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Cyril and Methodius

Cyril (born Constantine, 826–869) and Methodius (815–885) were brothers, Byzantine Christian theologians and missionaries. For their work evangelizing the Slavs, they are known as the "Apostles to the Slavs".[6]


Cyril and Methodius
"Saints Cyril and Methodius holding the Cyrillic alphabet," a mural by Bulgarian iconographer Z. Zograf, 1848, Troyan Monastery
Bishops and Confessors; Equals to the Apostles; Patrons of Europe; Apostles to the Slavs
Born826 or 827 and 815
Thessalonica, Byzantine Empire (present-day Greece)
Died(869-02-14)14 February 869 and (885-04-06)6 April 885
Rome and Velehrad, Great Moravia
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church
Catholic Church
Anglican Communion[1]
Lutheranism[2]
Feast11 and 24 May[3] (Eastern Orthodox Church)
14 February (present Roman Catholic calendar); 5 July (Roman Catholic calendar 1880–1886); 7 July (Roman Catholic calendar 1887–1969)
5 July (Roman Catholic Czech Republic and Slovakia)
AttributesBrothers depicted together; Eastern bishops holding up a church; Eastern bishops holding an icon of the Last Judgment.[4] Often, Cyril is depicted wearing a monastic habit and Methodius vested as a bishop with omophorion.
PatronageBulgaria, North Macedonia, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Transnistria, Serbia, Archdiocese of Ljubljana, Europe,[4] Slovak Eparchy of Toronto, Eparchy of Košice[5]

They are credited with devising the Glagolitic alphabet, the first alphabet used to transcribe Old Church Slavonic.[7] After their deaths, their pupils continued their missionary work among other Slavs. Both brothers are venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church as saints with the title of "equal-to-apostles". In 1880, Pope Leo XIII introduced their feast into the calendar of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church. In 1980, the first Slav pope, Pope John Paul II declared them co-patron saints of Europe, together with Benedict of Nursia.[8]

Early career

Early life

The two brothers were born in Thessalonica, at that time in the Byzantine province of the same name (today in Greece) – Cyril in 827–828, and Methodius in 815–820. According to the Vita Cyrilli ("The Life of Cyril"), Cyril was reputedly the youngest of seven brothers; he was born Constantine,[9] but was given the name Cyril upon becoming a monk in Rome shortly before his death.[10][11][12] Methodius was born Michael and was given the name Methodius upon becoming a monk in Polychron Monastery at Mysian Olympus (present-day Uludağ in northwest Turkey).[13] Their father was Leo, a droungarios of the Byzantine theme of Thessalonica, and their mother's name was Maria.

The exact ethnic origins of the brothers are unknown; there is controversy as to whether Cyril and Methodius were of Slavic[14] or Greek[15] origin, or both.[16] The two brothers lost their father when Cyril was fourteen, and the powerful minister Theoktistos, who was logothetes tou dromou, one of the chief ministers of the Empire, became their protector. He was also responsible, along with the regent Bardas, for initiating a far-reaching educational program within the Empire which culminated in the establishment of the University of Magnaura, where Cyril was to teach. Cyril was ordained as priest some time after his education, while his brother Methodius remained a deacon until 867/868.[17]

Mission to the Khazars

About the year 860, Byzantine Emperor Michael III and the Patriarch of Constantinople Photius (a professor of Cyril's at the University and his guiding light in earlier years), sent Cyril on a missionary expedition to the Khazars who had requested a scholar be sent to them who could converse with both Jews and Saracens.[18] It has been claimed that Methodius accompanied Cyril on the mission to the Khazars, but this may be a later invention.[citation needed] The account of his life presented in the Latin "Legenda" claims that he learned the Khazar language while in Chersonesos, in Taurica (today Crimea).

