[19]

Casimir IV was forced to cede to the demands of Pope Calixtus III and to recognize Gregory as Metropolitan, restoring the Union in Lithuania. Jonah resisted this decision, and in 1459 he assembled the Council and demanded that its members swear allegiance to him or to his successor, as well as to sever relations with the Uniate Metropolitan Gregory. In case of any persecution by the authorities, Jonah promised the bishops refuge in the Moscow Principality, but only one Bishop, Evfimy of Bryansk and Chernigov, took advantage of this offer (he became Bishop of Suzdal). In 1461, Jonah died.[16][17] Despite the victory of Gregory the Bulgarian over the Eastern Orthodox bishops, he faced resistance to the Union at the grassroots level (at this time the first Orthodox "brotherhoods" were formed).[17]

At the same time, in Constantinople, which was ruled by the Turks, the Union was finally rejected. As a result, Gregory decided to leave the Catholic Church, and returned to the jurisdiction of Patriarch Dionysius I of Constantinople. In February 1467 Dionysius sent a letter to Moscow, in which he called all the Russian lands, and especially Great Novgorod, to accept Gregory as the only legitimate Metropolitan recognized by Constantinople. In addition, in the same letter Dionysius claimed that his Holy Catholic Church "did not accept, does not hold, and does not name as metropolitans" Jonah and other metropolitans, ordained in Moscow after him.[1][10][17] At this time, Philip I was the metropolitan in Moscow, since 1464; he replaced Theodosius, whom Jonah had appointed as his successor.[16]

Complete rupture with the Ecumenical Patriarch by Ivan III edit

Grand Prince Ivan III of Russia refused to recognize Gregory the Bulgarian, which led to a rupture of relations between Moscow and Constantinople. In 1470, Ivan III wrote to the Archbishop of Novgorod that he did not recognize Gregory as a Metropolitan; Ivan added concerning the Patriarch of Constantinople: "we do not demand him, nor his blessing, nor his disregard, we consider him, the very patriarch, alien and renounced". These words were a clear confirmation of the formal break with Constantinople, which arose because of the autocephaly of the church of Moscow.[20] Soon the Novgorod Republic tried to get out from the influence of Moscow, recognizing Casimir of Poland and Lithuania as their liege, and Gregory as their Metropolitan. But Ivan III suppressed this attempt by military force, executing leaders of the opposition (1471).[21]

Consequences of the fall of Constantinople edit

Role of the Byzantine emperor in the Eastern Orthodox Church edit

  • The Byzantine Empire was a theocracy, the Emperor was the supreme authority in both church and state.[22][23][24][25] "The king is not God among men but the Viceroy of God. He is not the logos incarnate but is in a special relation with the logos. He has been specially appointed and is continually inspired by God, the friend of God, the interpreter of the Word of God. His eyes look upward, to receive the messages of God. He must be surrounded with the reverence and glory that befits God's earthly copy; and he will 'frame his earthly government according to the pattern of the divine original, finding strength in its conformity with the monarchy of God'.[26]"[27]
  • In the East, endorsement of Caesaropapism, subordination of the church to the religious claims of the dominant political order, was most fully evident in the Byzantine Empire at the end of the first millennium,[28] while in the West the decline of imperial authority left the Church relatively independent.[29][30][31][32]

In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the role of the Roman emperor as the sole secular head of all Eastern Orthodox was very prominent. Thus, in 1393 Patriarch Anthony IV of Constantinople wrote to Grand Prince Vasily I of Moscow:[33]

The holy emperor has a great place in the church, for he is not like other rulers or governors of other regions. This s [sic] so because from the beginning the emperors established and confirmed the [true] faith in all the inhabited world. They convoked the ecumenical councils and confirmed and decreed the acceptance of the pronouncements of the divine and holy canons regarding the correct doctrines and the government of Christians. [...] The basileus [note: the Greek term for emperor] is anointed with the great myrrh and is appointed basileus and autokrator of the Romans, and indeed of all Christians. Everywhere the name of the emperor is commemorated by all patriarchs and metropolitans and bishops wherever men are called Christians, [a thing] which no other ruler or governor ever received. Indeed he enjoys such great authority over all that even the Latins themselves, who are not in communion with our church, render him the same honor and submission which they did in the old days when they were united with us. So much more do Orthodox Christians owe such recognition to him....
Therefore, my son, you are wrong to affirm that we have the church without an Emperors for it is impossible for Christians to have a church and no empire. The Baslleia [empire] and the church have a great unity and community – indeed they cannot be separated. Christians can repudiate only emperors who are heretics who attack the church, or who introduce doctrines irreconcilable with the teachings of the Apostles and the Fathers. [...] Of whom, then, do the Fathers, councils, and canons speak? Always and everywhere they speak loudly of' the one rightful basileus, whose laws, decrees, and charters are in force throughout the world and who alone, only he, is mentioned in all places by Christians in the liturgy.[34]

— Letter of Patriarch Anthony to Vasily I

The basileus gave the Patriarchate of Constantinople an enormous prestige, although this position of Eastern Orthodox emperor was challenged; indeed, the rivalry for primacy with the basileus of the Byzantine empire was especially strong among the Eastern Orthodox Slavs in the Balkans, who sought autocephaly for their churches and gave their rulers the title of tsar (emperor).[e] The capital of the Bulgarian Tsardome, Tarnovo, was even called "New Rome". The Patriarchs of Constantinople, however, did not recognize these rulers as equal to a basileus of the Byzantine Empire. Muscovy also shared this feeling of rivalry with the Byzantine empire over the secular primacy in the Eastern Orthodox Church.[1][35]

Moscow, third Rome edit

The expulsion of Metropolitan Isidore and the independent ordination of Jonah were the response of Moscow to the Union. However, even after the Patriarchate of Constantinople officially rejected the Union in 1484, its jurisdiction over Moscow was not restored because there was no Eastern Roman emperor anymore.

In 1453, Constantinople was captured by the Turks, and the last fragment of the Byzantine Empire, Trebizond, fell in 1461 to the Turks. Even before the fall of Constantinople, the Orthodox Slavic states in the Balkans had fallen under Turkish rule. The fall of Constantinople caused tremendous fears, many considered the fall of Constantinople as a sign the End time was near (in 1492 it was 7000 Anno Mundi); others believed that the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire (although he was a Roman Catholic) now took the place of the emperors of Constantinople. There were also hopes that Constantinople would be liberated soon. Moreover, the Orthodox Church was left without its Eastern Orthodox Basileus. Therefore, the question arose of who would become the new basileus. At the end of the various "Tales" about the fall of Constantinople [ru], which gained great popularity in Moscow Russia, it was directly stated that the Rus' people would defeat the Ishmaelites (Muslims) and their king would become the basileus in the City of Seven Hills (Constantinople). The Grand Prince of Moscow remained the strongest of the Eastern Orthodox rulers; Ivan III married Sophia Paleologue, broke his formal subordination to the Golden Horde (already divided into several Tatar kingdoms) and became an independent ruler. All of this strengthened Moscow's claims to primacy in the Eastern Orthodox world. However, the liberation of Constantinople was still far away — the Moscow State had no opportunity to fight the Ottoman Empire. At the end of the 15th century, the emergence of the idea that Moscow is a truly a new Rome can be found. Metropolitan Zosima, in 1492, quite clearly expressed it, calling Ivan III "the new Tsar Constantine of the new city of Constantine — Moscow."[35] This idea is best known in the presentation of the monk Philotheus of the early 16th century:[36][37][38]

So know, pious king, that all the Christian kingdoms came to an end and came together in a single kingdom of yours, two Romes have fallen, the third stands, and there will be no fourth [emphasis added]. No one shall replace your Christian Tsardom according to the great Theologian [cf. Revelation 17:10] [...].