After his return to Constantinople, Cyril assumed the role of professor of philosophy at the University. His brother had by this time become a significant figure in Byzantine political and administrative affairs, and an abbot of his monastery.[citation needed]

Mission to the Slavs

Great Moravia

 
Cyril and Methodius, painting by Jan Matejko, 1885

In 862, the brothers began the work which would give them their historical importance. That year Prince Rastislav of Great Moravia requested that Emperor Michael III and the Patriarch Photius send missionaries to evangelize his Slavic subjects. His motives in doing so were probably more political than religious. Rastislav had become king with the support of the Frankish ruler Louis the German, though he subsequently sought to assert his independence from the Franks. That Cyril and Methodius might have been the first to bring Christianity to Moravia is a common misconception; Rastislav's letter to Michael III states clearly that his people "had already rejected paganism and adhere to the Christian law."[19] Rastislav is said to have expelled missionaries of the Roman Church and instead turned to Constantinople for ecclesiastical assistance and, presumably, a degree of political support.[20] The Emperor quickly chose to send Cyril, accompanied by his brother Methodius.[21] The request provided a convenient opportunity to expand Byzantine influence. Their first work seems to have been the training of assistants. In 863, they began the task of translating the Gospels and essential liturgical books into what is now known as Old Church Slavonic,[22] and travelled to Great Moravia to promote it.[23] This endeavour was amply rewarded. However, they came into conflict with German ecclesiastics, who opposed their efforts to create a specifically Slavic liturgy.

For the purpose of this mission, they devised the Glagolitic alphabet, the first alphabet to be used for Slavonic manuscripts. The Glagolitic alphabet was suited to match the specific features of the Slavic language. Its descendant script, the Cyrillic, is still used by many languages today.[20]

The brothers wrote the first Slavic Civil Code, which was used in Great Moravia. The language derived from Old Church Slavonic, known as Church Slavonic, is still used in the liturgy by several Orthodox Churches, and also in some Eastern Catholic churches.

Exactly how much the brothers translated is impossible to say for certain. The New Testament and the Psalms seem to have been the first, followed by other lessons from the Old Testament.[citation needed] The "Translatio" speaks only of a version of the Gospels by Cyril, and the "Vita Methodii" only of the "evangelium Slovenicum", though other liturgical selections may also have been translated.

Nor is it known for sure which liturgy, whether of Rome or of Constantinople, they took as a source. They may well have used the Roman alphabet, as hinted by liturgical fragments adhering closely to the Latin type. This view is confirmed by the "Prague Fragments" and by certain Old Glagolitic liturgical fragments brought from Jerusalem to Kyiv and discovered there by Izmail Sreznevsky—probably the oldest document in the Slavonic tongue; examples of where they resemble the Latin type include the words "Mass," "Preface," and the name of one Felicitas. Regardless, the circumstances were such that the brothers could have hoped for no lasting success without having had authorization from Rome.

Journey to Rome

 
Saints Cyril and Methodius in Rome. Fresco in San Clemente

The mission of Constantine and Methodius had great success among Slavs in part because they used the people's native language rather than Latin or Greek. In Great Moravia, Constantine and Methodius also encountered missionaries from East Francia. They would have represented the western, or Latin, branch of the Church, more particularly epitomizing the Carolingian Empire as founded by Charlemagne, and intent on linguistic and cultural uniformity. They insisted on the use of the Latin liturgy, and they regarded Moravia and the Slavic peoples as part of their rightful mission field.

When friction developed, the brothers, unwilling to be a cause of dissension among Christians, decided to travel to Rome to see the Pope, and seek a solution that would avoid quarrelling between missionaries in the field. In 867, Pope Nicholas I (858-867) invited the brothers to Rome. Their evangelizing mission in Moravia had by this time become the focus of a dispute with Archbishop Adalwin of Salzburg (859–873) and Bishop Ermanrich of Passau (866-874). They claimed ecclesiastical control of the same territory and wished to see it use the Latin liturgy exclusively.

With them they brought the relics of Saint Clement and a retinue of disciples. They passed through Pannonia (the Balaton Principality), where they were well received by Prince Koceľ. This activity in Pannonia made a continuation of conflicts inevitable with the German episcopate, and especially with the bishop of Salzburg, whose prerogative Pannonia had been for seventy-five years. As early as 865, Bishop Adalwin was found to exercise Episcopal rights there. The administration under him was in the hands of the archpriest Riehbald. He was obliged to retire to Salzburg, though his superior was instinctively disinclined to abandon his claim.

The brothers sought support from Rome, and arrived there in 868, where they were warmly received. This was partly due to their bringing with them the relics of Saint Clement; rivalry with Constantinople over the territory of the Slavs would have inclined Rome to value the brothers and their influence.[20]

The brothers were praised for their learning and cultivated for their influence in Constantinople. Anastasius Bibliothecarius would later call Cyril "a man of apostolic life" and "a man of great wisdom".[24] Their project in Moravia found support from the new Pope Adrian II (867-872), who formally authorized the use of the new Slavic liturgy. Subsequently, Methodius was ordained as priest by the pope himself, and five Slavic disciples were ordained as priests (Saint Gorazd, Saint Clement of Ohrid and Saint Naum) and as deacons (Saint Angelar and Saint Sava) by the prominent bishops Formosus and Gauderic.[25] Since the 10th century Cyril and Methodius along with these five disciples are collectively venerated by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church as the "Seven Saints".[26][27] The newly made priests officiated in their own language at the altars of some of the principal churches. Feeling his end approaching, Cyril became a Basilian monk, and was given the new name Cyril.[28] He died in Rome fifty days later (14 February 869). There is some question whether he had been made a bishop, as is asserted in the Translatio (ix.). Upon Cyril´s death Methodius was given the title of Archbishop of Sirmium (now Sremska Mitrovica in Serbia) with jurisdiction over all of Moravia and Pannonia, and authority to use the Slavonic Liturgy.[29]

The statement of the "Vita" that Methodius was made bishop in 870 and not raised to the dignity of an archbishop until 873 is contradicted by the brief of Pope John VIII, written in June 879, according to which Adrian consecrated him archbishop; John includes in his jurisdiction not only Great Moravia and Pannonia, but Serbia as well.

Methodius alone

 
Saint Cyril and Methodius by Stanislav Dospevski, Bulgarian painter

Methodius now continued the work among the Slavs alone; not at first in Great Moravia, but in Pannonia (in the Balaton Principality). Political circumstances in Greater Moravia were insecure. Rastislav had been taken captive by his nephew Svatopluk in 870, then delivered over to Carloman of Bavaria, and condemned in a diet held at Regensburg at the end of 870. Meanwhile, the East Frankish rulers and their bishops decided to try and depose Methodius. The archiepiscopal claims of Methodius were considered so threatening to the rights of Salzburg that he was captured and forced to answer to East Frankish bishops: Adalwin of Salzburg, Ermanrich of Passau, and Anno of Freising. After heated discussion, they declared the intruder deposed, and ordered him to be sent to Germany. There he was kept prisoner in a monastery for two and a half years.[30]

Notwithstanding strong representations of the Conversio Bagoariorum et Carantanorum, written in 871 to influence the pope, though not conceding this purpose, Rome declared emphatically for Methodius. He sent a bishop, Paul of Ancona, to reinstate him and punish his enemies, after which both parties were ordered to appear in Rome with the legate. Thus in 873, new Pope John VIII (872-882) secured the release of Methodius, but instructed him to stop using the Slavonic Liturgy.[31]

Methodius' final years

The papal will prevailed, and Methodius secured his freedom and his archiepiscopal authority over both Great Moravia and Pannonia, albeit without the use of Slavonic for Mass in the Catholic Church. His authority in Pannonia was restricted after Koceľ's death, when the principality was administered by German nobles. However, Svatopluk now ruled practically independently in Great Moravia, and he expelled the German clergy. It seems this secured an undisturbed field of operation for Methodius, and the Vita (x.) depicts the next few years (873–879) as a time of fruitful progress. Methodius seems to have disregarded, wholly or in part, the prohibition of the Slavonic liturgy. When Frankish clerics again ventured into the country, revealing a permissive Svatopluk at odds with his punctilious archbishop, this was made a cause of complaint against him at Rome, coupled with charges regarding the Filioque.