The Moscow scholars explained the fall of Constantinople as the divine punishment for the sin of the Union with the Catholic Church, but they did not want to obey the Patriarch of Constantinople, although there were no unionist patriarchs since the Turkish conquest in 1453 and the first Patriarch since then, Gennadius Scholarius, was the leader of the anti-unionists. At the next synod, held in Constantinople in 1484, the Union was finally declared invalid. Having lost its Christian basileus after the Turkish conquest, Constantinople as a center of power lost a significant part of its authority. On the contrary, the Moscow rulers soon began to consider themselves real Tsars (this title was already used by Ivan III), and therefore according to them the center of the Eastern Orthodox Church should have been located in Moscow, and thus the bishop of Moscow should become the head of the Orthodoxy.[35] The text of the bishop's oath in Muscovy, edited in 1505–1511, condemned the ordination of metropolitans in Constantinople, calling it "the ordination in the area of godless Turks, by the pagan[f] tsar."[39]

"The liturgical privileges that the Byzantine emperor enjoyed carried over to the Muscovite tsar. In 1547, for instance, when Ivan IV was crowned tsar, not only was he anointed as the Byzantine emperor had been after the late twelfth century, but he was also allowed to communicate in the sanctuary with the clergy."[40]

"The Russian Orthodox Church declared itself autocephalous in 1448, on the basis of explicit rejection of the Filioque, and the doctrine of "Moscow as the Third and Final Rome" was born. This rejection of the Idea of Progress embodied in the Council of Florence is the cultural root of subsequent Russian imperial designs on the West."[18]

Attempts to restore relations edit

When breaking off relations with Constantinople in 1467–1470, ambassadors of the Ecumenical Patriarch were forbidden to enter the possession of the Moscow Grand Prince Ivan III. As a result, direct contacts were completely interrupted for almost half a century. However, Moscow continued to intensively communicate with the monks of Mount Athos and in 1517 Patriarch Theoleptus I of Constantinople used this channel of communication. Together with the elders of Athos, among whom was the famous Maximus the Greek, he sent his ambassadors, Gregory (Metropolitan of Zichnai) and the patriarchal deacon, to the Grand Prince Vasily III.[41]

The question of who initiated this contact remains unresolved. It is known that Vasily III was childless for a long time in his first marriage, and many attempts were made to beg for an heir from the Higher powers. The monks of Athos who accompanied the ambassadors reported that they fulfilled the request to pray for the childbearing of Princess Solomonia in the monasteries of the Holy Mountain. Modern researchers (Dm. Kryvtsov, V. Lurie) believe that the initiative came from the Patriarch of Constantinople, and the real goal (in addition to the request for financial assistance) was to restore the canonical jurisdiction of Constantinople over Moscow. The story of this embassy in the Moscow chronicles was seriously reworked, and some documents were withdrawn, but the original evidence is preserved in the materials of the trial of Maximus the Greek. It follows from them that the Patriarch's ambassadors were met extremely coldly; the Grand Prince and Metropolitan Varlaam did not accept the blessing from the Patriarch's envoy.[41]

In the ensuing controversy about the right to autocephaly, Moscow had no serious canonical arguments. However, Muscovites believed that if God was dissatisfied with the ordination of Jonas in 1448, He would somehow have showed it. In particular, afterlife miracles of former Metropolitans of Moscow, saint Alexius and saint Peter – saint Alexius having been canonized by Jonah in 1448 -, were cited to prove that those saints were in favor of the ordination of Metropolitan Jonah. In addition, Muscovites recalled precedents – the proclamation of autocephaly of the Serbian and Bulgarian churches and similar miracles performed by the relics of the Patriarch of Bulgaria. According to the Moscow scholars, those miracles could not have been possible if God did not want the Bulgarians to have their own independent primate. The embassy of the Patriarch of Constantinople was in Moscow for a year and a half, and at this time (1518–1519) sources record a series of miraculous healings from the relics of Metropolitan Alexius (his canonization was the first act of Metropolitan Jonah after his ordination in 1448). In honor of these healings, magnificent celebrations were arranged with the participation of the Grand Duke, Metropolitans, bishops and other members of the clergy, who had to show the "Greeks" the legitimacy of the Moscow autocephaly. The possession of ancient Byzantine icons as a symbol of continuity and preservation of "pure" Orthodox traditions was also demonstrated to the "Greeks". In 1518, Metropolitan of Moscow Varlaam made a public prayer for the ending of prolonged rains. When the rains came to an end, it was also regarded as an approval of the legitimacy of Varlaam's ordination.[41]

The Greeks could not do anything against such arguments. Even if they were not directly expressed, the very atmosphere of the continuous triumph of "Russian Orthodoxy" made useless any attempt to officially raise the question of the subordination of the Moscow autocephalous church to the Patriarch of Constantinople. So the envoys of the Ecumenical Patriarch returned with nothing. The next envoy of the Patriarch of Constantinople appeared in Moscow only 37 years later, in 1556. Maximus the Greek stayed in Moscow and tried to debate, explaining the uncanonical character of the Moscow autocephaly and the fact that the Metropolitan of Moscow was ordinated "not according to divine scripture, nor according to the rules of the Saints Fathers". This ended for him with a trial and a very long imprisonment, despite the sympathetic attitude of a part of the clergy who, to the best of their strength, facilitated his fate and made it possible for him to continue his writings.[41]

In 1539, Grand Prince Vasily III died. As a result of court intrigues, Metropolitan Daniel was dismissed, and Joasaph (Skripitsyn), abbot of the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius, was put in his place. Joasaph was a famous book lover and patron of scribes and calligraphers; he opposed to Josephites and was a friend of Maximus the Greek. Ascending the post, Joasaph did not renounce the patriarch of Constantinople, as his predecessors Moscow metropolitans did and as his successors would; Joasaph did not declare Moscow's Orthodoxy as being the only true one. Historian Vladimir Lurie [ru] believes that the actions of Joasaph can be considered as an attempt to bring Moscow out of the schism. However, Joasaph's rule was short-lived, in 1542 he was removed from the See of Moscow.[1][42]

End of the schism and recognition of Moscow's autocephaly edit

The exact time of the end of the schism is not known for sure. The Church historian Anton Kartashev believed that the excommunication imposed by Constantinople for the rejection of Isidore "was never lifted from the Russian Church in formal and documented way. It gradually melted in the course of history, and at the time the Moscow Patriarchate was approved in 1589, it was not even remembered".[43] On the other hand, the modern historian of the Church, Vladimir Lurie [ru], believes that in 1560–1561 the Metropolis of Moscow returned to the jurisdiction of the Patriarch of Constantinople, while losing its self-proclaimed autocephaly. This conclusion was made as a result of a detailed analysis of a set of documents relating to the Embassy of Archimandrite Theodorite of 1557 and the Embassy of Archimandrite Joasaph of 1560–1561. The main issue of negotiations was to confirm the coronation of Ivan the Terrible as a real Eastern Orthodox tsar (emperor). In one letter, the patriarch of Constantinople Joasaph calls the metropolitan of Moscow "the exarch of the catholic patriarch" (Greek: ώς εξαρχος πατριαρχιός καθολικός). Such a title meant administrative subordination, and beyond that it was specially noted in this letter that "he has power from us" (that is, from the Patriarch of Constantinople) and only in this way could he act as a hierarch.[1]

The Russian Orthodox Church considers that it became de facto autocephalous in 1448,[44] yet the other Eastern Orthodox Patriarchs recognized its autocephaly only in 1589–1593. "This was done by means of two letters signed, not by the Ecumenical Patriarch alone, but also by other Patriarchs of the East. In these letters the Patriarchal rank of the primate of the Russian Church was recognized and the Patriarch of Moscow was placed fifth in diptych after the four Patriarchs of the East."[44][45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ V. M. Lurie [ru] in his work called this period the "schism of the Church of Moscow of 1467–1560"[1]
  2. ^ Sometimes also spelled as Laetentur Coeli, Laetantur Caeli, Lætentur Cæli, Lætentur Cœli, or Lætantur Cæli, and occasionally referred to as the Act of Union or "Decree of Union".
  3. ^ "In the accusing charter of the Russian clergy against Shemyaka, sent in December 6956 (1447) Jonah is still referred to as "the bishop of Ryazan" and is named on the third place – after Efrem of Rostov and Abraham of Suzdal"[13]
  4. ^ Constantinople, literally "The City of Tsars" which mean "The City of Emperors"
  5. ^ For example, the tsar of Bulgaria or the emperor of the Serbs.
  6. ^ The term "pagan" has been used to refer to any adherent of a different faith and had a very negative connotation. In this case, it is used to designate pejoratively the muslims.