In 878, Methodius was summoned to Rome on charges of heresy and using Slavonic. This time Pope John was convinced by the arguments that Methodius made in his defence and sent him back cleared of all charges, and with permission to use Slavonic. The Carolingian bishop who succeeded him, Wiching, a Swabian, suppressed the Slavonic Liturgy and forced the followers of Methodius into exile. Many found refuge with Knyaz Boris the Baptizer in Bulgaria, under whom they reorganized a Slavic-speaking Church. Meanwhile, Pope John's successors adopted a Latin-only policy which lasted for centuries.

Methodius vindicated his orthodoxy and promised to obey with regard to the liturgy. He could the more easily defend his omission of Filioque from the creed as this also pertained in Rome at the time. Though Filioque could, by the 6th century, be heard in some Latin-speaking churches in the west, it was not to be until 1014 that Rome followed suit (see Nicene Creed). Methodius' critics were mollified by Methodius having to accept the appointment of Wiching as his coadjutor. When relations between the two factions again became strained, John VIII steadfastly supported Methodius. After his death (December 882) it was the archbishop himself whose position looked insecure. His need for political support, visiting the Eastern emperor, inclined Goetz to accept the account in the Vita (xiii.).

After Methodius died on 6 April 885,[32] animosity erupted into open conflict. Gorazd, whom Methodius had designated as his successor, was not recognised by Pope Stephen V. This pope now also forbade the Slavic liturgy[33] and placed as Methodius' successor the infamous Wiching . He promptly sent disciples of Cyril and Methodius into exile from Great Moravia. They fled to the First Bulgarian Empire, to be welcomed and commissioned to establish two theological schools - the Ohrid Literary School in Ohrid and the Preslav Literary School in Preslav. This had been originally established in Pliska, but was moved in 893. In Preslav the Cyrillic script was devised from the Greek and Glagolitic alphabets.[34] Cyrillic gradually replaced Glagolitic as the alphabet of the Old Church Slavonic language, which became the official language of the First Bulgarian Empire and later spread to the Eastern Slav lands of Kievan Rus'. Cyrillic eventually spread throughout most of the Slavic world to become the standard alphabet in the Eastern Orthodox Slavic countries. In this way the work of Cyril and Methodius and their disciples enabled the spread of Christianity throughout Eastern Europe.

Methodius' body was buried in the main cathedral church of Great Moravia. It still remains an open question which city was capital of Great Moravia. As a result the location of Methodius' remains remains uncertain.[35]

Invention of the Glagolitic and Cyrillic alphabets

 
The Baška tablet is an early example of the Glagolitic from Croatia
 
A cartoon about Saints Cyril and Methodius from Bulgaria in 1938. The caption reads : Brother Cyril, go tell those who are inside to learn the alphabet so they know freedom (Bulgarian: свобода) and anarchy (Bulgarian: слободия) are not the same.

The Glagolitic and Cyrillic alphabets are the oldest known Slavic alphabets, and were created by the two brothers and/or their students, to translate the Gospels and liturgical books[22] into the Slavic languages.[36] The early Glagolitic alphabet was used in Great Moravia between 863 (the arrival of Cyril and Methodius) and 885 (the expulsion of their students) for government and religious documents and books, and at the Great Moravian Academy (Veľkomoravské učilište) founded by Cyril, where followers of Cyril and Methodius were educated, by Methodius himself among others. The alphabet has been traditionally attributed to Cyril. That seems confirmed explicitly by the papal letter Industriae tuae (880) approving the use of Old Church Slavonic, which says that the alphabet was "invented by Constantine the Philosopher". "Invention" need not exclude the brothers having possibly made use of earlier letterforms. Before that time the Slavic languages had no distinct script of their own.

The early Cyrillic alphabet was developed by the disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodius at the Preslav Literary School (previously in Pliska as Pliska Literary School) at the end of the 9th century as a simplification of the Glagolitic alphabet which more closely resembled the Greek alphabet.

After the death of Cyril, Clement of Ohrid accompanied Methodius from Rome to Pannonia and Great Moravia. After the death of Methodius in 885, Clement headed the struggle against the German clergy in Great Moravia along with Gorazd. After spending some time in jail, he was expelled from Great Moravia, and in 885 or 886 reached the borders of the Bulgarian Empire together with Naum, Angelar, and possibly Gorazd (other sources suggest Gorazd had already died by that time). Clement and Naum were afterwards sent to the Bulgarian capital of Pliska, where they were commissioned by Boris I to instruct the future clergy of the state in the Slavonic language.

After the adoption of Christianity in 865, religious ceremonies in Bulgaria were conducted in Greek by clergy sent from the Byzantine Empire. Fearing growing Byzantine influence and weakening of the state, Boris viewed the adoption of the Old Slavonic language as a way to preserve the political independence and stability of Bulgaria, so he established two literary schools (academies), in Pliska and Ohrid, where theology was to be taught in the Slavonic language. While Naum of Preslav stayed in Pliska working on the foundation of the Pliska Literary School, Clement was commissioned by Boris I to organise the teaching of theology to future clergymen in Old Church Slavonic at the Ohrid Literary School. Over seven years (886-893) Clement taught some 3,500 students in the Slavonic language and the Glagolitic alphabet.

Commemoration

Saints Cyril and Methodius' Day

 
Saints Cyril and Methodius procession

Compared to nowadays, the process leading to canonization was less involved in the decades following Cyril's death. Cyril was regarded by his disciples as a saint soon after his death. His following spread among the nations he evangelized, and subsequently to the wider Christian Church. With his brother Methodius, he was famous as a man of holiness. From the crowds lining the Roman streets during his funeral procession, there were calls for Cyril to be accorded saintly status. The brothers' first appearance in a papal document is in Grande Munus of Leo XIII in 1880. They are known as the "Apostles of the Slavs", and are still highly regarded by both Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christians. Their feast day is currently celebrated on 14 February in the Roman Catholic Church (to coincide with the date of St Cyril's death); on 11 May in the Eastern Orthodox Church (though for Eastern Orthodox Churches which use the Julian Calendar this is 24 May according to the Gregorian calendar); and on 7 July according to the old sanctoral calendar before the revisions of the Second Vatican Council. The celebration also commemorates the introduction of literacy and the preaching of the gospels in the Slavonic language by the brothers. The brothers were declared "Patrons of Europe" in 1980.[37]

The first recorded secular celebration of Saints Cyril and Methodius' Day as the "Day of the Bulgarian script", as traditionally accepted by Bulgarian history, was held in the town of Plovdiv on 11 May 1851. At the same time a local Bulgarian school was named "Saints Cyril and Methodius". Both acts had been instigated by the prominent Bulgarian educator Nayden Gerov.[38] However, an Armenian traveller referred to a "celebration of the Bulgarian script" when he visited the town of Shumen on 22 May 1803.[39]

Cyril and Methodius are remembered in the Church of England with a Lesser Festival[40] and with a lesser feast on the Episcopal Church calendar[1] on 14 February.

The day is now celebrated as a public holiday in the following countries:

  • In Bulgaria it is celebrated on 24 May and is known as the "Bulgarian Education and Culture, and Slavonic Script Day" (Bulgarian: Ден на българската просвета и култура и на славянската писменост), a national holiday celebrating Bulgarian culture and literature as well as the alphabet. It is also known as "Alphabet, Culture, and Education Day" (Bulgarian: Ден на азбуката, културата и просвещението). Saints Cyril and Methodius are patrons of the National Library of Bulgaria. There is a monument to them in front of the library. Saints Cyril and Methodius are the most celebrated saints in the Bulgarian Orthodox church, and icons of the two brothers can be found in every church.
  • In North Macedonia, it is celebrated on 24 May and is known as the "Saints Cyril and Methodius, Slavonic Enlighteners' Day" (Macedonian: Св. Кирил и Методиј, Ден на словенските просветители), a national holiday. The Government of the Republic of Macedonia enacted a statute of the national holiday in October 2006 and the Parliament of the Republic of Macedonia passed a corresponding law at the beginning of 2007.[41] Previously it had only been celebrated in the schools. It is also known as the day of the "Solun Brothers" (Macedonian: Солунските браќа).
  • In the Czech Republic and Slovakia, the two brothers were originally commemorated on 9 March, but Pope Pius IX changed this date to 5 July for several reasons.[42] Today, Saints Cyril and Methodius are revered there as national saints and their name day (5 July), "Sts Cyril and Methodius Day" is a national holiday in Czech Republic and Slovakia. In the Czech Republic it is celebrated as "Slavic Missionaries Cyril and Methodius Day" (Czech: Den slovanských věrozvěstů Cyrila a Metoděje); in Slovakia it is celebrated as "St. Cyril and Metod Day" (Slovak: Sviatok svätého Cyrila a Metoda).[42]
  • In Russia, it is celebrated on 24 May and is known as the "Slavonic Literature and Culture Day" (Russian: День славянской письменности и культуры), celebrating Slavonic culture and literature as well as the alphabet. Its celebration is ecclesiastical (11 May in the Church's Julian calendar). It is not a public holiday in Russia.