See also edit

Eastern Orthodoxy

Politics

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e V. M. Lurie [ru], Прекращение московского церковного раскола 1467—1560 годов: финал истории в документах (also on Academia.edu) (in Russian)
  2. ^ a b Ágnes Kriza (2022). Depicting Orthodoxy in the Russian Middle Ages The Novgorod Icon of Sophia, the Divine Wisdom. Oxford University Press. p. 244. ISBN 9780198854302.
  3. ^ a b Valois, 1911, p. 463
  4. ^ Joseph Gill, Personalities of the Council of Florence, pg68
  5. ^ "Bulla Laetentur caeli (6 Iul. 1439), de unione Graecorum". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  6. ^ Dezhnyuk, Sergey. "COUNCIL OF FLORENCE: THE UNREALIZED UNION". Retrieved 27 December 2022 – via www.academia.edu.
  7. ^ Matthew R. Lootens, "Silvestros Syropoulos", in Graeme Dunphy and Cristian Bratu (eds.), Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle (published online 2016), accessed 21 September 2017.
  8. ^ a b "The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church – Consistory of December 18, 1439". cardinals.fiu.edu. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  9. ^ ИОНА // Orthodox Encyclopedia
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "Флорентийская уния и Восточная Европа (конец 30-х — конец 60-х гг. XV в.)". Церковно-Научный Центр "Православная Энциклопедия" (in Russian). Retrieved 2018-12-07.
  11. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Isidore of Thessalonica". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 2018-12-05.
  12. ^ a b Dezhnyuk 2015, chpt. 3 "The Bitter End".
  13. ^ a b c d Лурье, Яков (1991). "Как установилась афтокефалия русской церкви в XV в.?" [How was the autocephaly of the Russian church established in the 15th century?]. Вспомогательные исторические дисциплины (in Russian). XXIII.
  14. ^ "Patriarch Bartholomew explains Metropolitan Onufriy reasons for Ukraine church's autocephaly (Letter)". www.unian.info. 7 December 2018. Retrieved 2018-12-08.
  15. ^ "ΑΠΟΚΛΕΙΣΤΙΚΟ | Βαρθολομαίος σε Ονούφριο: Δεν μπορείτε να έχετε πλέον τον τίτλο Κιέβου". ROMFEA (in Greek). 7 December 2018. Retrieved 2018-12-08.
  16. ^ a b c Shubin 2004, pp. 132–133.
  17. ^ a b c d Карташев, Антон (1959). [Metropolitan Gregory the Bulgarian (1458–1473)]. Очерки по истории Русской Церкви (in Russian). Vol. 1. Archived from the original on 2009-05-20. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  18. ^ a b Hamermann, Nora (Spring 1992). "The Council of Florence: The Religious Event that Shaped the Era of Discovery" (PDF). Fidelio. 1 (2): 23–36 – via Schiller Institute.
  19. ^ Philippides, Marios; Hanak, Walter (2018). Cardinal Isidore (c.1390–1462): A Late Byzantine Scholar, Warlord, and Prelate. Routledge. p. 422. ISBN 978-1-351-21488-9.
  20. ^ Карташев, Антон (1959). "Филипп (I) (1464–1473 гг.)". Очерки по истории Русской Церкви (in Russian). Vol. 1. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  21. ^ Shubin 2004, pp. 136.
  22. ^ Herrin, Judith (2013). Margins and Metropolis. Princeton University Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-69115301-8.
  23. ^ VanVoorst, Jenny Fretland (2012). The Byzantine Empire. Capstone. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-75654565-9.
  24. ^ Stefoff, Rebecca (2007). Monarchy. Marshall Cavendish. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-76142630-1.
  25. ^ Dawson, Christopher (2008). The Formation of Christendom. Ignatius Press. p. 140. ISBN 978-1-58617239-8.
  26. ^ "CHURCH FATHERS: Oration in Praise of Constantine (Eusebius)". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 2018-12-18.
  27. ^ Steven Runciman. The Byzantine Theocracy. Cambridge University Press, 1977.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 October 2009.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 October 2009.
  30. ^ John C. Dwyer, Church History (Paulist Press 1998 ISBN 978-0-8091-3830-2), p. 118.
  31. ^ Matthew Bunson, Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire (Facts on File 2002 ISBN 978-0-8160-4562-4), pp. 115–116.
  32. ^ Deno John Geanakoplos, Constantinople and the West (University of Wisconsin Press 1989 ISBN 978-0-299-11884-6), p. 226.
  33. ^ Runciman 1985, Book I, chpt. 3 "Church and State".
  34. ^ "Medieval Sourcebook:
    Patriarch Anthony:
    Defending the Emperor, 1395". sourcebooks.fordham.edu. Internet History Sourcebooks Project. Retrieved 2019-10-19.
  35. ^ a b c Strémooukhoff, Dimitri (1953). "Moscow the Third Rome: Sources of the Doctrine". Speculum. 28 (1): 84–101. doi:10.2307/2847182. JSTOR 2847182. S2CID 161446879.
  36. ^ Strémooukhoff, Dimitri (1953). "Moscow the Third Rome: Sources of the Doctrine". Speculum. 28 (1): 84–101. doi:10.2307/2847182. JSTOR 2847182. S2CID 161446879. That is why we consider the theory definitively formulated by Philotheus to occupy a central place in Muscovite ideology: it forms the core of the opinions developed by the Muscovites about their fatherland and erects them into a doctrine.
  37. ^ Подосокорский, Николай (2017-07-10). "Послание старца Филофея великому князю Василию III о содомском блуде". philologist.livejournal.com. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  38. ^ "ПОСЛАНИЯ СТАРЦА ФИЛОФЕЯ". pushkinskijdom.ru. 31 October 2019.
  39. ^ Kryvtsov 2001, p. 51.
  40. ^ Ostrowski, Donald (1998). Muscovy and the Mongols: Cross-Cultural Influences on the Steppe Frontier, 1304–1589. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (published 2002). p. 211. ISBN 9780521894104.
  41. ^ a b c d Kryvtsov 2001.
  42. ^ Дмитриева, Руфина (1988). "Иоасаф (Скрипицын), митрополит Московский". In Лихачёв, Дмитрий (ed.). Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси. Вып. 2 (вторая половина XIV-XVI в.), часть 1. Ленинград: Наука.
  43. ^ Kartashev, Anton (1992). Очерки по истории русской церкви. Moscow: Терра. pp. 377–378. ISBN 5-85255-103-1.
  44. ^ a b "Primacy and Synodality from an Orthodox Perspective". mospat.ru. The Russian Orthodox Church. 9 November 2014. Retrieved 2018-12-20.
  45. ^ "Russian Orthodox Church | History & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2019-10-18.