The saints' feast day is celebrated by the Eastern Orthodox Church on 11 May and by the Roman Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion on 14 February as "Saints Cyril and Methodius Day". The Lutheran Churches of Western Christianity commemorate the two saints either on 14 February or 11 May. The Byzantine Rite Lutheran Churches celebrate Saints Cyril and Methodius Day on 24 May.[43]

Other commemoration

The national library of Bulgaria in Sofia, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje in the North Macedonia, and St. Cyril and St. Methodius University of Veliko Tarnovo in Bulgaria and in Trnava, Slovakia, bear the name of the two saints. Faculty of Theology at Palacký University in Olomouc (Czech Republic), bears the name "Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology". In the United States, SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan, bears their name.

The Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius established in 1846 was short-lived a pro-Ukrainian organization in the Russian Empire to preserve Ukrainian national identity.

Saints Cyril and Methodius are the main patron saints of the Archdiocese of Ljubljana. Ljubljana Cathedral stands at Cyril and Methodius Square (Slovene: Ciril–Metodov trg).[44] They are also patron saints of the Greek-Catholic Eparchy of Košice (Slovakia)[5] and the Slovak Greek Catholic Eparchy of Toronto.

St. Cyril Peak and St. Methodius Peak in the Tangra Mountains on Livingston Island, South Shetland Islands, in Antarctica are named for the brothers.

Saint Cyril's remains are interred in a shrine-chapel within the Basilica di San Clemente in Rome. The chapel holds a Madonna by Sassoferrato.

The Basilica of SS. Cyril and Methodius in Danville, Pennsylvania, (the only Roman Catholic basilica dedicated to SS. Cyril and Methodius in the world) is the motherhouse chapel of the Sisters of SS. Cyril and Methodius, a Roman Catholic women's religious community of pontifical right dedicated to apostolic works of ecumenism, education, evangelization, and elder care.[45]

The Order of Saints Cyril and Methodius, originally founded in 1909, is part of the national award system of Bulgaria.

In 2021, a research vessel newly acquired by the Bulgarian Navy was re-christened Ss. Cyril and Methodius after the saints, with actress Maria Bakalova as the sponsor.[46]

Gallery

Names in other relevant languages

  • Armenian: Կիրիլ և Մեթոդիոս (Kiril ev Metodios)
  • Greek: Κύριλλος καὶ Μεθόδιος (Kýrillos kaí Methódios)
  • Old Church Slavonic: Кѷриллъ и Меѳодїи
  • Belarusian: Кірыла і Мяфодзій (Kiryła i Miafodzij) or Кірыла і Мятода (Kiryła i Miatoda)
  • Bulgarian: Кирил и Методий (Kiril i Metodiy)
  • Croatian: Ćiril i Metod
  • Czech: Cyril a Metoděj
  • Kazakh: Кирилл және методиус (Kïrïll jäne metodïws)
  • Macedonian: Кирил и Методиј (Kiril i Metodij)
  • New Church Slavonic: Кѷрі́ллъ и҆ Меѳо́дїй (Kỳrill" i Methodij)
  • Polish: Cyryl i Metody
  • Romanian: Chiril și Metodie
  • Russian: Кири́лл и Мефодий (Kirill i Mefodij), pre-1918 spelling: Кириллъ и Меѳодій (Kirill" i Methodij)
  • Serbian: Ћирило и Методије / Ćirilo i Metodije
  • Slovak: Cyril a Metod
  • Slovene: Ciril in Metod
  • Ukrainian: Кирило і Мефодій (Kyrylo i Mefodij)