Sources edit

  • Shubin, Daniel (2004). A History of Russian Christianity. Volume I: From the Earliest Years through Tsar Ivan IV. New York: Algora Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87586-289-7.
  • Dezhnyuk, Sergey (2015). Council of Florence: The Unrealized Union. A Project Report Submitted to the Faculty In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Masters of Theological Studies. Tulsa, OK: Phillips Theological Seminary.
  • Runciman, Steven (1985). The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31310-0. (excerpts here)
  • Голубинский Е. Е. История Русской Церкви. Т. II 1-я половина. С. 469—515
  • Казакова Н. А. Известия летописей и хронографов о начале автокефалии русской церкви. // Из истории русской культуры. Т.II. кн. 1. С. 415—424.
  • Казакова Н. А. Вопрос о причинах осуждения Максима Грека. // Византийский временник, т. 29.
  • Синицына Н. В. Автокефалия Русской церкви и учреждение Московского патриархата.//Церковь, общество и государство в феодальной России. С. 156—151.
  • Флоря Б. Н.. Флорентийская уния и Восточная Европа (конец 30-х — конец 60-х гг. XV в.)
  • В. М., Лурье. Прекращение московского церковного раскола 1467—1560 годов: финал истории в документах (also on Academia.edu) (in Russian)
  • Я. С. Лурье Как установилась афтокефалия русской церкви в XV в.? Вспомогательные исторические дисциплины. – Т. XXIII. – Л., 1991. (in Russian)
  • Кривцов, Дмитрий (2001). "Посольство константинопольского вселенского патриарха Феолипта I в Москву в 1518 — 1519 гг. (Эпизод из истории борьбы за признание автокефалии русской Церкви)". Материалы докладов научных конференций, проводившихся в Нижегородском государственном университете им. Н.И. Лобачевского 22 мая 1998 г., 21 мая 1999 г. и 21 мая 2000 г. Нижний Новгород: Издательство ННГУ. pp. 45–67. ISBN 5-85746-624-5.
  • Абеленцева О.А. Митрополит Иона и установление автокефалии Русской Церкви. — СПб.: Альянс-Архео, 2009. — 472 с (no access yet)
  • Jonah in the Orthodox Encyclopedia: [1]
  • Gregory the Bulgarian in the Orthodox Encyclopedia: [2]
  • Philippides, Marios and Hanak, Walter K., Cardinal Isidore (c.1390–1462): A Late Byzantine Scholar, Warlord, and Prelate, Routledge, 2018 (on Google books)

Further reading edit

  • Iftimiu, Aurelian (22 March 2018). "Original 1590 Synodal Tomos of Foundation of Moscow Patriarchate". Basilica.ro.
  • "Kyiv metropoly". Encyclopedia of Ukraine.
  • Blanchet, Marie-Hélène; Congourdeau, Marie-Hélène; Mureșan, Dan Ioan, eds. (2014). Le patriarcat œcuménique de Constantinople et Byzance hors frontières (1204–1586) : Actes de la table ronde organisée dans le cadre du 22e Congrès International des Études Byzantines, Sofia, 22–27 août 2011 (in French). Centre d'études byzantines, néo-helléniques et sud-est européennes – via Academia.edu.
  • Klimenko, Anna N.; Yurtaev, Vladimir I. (2018-11-21). "The "Moscow as the Third Rome" Concept: Its Nature and Interpretations since the 19th to Early 21st Centuries". Geopolítica(s). Revista de estudios sobre espacio y poder. 9 (2): 253–289. doi:10.5209/GEOP.58910. ISSN 2172-7155.

15th, 16th, century, moscow, constantinople, schism, schism, between, ecumenical, patriarchate, part, metropolis, kiev, which, later, became, moscow, patriarchate, occurred, between, approximately, 1467, 1560, this, schism, facto, ended, supposedly, around, 15. The schism between the Ecumenical Patriarchate and part of its Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus which later became the Moscow Patriarchate occurred between approximately 1467 and 1560 a This schism de facto ended supposedly around 1560 15th 16th century Moscow Constantinople schismDateapprox 1467 1560Also known as Schism of the Church of Moscow of 1467 1560 by V M Lurie ru TypeChristian schismCause1 Decision of the Ecumenical Patriarchate July 1439 to enter in union with the Catholic Church at the Council of Florence2 Fall of ConstantinopleParticipants1 Ecumenical Patriarchate2 Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus of the Ecumenical Patriarchate3 Popes Eugene IV and Calixtus IIIOutcomeGrand Prince Ivan III of Russia refused to recognize Gregory the Bulgarian as head of Moscow s Church which led to a rupture of communion between the Churches of Moscow and Constantinople in 1460 This break was mended by around 1560 On 15 December 1448 Jonah became Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus without the agreement of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople which made the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus de facto independent In response in 1458 a rival Metropolitan Gregory the Bulgarian was appointed and consecrated by the Pope of Rome as the Byzantine Catholic Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus 2 Metropolitan Gregory was then recognised by Patriarch Dionysius I of Constantinople in 1466 since Constantinople maintained the Union with the Catholic Church until 1484 Kiev returned under Constantinople s jurisdiction 2 Dionysius therefore demanded in 1467 that all the hierarchs of the Muscovy submit to Gregory but Moscow peremptorily refused On the same year Grand Prince Ivan III of Moscow declared a complete rupture of relations with the Patriarchate of Constantinople Relations were gradually restored and in 1560 the Patriarch of Constantinople considered the Metropolitan of Moscow to be his exarch In 1589 1591 the Church of Moscow was recognized as autocephalous and the Patriarch of Moscow later became the fifth Patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church Contents 1 Background 1 1 Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus 1 2 Ecumenical Council 2 Premises of the schism 2 1 Question of the subordination of the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus and the union 2 2 Election of Metropolitan Jonah of Kiev and all Rus 3 Schism 3 1 Gregory the Bulgarian division of the Metropolis of Kiev and beginning of the schism 3 2 Complete rupture with the Ecumenical Patriarch by Ivan III 3 3 Consequences of the fall of Constantinople 3 3 1 Role of the Byzantine emperor in the Eastern Orthodox Church 3 3 2 Moscow third Rome 3 4 Attempts to restore relations 4 End of the schism and recognition of Moscow s autocephaly 5 Notes 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further readingBackground editMetropolis of Kiev and all Rus edit The Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus was a metropolis of the Eastern Orthodox Church that was erected on the territory of Kievan Rus It existed between 988 AD and 1596 AD Canonically it was under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople The episcopal seat cathedra was located in the city of Kiev Ecumenical Council edit nbsp Grand Prince Vasily II nbsp Isidore of KievAn Ecumenical council of the Church the Council of Florence took place from 1431 to 1449 3 Although he resisted at first the Grand Prince of Moscow Vasily II of Moscow eventually permitted the Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus Isidore of Kiev to attend the council on condition that Isidore should return with the rights of Divine law and the constitution of the holy Church uninjured 4 The council healed the Great Schism by uniting the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches The union was proclaimed on 6 July 1439 in the document Laetentur Caeli 5 b which was composed by Pope Eugene IV and signed by the Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund and all but one of the bishops present 3 Some Greek bishops perhaps feeling political pressure from the Byzantine Emperor reluctantly accepted the decrees of the council Other Eastern bishops such as Isidore did so with sincere conviction 6 Sylvester Syropoulos 7 and other Greek writers charge Isidore with perjury because he accepted the union despite his promise to Vasili II 8 Following the signing of the bull Isidore returned to the Grand Duchy of Moscow In the Kremlin s Dormition Cathedral Isidore read the decree of unification aloud He also passed a message to Vasili II from the Holy See containing a request to assist the metropolitan in spreading the Union in Rus Three days later Isidore was arrested by the Grand Prince and imprisoned in the Chudov Monastery He arranged for certain Rus clergy to denounce the metropolitan for refusing to renounce the union with Rome As a result the Great Prince of Moscow voided the union in his lands and imprisoned Isidore for some time 8 Having adjudged Isidore to have apostatized to Catholicism he was deposed by a local synod 9 Premises of the schism editThe Council of Bishops of Moscow condemned Isidor and imprisoned him They later sent a letter to the Patriarch of Constantinople in which they listed Isidore s faults and requested that his case be considered They also asked to be allowed to ordain a Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus by themselves apparently they had no doubt that Isidore would be deprived of his dignity This letter has been interpreted in two ways According to the historian Golubinsky Moscow offered Constantinople a kind of compromise Moscow gets the opportunity to ordain a Metropolitan and in return it does not raise the issue of the Union while remaining in formal dependence on the uniate Patriarch of Constantinople According to the historian Florya the Eastern Orthodox of Moscow were sure of the imminent failure of the Union supporters and were hoping for this failure 10 However the situation was different and the new Patriarch of Constantinople was the uniate Metrophanes II who continued to follow the decisions of the Council of Florence The Eastern Orthodox of Moscow did not dare to judge Isidore themselves so he was expelled from Moscow it was officially announced that he had escaped then he was also expelled from Tver He was also poorly met in Lithuanian Navahrudak because Lithuanian Prince Casimir recognized the anti pope Felix V who had been previously elected by the Council of Basel In March 1443 Isidore had moved in Buda possession of the new king of Poland and Hungary Vladislav III and contributed to the publication of the privilege which formally equated the rights of Catholic and Eastern Orthodox clergy in kings lands Then he went to Rome 11 10 It is known that at least one of the Eastern Orthodox bishops of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania accepted the ordination from Isidor and repented of it but other information on the situation in Lithuania is extremely rare 10 Question of the subordination of the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus and the union edit After the exile of Isidore from Moscow in 1441 the question of the subordination of the Metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus to the Church of Constantinople remained unclear for a long time In Constantinople itself there was a fierce struggle between pro and anti unionists In fact the Union was supported by a narrow group of elite from the capital of the dying Empire Russian Grand Prince Vasiliy II supported the anti unionists those information are preserved his correspondence with the monks of Mount Athos 10 After the death of the pro unionist Metrophanes II in 1443 in Constantinople for a long time they did not manage to elect a new Patriarch In 1444 1445 there were 15 public disputes between supporters and opponents of the Union 12 Gradually the ranks of the pro unionists were reduced and ten years after the Council of Florence only four of the members of the Greek delegation remained faithful to the Union Despite this the firm supporter of the Union Gregory Mammas became the new Patriarch in 1444 or 1445 His position remained fragile and he fled Constantinople in 1451 after the death of Byzantine emperor John VIII Palaiologos one of the initiators of the Union 12 Information about relations between Moscow and Constantinople during this period is extremely scarce and unreliable 13 Election of Metropolitan Jonah of Kiev and all Rus edit See also Muscovite Civil War After Vasily II regained his throne in 1447 Jonah was still officially only the bishop of Ryazan and his name was only in third place c It is only in 1448 that the Council of bishops of North Eastern Rus proclaimed Jonas Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus This decision was not unanimous the bishops of Tver and Novgorod both cities were semi independent from Moscow did not sign the Charter of his election 13 In support of Jonah s claims Moscow claimed that the previous Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus Photios had proclaimed Jonah as his successor and that a Patriarch of Constantinople which they did not name had once promised Jonah that he would become Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus after Isidore Some modern researchers doubt the validity of these claims 13 The election of Jonah was not accompanied by a clear break with Constantinople For example Vasily II