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Cyril and Methodius, Missionaries, 869, 885". The Episcopal Church. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  2. ^ . Resurrectionpeople.org. Archived from the original on 16 May 2019. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  3. ^ In the 21st century this date in the Julian Calendar corresponds to 24 May in the Gregorian Calendar
  4. ^ a b Jones, Terry. . Patron Saints Index. Archived from the original on 19 February 2007. Retrieved 18 February 2007.
  5. ^ a b History of the Eparchy of Košice 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine (Slovak)
  6. ^ "Figures of (trans-) national religious memory of the Orthodox southern Slavs before 1945: an outline on the examples of SS. Cyril and Methodius". ResearchGate. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
  7. ^ Liturgy of the Hours, Volume III, 14 February.
  8. ^ "Egregiae Virtutis". from the original on 4 January 2009. Retrieved 26 April 2009. Apostolic letter of Pope John Paul II, 31 December 1980 (in Latin)
  9. ^ Cyril and Methodius, Encyclopædia Britannica 2005
  10. ^ Vita Constantini slavica, Cap. 18: Denkschriften der kaiserl. Akademie der Wissenschaften 19, Wien 1870, p. 246
  11. ^ Chapter 18 of the Slavonic Life of Constantine 15 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine, an English translation
  12. ^ English Translation of the 18th Chapter of the Vita Constantini, Liturgy of the Hours, Proper of Saints, 14 February
  13. ^ "SS.Cyril and Methodius". www.carpatho-rusyn.org. from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  14. ^
    • 1. Mortimer Chambers, Barbara Hanawalt, Theodore Rabb, Isser Woloch, Raymond Grew. The Western Experience with Powerweb. Eighth Edition. McGraw-Hill Higher Education 2002. University of Michigan. p. 214. ISBN 9780072565447
    ...Two Christian brothers of Slavic descent, Cyril and Methodius, set out in about 862 as missionaries from the Byzantine...
    • 2. Balkan Studies, Volume 22. Hidryma Meletōn Chersonēsou tou Haimou (Thessalonikē, Greece). The Institute, 1981. Original fromthe University of Michigan. p. 381
    ...Being of Slavic descent, both of them spoke the old Slavic language fluently...
    • 3. Loring M. Danforth. The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World. Princeton University Press, 1995. p. 49 ISBN 9780691043562.
    ...In the ninth century two brothers Cyril and Methodius, Macedonian educators of Slavic origin from Solun, brought literacy and Christianity to the Slavs...
    • 4. Ihor Ševčenko. Byzantium and the Slavs: In Letters and Culture'. Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, 1991. p. 481. ISBN 9780916458126
    ...63-68 (Cyril and Methodius were Slavs)...There remains that argument for Cyril's and Methodius' Slavic origin which has to do with the Slavic translation of the Gospels and...
    • 5. Roland Herbert Bainton. Christianity: An American Heritage Book Series. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2000. p. 156. ISBN 9780618056873
    ...Two missionaries of Slavic origin, Cyril (baptized Constantine) and Methodius, adapted the Greek alphabet and translated both the Bible and the liturgy into the Slavic tongue...
    • 6. John Shea. Macedonia and Greece: The Struggle to Define a New Balkan Nation. McFarland, 1997. p. 56 . ISBN 9780786437672
    ...Byzantine emperor Michael, on the request of the Moravian prince Ratislav, decided to send Slav priests as educators, he chose the Salonika brothers Cyril and Methodius...
    • 7. UNESCO Features: A Fortnightly Press Service. UNESCO. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, 1984. University of Michigan
    ...They may have been of wholly Slavic descent or of mixed Greco-Slav origin...
    • 8. The Pakistan Review, Volume 19. Ferozsons Limited, 1971. University of California. p. 41
    ...century in Salonika, then one of the largest towns in the Byzantine Empire. The brothers were of Slav origin...
    • 9. Balkania, Volume 7. Balkania Publishing Company, 1973. Indiana University. p. 10
    ...Cyril and Methodius not only lived among Slavs. ...of Slavonic, which they not only spoke and understood, but in which they also wrote—translated and composed—and for which they invented an alphabet, is proof of their Slav origin...