composed a letter to the new Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos whom he wrongly considered an opponent of the Union Vasily justified the unauthorized election of Jonah by extreme circumstances and asked for communion and blessings but only if there would be an Eastern Orthodox Patriarch in Constantinople 10 We have done this from necessity not from pride or insolence Till the end of time we shall abide in the Orthodoxy that was given to us our Church will always seek the blessing of the Church of Tsarigrad d and will be obedient in all things to the ancient piety However Constantine XI in a desperate search for allies against the Turks agreed to the Union Soon in 1453 Constantinople fell and the question of recognizing Jonah remained uncertain until his death 10 The Ecumenical Patriarchate wrote in an official letter in 2018 the Holy Metropolitanate of Kiev has always belonged to the jurisdiction of the Mother Church of Constantinople founded by it as a separate Metropolitanate occupying the 60th position in the list of the eparchies of the Ecumenical Throne Later on the local Synod in the state of Great Russia upon an unfounded pretext unilaterally cut itself off from its canonical authority i e the Holy Great Church of Christ 1448 but in the city of Kiev other Metropolitans authentic and canonical were continually and unceasingly ordained by the Ecumenical Patriarchate since the Kievan clergy and laity did not accept their subjection to the center of Moscovy 14 15 Schism editGregory the Bulgarian division of the Metropolis of Kiev and beginning of the schism edit After his election Metropolitan Jonah tried to assert his jurisdiction over the Eastern Orthodox of Lithuania He succeeded because the Grand Duke of Lithuania Casimir who was recently in 1447 elected king of Poland and Vasily II his brother in law were able to agree on this In 1451 Casimir IV sent a charter to the Eastern Orthodox of Lithuania in which he called them to obey Jonah as Metropolitan 16 17 In 1454 after they conquered Constantinople the Ottomans removed Ecumenical Patriarch Athanasius II and imposed a new Ecumenical Patriarch Gennadios who promptly renounced the Filioque 18 However in 1458 the Patriarch Uniate Gregory Mammas who had fled from Constantinople to Rome ordained Gregory the Bulgarian as new Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus Previously also in 1458 Pope Calixtus III had divided the Metropolis of Kiev into two parts Superior Russia centered about Moscow and Inner Russia centered about Kiev 19 Casimir IV was forced to cede to the demands of Pope Calixtus III and to recognize Gregory as Metropolitan restoring the Union in Lithuania Jonah resisted this decision and in 1459 he assembled the Council and demanded that its members swear allegiance to him or to his successor as well as to sever relations with the Uniate Metropolitan Gregory In case of any persecution by the authorities Jonah promised the bishops refuge in the Moscow Principality but only one Bishop Evfimy of Bryansk and Chernigov took advantage of this offer he became Bishop of Suzdal In 1461 Jonah died 16 17 Despite the victory of Gregory the Bulgarian over the Eastern Orthodox bishops he faced resistance to the Union at the grassroots level at this time the first Orthodox brotherhoods were formed 17 At the same time in Constantinople which was ruled by the Turks the Union was finally rejected As a result Gregory decided to leave the Catholic Church and returned to the jurisdiction of Patriarch Dionysius I of Constantinople In February 1467 Dionysius sent a letter to Moscow in which he called all the Russian lands and especially Great Novgorod to accept Gregory as the only legitimate Metropolitan recognized by Constantinople In addition in the same letter Dionysius claimed that his Holy Catholic Church did not accept does not hold and does not name as metropolitans Jonah and other metropolitans ordained in Moscow after him 1 10 17 At this time Philip I was the metropolitan in Moscow since 1464 he replaced Theodosius whom Jonah had appointed as his successor 16 Complete rupture with the Ecumenical Patriarch by Ivan III edit Grand Prince Ivan III of Russia refused to recognize Gregory the Bulgarian which led to a rupture of relations between Moscow and Constantinople In 1470 Ivan III wrote to the Archbishop of Novgorod that he did not recognize Gregory as a Metropolitan Ivan added concerning the Patriarch of Constantinople we do not demand him nor his blessing nor his disregard we consider him the very patriarch alien and renounced These words were a clear confirmation of the formal break with Constantinople which arose because of the autocephaly of the church of Moscow 20 Soon the Novgorod Republic tried to get out from the influence of Moscow recognizing Casimir of Poland and Lithuania as their liege and Gregory as their Metropolitan But Ivan III suppressed this attempt by military force executing leaders of the opposition 1471 21 Consequences of the fall of Constantinople edit Role of the Byzantine emperor in the Eastern Orthodox Church edit See also East West Schism Other points of conflict Theological differences between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church State church of the Roman Empire State church of the Roman Empire End of the Western Roman Empire and Church reform of Peter the Great The Byzantine Empire was a theocracy the Emperor was the supreme authority in both church and state 22 23 24 25 The king is not God among men but the Viceroy of God He is not the logos incarnate but is in a special relation with the logos He has been specially appointed and is continually inspired by God the friend of God the interpreter of the Word of God His eyes look upward to receive the messages of God He must be surrounded with the reverence and glory that befits God s earthly copy and he will frame his earthly government according to the pattern of the divine original finding strength in its conformity with the monarchy of God 26 27 In the East endorsement of Caesaropapism subordination of the church to the religious claims of the dominant political order was most fully evident in the Byzantine Empire at the end of the first millennium 28 while in the West the decline of imperial authority left the Church relatively independent 29 30 31 32 In Eastern Orthodox Christianity the role of the Roman emperor as the sole secular head of all Eastern Orthodox was very prominent Thus in 1393 Patriarch Anthony IV of Constantinople wrote to Grand Prince Vasily I of Moscow 33 The holy emperor has a great place in the church for he is not like other rulers or governors of other regions This s sic so because from the beginning the emperors established and confirmed the true faith in all the inhabited world They convoked the ecumenical councils and confirmed and decreed the acceptance of the pronouncements of the divine and holy canons regarding the correct doctrines and the government of Christians The basileus note the Greek term for emperor is anointed with the great myrrh and is appointed basileus and autokrator of the Romans and indeed of all Christians Everywhere the name of the emperor is commemorated by all patriarchs and metropolitans and bishops wherever men are called Christians a thing which no other ruler or governor ever received Indeed he enjoys such great authority over all that even the Latins themselves who are not in communion with our church render him the same honor and submission which they did in the old days when they were united with us So much more do Orthodox Christians owe such recognition to him Therefore my son you are wrong to affirm that we have the church without an Emperors for it is impossible for Christians to have a church and no empire The Baslleia empire and the church have a great unity and community indeed they cannot be separated Christians can repudiate only emperors who are heretics who attack the church or who introduce doctrines irreconcilable with the teachings of the Apostles and the Fathers Of whom then do the Fathers councils and canons speak Always and everywhere they speak loudly of the one rightful basileus whose laws decrees and charters are in force throughout the world and who alone only he is mentioned in all places by Christians in the liturgy 34 Letter of Patriarch Anthony to Vasily I The basileus gave the Patriarchate of Constantinople an enormous prestige although this position of Eastern Orthodox emperor was challenged indeed the rivalry for primacy with the basileus of the Byzantine empire was especially strong among the Eastern Orthodox Slavs in the Balkans who sought autocephaly for their churches and gave their rulers the title of tsar emperor e The capital of the Bulgarian Tsardome Tarnovo was even called New Rome The Patriarchs of Constantinople however did not recognize these rulers as equal to a basileus of the Byzantine Empire Muscovy also shared this feeling of rivalry with the Byzantine empire over the secular primacy in the Eastern Orthodox Church 1 35 Moscow third Rome edit Main article Moscow third Rome See also Legend of the White Cowl The Tale of the Princes of Vladimir and Third Rome The expulsion of Metropolitan Isidore and the independent ordination of Jonah were the response of Moscow to the Union However even after the Patriarchate of Constantinople officially rejected the Union in 1484 its jurisdiction over Moscow was not restored because there was no Eastern Roman emperor anymore In 1453 Constantinople was captured by the Turks and the last fragment of the Byzantine Empire Trebizond fell in 1461 to the Turks Even before the fall of Constantinople the Orthodox Slavic states in the Balkans had fallen under Turkish rule The fall of Constantinople caused tremendous fears many considered the fall of Constantinople as a sign the End time was near in 1492 it was 7000 Anno Mundi others believed that the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire although he was a Roman Catholic now took the place of the emperors of Constantinople There were also hopes that Constantinople would be liberated soon Moreover the Orthodox Church was left without its Eastern Orthodox Basileus Therefore the question arose of who would become the new basileus At the end of the various Tales about the fall of Constantinople ru which gained great popularity in Moscow Russia it was directly stated that the Rus people would defeat the Ishmaelites Muslims and their king would become the basileus in the City of Seven Hills Constantinople The Grand Prince of Moscow remained the strongest of the Eastern Orthodox rulers Ivan III married Sophia Paleologue broke his formal subordination to the Golden Horde already divided into several Tatar kingdoms and became an independent ruler All of this strengthened Moscow s claims to primacy in the Eastern Orthodox world However the liberation of Constantinople was still far away the Moscow State had no opportunity to fight the Ottoman Empire At the end of the 15th century the emergence of the idea that Moscow is a truly a new Rome can be found Metropolitan Zosima in 1492 quite clearly expressed it calling Ivan III the new Tsar Constantine of the new city of Constantine Moscow 35 This idea is best known in the presentation of the monk Philotheus of the early 16th century 36 37 38 So know pious king that all the Christian kingdoms came to an end and came together in a single kingdom of yours two Romes have fallen the third stands and there will be no fourth emphasis added No one shall replace your Christian Tsardom according to the great Theologian cf Revelation 17 10 The Moscow scholars explained the fall of Constantinople as the divine punishment for the sin of the Union with the Catholic Church but they did not want to obey the Patriarch of Constantinople although there were no unionist patriarchs since the Turkish conquest in 1453 and the first Patriarch since then Gennadius Scholarius was the leader of the anti unionists At the next synod held in Constantinople in 1484 the Union was finally declared invalid Having lost its Christian basileus after the Turkish conquest Constantinople as a center of power lost a significant part of its authority On the contrary the Moscow rulers soon began to consider themselves real Tsars this title was already used by Ivan III and therefore according to them the center of the Eastern Orthodox Church should have been located in Moscow and thus the bishop of Moscow should become the head of the Orthodoxy 35 The text of the bishop s oath in Muscovy edited in 1505 1511 condemned the ordination of metropolitans in Constantinople calling it the ordination in the area of godless Turks by the pagan f tsar 39 The liturgical privileges that the Byzantine emperor enjoyed carried over to the Muscovite tsar In 1547 for instance when Ivan IV was crowned tsar not only was he anointed as the Byzantine emperor had been after the late twelfth century but he was also allowed to communicate in the sanctuary with the clergy 40 The Russian Orthodox Church declared itself autocephalous in 1448 on the basis of explicit rejection of the Filioque and the doctrine of Moscow as the Third and Final Rome was born This rejection of the Idea of Progress embodied in the Council of Florence is the cultural root of subsequent Russian imperial designs on the West 18 Attempts to restore relations edit When breaking off relations with Constantinople in 1467 1470 ambassadors of the Ecumenical Patriarch were forbidden to enter the possession of the Moscow Grand Prince Ivan III As a result direct contacts were completely interrupted for almost half a century However Moscow continued to intensively communicate with the monks of Mount Athos and in 1517 Patriarch Theoleptus I of Constantinople used this channel of communication Together with the elders of Athos among whom was the famous Maximus the Greek he sent his ambassadors Gregory Metropolitan of Zichnai and the patriarchal deacon to the Grand Prince Vasily III 41 The question of who initiated this contact remains unresolved It is known that Vasily III was childless for a long time in his first marriage and many attempts were made to beg for an heir from the Higher powers The monks of Athos who accompanied the ambassadors reported that they fulfilled the request to pray for the childbearing of Princess Solomonia in the monasteries of the Holy Mountain Modern researchers Dm Kryvtsov V Lurie believe that the initiative came from the Patriarch of Constantinople and the real goal in addition to the request for financial assistance was to restore the canonical jurisdiction of Constantinople over Moscow The story of this embassy in the Moscow chronicles was seriously reworked and some documents were withdrawn but the original evidence is preserved in the materials of the trial of Maximus the Greek It follows from them that the Patriarch s ambassadors were met extremely coldly the Grand Prince and Metropolitan Varlaam did not accept the blessing from the Patriarch s envoy 41 In the ensuing controversy about the right to autocephaly Moscow had no serious canonical arguments However Muscovites believed that if God was dissatisfied with the ordination of Jonas in 1448 He would somehow have showed it In particular afterlife miracles of former Metropolitans of Moscow saint Alexius and saint Peter saint Alexius having been canonized by Jonah in 1448 were cited to prove that those saints were in favor of the ordination of Metropolitan Jonah In addition Muscovites recalled precedents the proclamation of autocephaly of the Serbian and Bulgarian churches and similar miracles performed by the relics of the Patriarch of Bulgaria According to the Moscow scholars those miracles could not have been possible if God did not want the Bulgarians to have their own independent primate The embassy of the Patriarch of Constantinople was in Moscow for a year and a half and at this time 1518 1519 sources record a series of miraculous healings from the relics of Metropolitan Alexius his canonization was the first act of Metropolitan Jonah after his ordination in 1448 In honor of these healings magnificent celebrations were arranged with the participation of the Grand Duke Metropolitans bishops and other members of the clergy who had to show the Greeks the legitimacy of the Moscow autocephaly The possession of ancient Byzantine icons as a symbol of continuity and preservation of pure Orthodox traditions was also demonstrated to the Greeks In 1518 Metropolitan of Moscow Varlaam made a public prayer for the ending of prolonged rains When the rains came to an end it was also regarded as an approval of the legitimacy of Varlaam s ordination 41 The Greeks could not do anything against such arguments Even if they were not directly expressed the very atmosphere of the continuous triumph of Russian Orthodoxy made useless any attempt to officially raise the question of the subordination of the Moscow autocephalous church to the Patriarch of Constantinople So the envoys of the Ecumenical Patriarch returned with nothing The next envoy of the Patriarch of Constantinople appeared in Moscow only 37 years later in 1556 Maximus the Greek stayed in Moscow and tried to debate explaining the uncanonical character of the Moscow autocephaly and the fact that the Metropolitan of Moscow was ordinated not according to divine scripture nor according to the rules of the Saints Fathers This ended for him with a trial and a very long imprisonment despite the sympathetic attitude of a part of the clergy who to the best of their strength facilitated his fate and made it possible for him to continue his writings 41 In 1539 Grand Prince Vasily III died As a result of court intrigues Metropolitan Daniel was dismissed and Joasaph Skripitsyn abbot of the Trinity Lavra of St Sergius was put in his place Joasaph was a famous book lover and patron of scribes and calligraphers he opposed to Josephites and was a friend of Maximus the Greek Ascending the post Joasaph did not renounce the patriarch of Constantinople as his predecessors Moscow metropolitans did and as his successors would Joasaph did not declare Moscow s Orthodoxy as being the only true one Historian Vladimir Lurie ru believes that the actions of Joasaph can be considered as an attempt to bring Moscow out of the schism However Joasaph s rule was short lived in 1542 he was removed from the See of Moscow 1 42 End of the schism and recognition of Moscow s autocephaly editThe exact time of the end of the schism is not known for sure The Church historian Anton Kartashev believed that the excommunication imposed by Constantinople for the rejection of Isidore was never lifted from the Russian Church in formal and documented way It gradually melted in the course of history and at the time the Moscow Patriarchate was approved in 1589 it was not even remembered 43 On the other hand the modern historian of the Church Vladimir Lurie ru believes that in 1560 1561 the Metropolis of Moscow returned to the jurisdiction of the Patriarch of Constantinople while losing its self proclaimed autocephaly This conclusion was made as a result of a detailed analysis of a set of documents relating to the Embassy of Archimandrite Theodorite of 1557 and the Embassy of Archimandrite Joasaph of 1560 1561 The main issue of negotiations was to confirm the coronation of Ivan the Terrible as a real Eastern Orthodox tsar emperor In one letter the patriarch of Constantinople Joasaph calls the metropolitan of Moscow the exarch of the catholic patriarch Greek ws e3arxos patriarxios ka8olikos Such a title meant administrative subordination and beyond that it was specially noted in this letter that he has power from us that is from the Patriarch of Constantinople and only in this way could he act as a hierarch 1 The Russian Orthodox Church considers that it became de facto autocephalous in 1448 44 yet the other Eastern Orthodox Patriarchs recognized its autocephaly only in 1589 1593 This was done by means of two letters signed not by the Ecumenical Patriarch alone but also by other Patriarchs of the East In these letters the Patriarchal rank of the primate of the Russian Church was recognized and the Patriarch of Moscow was placed fifth in diptych after the four Patriarchs of the East 44 45 Notes edit V M Lurie ru in his work called this period the schism of the Church of Moscow of 1467 1560 1 Sometimes also spelled as Laetentur Coeli Laetantur Caeli Laetentur Caeli Laetentur Cœli or Laetantur Caeli and occasionally referred to as the Act of Union or Decree of Union In the accusing charter of the Russian clergy against Shemyaka sent in December 6956 1447 Jonah is still referred to as the bishop of Ryazan and is named on the third place after Efrem of Rostov and Abraham of Suzdal 13 Constantinople literally The City of Tsars which mean The City of Emperors For example the tsar of Bulgaria or the emperor of the Serbs The term pagan has been used to refer to any adherent of a different faith and had a very negative connotation In this case it is used to designate pejoratively the muslims See also editEastern Orthodoxy Bulgarian schism 1996 Moscow Constantinople schism 2018 Moscow Constantinople schism Autocephaly of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine Phyletism Moscow third RomePolitics Russian irredentism Russian nationalism Ukrainian nationalismReferences edit a b c d e V M Lurie ru Prekrashenie moskovskogo cerkovnogo raskola 1467 1560 godov final istorii v dokumentah also on Academia edu in Russian a b Agnes Kriza 2022 Depicting Orthodoxy in the Russian Middle Ages The Novgorod Icon of Sophia the Divine Wisdom Oxford University Press p 244 ISBN 9780198854302 a b Valois 1911 p 463 Joseph Gill Personalities of the Council of Florence pg68 Bulla Laetentur caeli 6 Iul 1439 de unione Graecorum www vatican va Retrieved 27 December 2022 Dezhnyuk Sergey COUNCIL OF FLORENCE THE UNREALIZED UNION Retrieved 27 December 2022 via www academia edu Matthew R Lootens Silvestros Syropoulos in Graeme Dunphy and Cristian Bratu eds Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle published online 2016 accessed 21 September 2017 a b The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Consistory of December 18 1439 cardinals fiu edu Retrieved 14 March 2022 IONA Orthodox Encyclopedia a b c d e f g Florentijskaya uniya i Vostochnaya Evropa konec 30 h konec 60 h gg XV v Cerkovno Nauchnyj Centr Pravoslavnaya Enciklopediya in Russian Retrieved 2018 12 07 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Isidore of Thessalonica www newadvent org Retrieved 2018 12 05 a b Dezhnyuk 2015 chpt 3 The Bitter End a b c d Lure Yakov 1991 Kak ustanovilas aftokefaliya russkoj cerkvi v XV v How was the autocephaly of the Russian church established in the 15th century Vspomogatelnye istoricheskie discipliny in Russian XXIII Patriarch Bartholomew explains Metropolitan Onufriy reasons for Ukraine church s autocephaly Letter www unian info 7 December 2018 Retrieved 2018 12 08 APOKLEISTIKO Bar8olomaios se Onoyfrio Den mporeite na exete pleon ton titlo Kieboy ROMFEA in Greek 7 December 2018 Retrieved 2018 12 08 a b c Shubin 2004 pp 132 133 a b c d Kartashev Anton 1959 Mitropolit Grigorij Bolgarin 1458 1473 gg Metropolitan Gregory the Bulgarian 1458 1473 Ocherki po istorii Russkoj Cerkvi in Russian Vol 1 Archived from the original on 2009 05 20 Retrieved 12 December 2018 a b Hamermann Nora Spring 1992 The Council of Florence The Religious Event that Shaped the Era of Discovery PDF Fidelio 1 2 23 36 via Schiller Institute Philippides Marios Hanak Walter 2018 Cardinal Isidore c 1390 1462 A Late Byzantine Scholar Warlord and Prelate Routledge p 422 ISBN 978 1 351 21488 9 Kartashev Anton 1959 Filipp I 1464 1473 gg Ocherki po istorii Russkoj Cerkvi in Russian Vol 1 Retrieved 12 December 2018 Shubin 2004 pp 136 Herrin Judith 2013 Margins and Metropolis Princeton University Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 69115301 8 VanVoorst Jenny Fretland 2012 The Byzantine Empire Capstone p 14 ISBN 978 0 75654565 9 Stefoff Rebecca 2007 Monarchy Marshall Cavendish p 62 ISBN 978 0 76142630 1 Dawson Christopher 2008 The Formation of Christendom Ignatius Press p 140 ISBN 978 1 58617239 8 CHURCH FATHERS Oration in Praise of Constantine Eusebius www newadvent org Retrieved 2018 12 18 Steven Runciman The Byzantine Theocracy Cambridge University Press 1977 Church and State in the Byzantine Empire Archived from the original on 29 October 2009 Church and State in Western Europe Archived from the original on 29 October 2009 John C Dwyer Church History Paulist Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 8091 3830 2 p 118 Matthew Bunson Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire Facts on File 2002 ISBN 978 0 8160 4562 4 pp 115 116 Deno John Geanakoplos Constantinople and the West University of Wisconsin Press 1989 ISBN 978 0 299 11884 6 p 226 Runciman 1985 Book I chpt 3 Church and State Medieval Sourcebook Patriarch Anthony Defending the Emperor 1395 sourcebooks fordham edu Internet History Sourcebooks Project Retrieved 2019 10 19 a b c Stremooukhoff Dimitri 1953 Moscow the Third Rome Sources of the Doctrine Speculum 28 1 84 101 doi 10 2307 2847182 JSTOR 2847182 S2CID 161446879 Stremooukhoff Dimitri 1953 Moscow the Third Rome Sources of the Doctrine Speculum 28 1 84 101 doi 10 2307 2847182 JSTOR 2847182 S2CID 161446879 That is why we consider the theory definitively formulated by Philotheus to occupy a central place in Muscovite ideology it forms the core of the opinions developed by the Muscovites about their fatherland and erects them into a doctrine Podosokorskij Nikolaj 2017 07 10 Poslanie starca Filofeya velikomu knyazyu Vasiliyu III o sodomskom blude philologist livejournal com Retrieved 2019 10 30 POSLANIYa STARCA FILOFEYa pushkinskijdom ru 31 October 2019 Kryvtsov 2001 p 51 Ostrowski Donald 1998 Muscovy and the Mongols Cross Cultural Influences on the Steppe Frontier 1304 1589 Cambridge Cambridge University Press published 2002 p 211 ISBN 9780521894104 a b c d Kryvtsov 2001 Dmitrieva Rufina 1988 Ioasaf Skripicyn mitropolit Moskovskij In Lihachyov Dmitrij ed Slovar knizhnikov i knizhnosti Drevnej Rusi Vyp 2 vtoraya polovina XIV XVI v chast 1 Leningrad Nauka Kartashev Anton 1992 Ocherki po istorii russkoj cerkvi Moscow Terra pp 377 378 ISBN 5 85255 103 1 a b Primacy and Synodality from an Orthodox Perspective mospat ru The Russian Orthodox Church 9 November 2014 Retrieved 2018 12 20 Russian Orthodox Church History amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2019 10 18 Sources editShubin Daniel 2004 A History of Russian Christianity Volume I From the Earliest Years through Tsar Ivan IV New York Algora Publishing ISBN 978 0 87586 289 7 Dezhnyuk Sergey 2015 Council of Florence The Unrealized Union A Project Report Submitted to the Faculty In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Masters of Theological Studies Tulsa OK Phillips Theological Seminary Runciman Steven 1985 The Great Church in Captivity A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31310 0 excerpts here Golubinskij E E Istoriya Russkoj Cerkvi T II 1 ya polovina S 469 515 Kazakova N A Izvestiya letopisej i hronografov o nachale avtokefalii russkoj cerkvi Iz istorii russkoj kultury T II kn 1 S 415 424 Kazakova N A Vopros o prichinah osuzhdeniya Maksima Greka Vizantijskij vremennik t 29 Sinicyna N V Avtokefaliya Russkoj cerkvi i uchrezhdenie Moskovskogo patriarhata Cerkov obshestvo i gosudarstvo v feodalnoj Rossii S 156 151 Florya B N Florentijskaya uniya i Vostochnaya Evropa konec 30 h konec 60 h gg XV v V M Lure Prekrashenie moskovskogo cerkovnogo raskola 1467 1560 godov final istorii v dokumentah also on Academia edu in Russian Ya S Lure Kak ustanovilas aftokefaliya russkoj cerkvi v XV v Vspomogatelnye istoricheskie discipliny T XXIII L 1991 in Russian Krivcov Dmitrij 2001 Posolstvo konstantinopolskogo vselenskogo patriarha Feolipta I v Moskvu v 1518 1519 gg Epizod iz istorii borby za priznanie avtokefalii russkoj Cerkvi Materialy dokladov nauchnyh konferencij provodivshihsya v Nizhegorodskom gosudarstvennom universitete im N I Lobachevskogo 22 maya 1998 g 21 maya 1999 g i 21 maya 2000 g Nizhnij Novgorod Izdatelstvo NNGU pp 45 67 ISBN 5 85746 624 5 Abelenceva O A Mitropolit Iona i ustanovlenie avtokefalii Russkoj Cerkvi SPb Alyans Arheo 2009 472 s no access yet Jonah in the Orthodox Encyclopedia 1 Gregory the Bulgarian in the Orthodox Encyclopedia 2 Philippides Marios and Hanak Walter K Cardinal Isidore c 1390 1462 A Late Byzantine Scholar Warlord and Prelate Routledge 2018 on Google books Further reading editIftimiu Aurelian 22 March 2018 Original 1590 Synodal Tomos of Foundation of Moscow Patriarchate Basilica ro Kyiv metropoly Encyclopedia of Ukraine Blanchet Marie Helene Congourdeau Marie Helene Mureșan Dan Ioan eds 2014 Le patriarcat œcumenique de Constantinople et Byzance hors frontieres 1204 1586 Actes de la table ronde organisee dans le cadre du 22e Congres International des Etudes Byzantines Sofia 22 27 aout 2011 in French Centre d etudes byzantines neo helleniques et sud est europeennes via Academia edu Klimenko Anna N Yurtaev Vladimir I 2018 11 21 The Moscow as the Third Rome Concept Its Nature and Interpretations since the 19th to Early 21st Centuries Geopolitica s Revista de estudios sobre espacio y poder 9 2 253 289 doi 10 5209 GEOP 58910 ISSN 2172 7155 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 15th 16th century Moscow Constantinople schism amp oldid 1176163108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.