    • 10. Bryce Dale Lyon, Herbert Harvey Rowen, Theodore S. Hamerow. A History of the Western World, Volume 1. Rand McNally College Pub. Co., 1974. Northwestern University. p. 239
    ...brothers of Slavic origin, Cyril and Methodius, who, after being ordained at Constantinople, preached the Gospel to the Slavs...
    • 11. Roland Herbert Bainton. The history of Christianity. Nelson, 1964. p. 169
    ...Two missionaries of Slavic origin, Cyril (baptized Constantine) and Methodius, adapted the Greek alphabet and translated both the Bible and the liturgy into the Slavic tongue...
    • 12. Carl Waldman, Catherine Mason. Encyclopedia of European Peoples: Facts on File library of world history. Infobase Publishing, 2006. p. 752. ISBN 9781438129181
    ...There is disagreement as to whether Cyril and his brother Methodius were Greek or Slavic, but they knew the Slavic dialect spoken in Macedonia...
    • 13. Frank Andrews. Ancient Slavs'. Worzalla Publishing Company, 1976. University of Wisconsin - Madison. p. 163.
    ...Cyril and Methodius derived from a rich family of Salonica, perhaps of Slavic origin, but Grecized in those times. Methodius (815–885)...
    • 14. Johann Heinrich Kurtz, John Macpherson. Church History. Hodder and Stoughton, 1891. University of California. p. 431
    ...Born at Thessalonica, and so probably of Slavic descent, at least acquainted with the language of the Slavs,...
    • 15. William Leslie King. Investment and Achievement: A Study in Christian Progress. Jennings and Graham, 1913. Columbia University.
    ...This man and his brother Cyril became the Methodius and Cyril apostles of the Slavic people. These two brothers seemed to have been raised up for such a mission. They were probably of Slavic descent...
  15. ^
    • Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001–05, s.v. "Cyril and Methodius, Saints" "Greek missionaries, brothers, called Apostles to the Slavs and fathers of Slavonic literature."
    • Encyclopædia Britannica, Major alphabets of the world, Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets, 2008, O.Ed. "The two early Slavic alphabets, the Cyrillic and the Glagolitic, were invented by St. Cyril, or Constantine (c. 827–869), and St. Methodius (c. 825–884). These men were Greeks from Thessalonica who became apostles to the southern Slavs, whom they converted to Christianity.
    • Encyclopedia of World Cultures, David H. Levinson, 1991, p.239, s.v., "Social Science"
    • Eric M. Meyers, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East, p.151, 1997
    • Lunt, Slavic Review, June 1964, p. 216; Roman Jakobson, Crucial problems of Cyrillo-Methodian Studies; Leonid Ivan Strakhovsky, A Handbook of Slavic Studies, p.98
    • V.Bogdanovich, History of the ancient Serbian literature, Belgrade, 1980, p.119
    • Hastings, Adrian (1997). The construction of nationhood: ethnicity, religion, and nationalism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 126. ISBN 0-521-62544-0. The activity of the brothers Constantine (later renamed Cyril) and Methodius, aristocratic Greek priests who were sent from Constantinople.
    • Fletcher, R. A. (1999). The barbarian conversion: from paganism to Christianity. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 327. ISBN 0-520-21859-0.
    • Cizevskij, Dmitrij; Zenkovsky, Serge A.; Porter, Richard E. (1971). Comparative History of Slavic Literatures. Vanderbilt University Press. p. vi. ISBN 0-8265-1371-9. Two Greek brothers from Salonika, Constantine who later became a monk and took the name Cyril and Methodius.
    • The illustrated guide to the Bible. New York: Oxford University Press. 1998. p. 14. ISBN 0-19-521462-5. In Eastern Europe, the first translations of the Bible into the Slavonic languages were made by the Greek missionaries Cyril and Methodius in the 860s
    • Smalley, William Allen (1991). Translation as mission: Bible translation in the modern missionary movement. Macon, Ga.: Mercer. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-86554-389-8. The most important instance where translation and the beginning church did coincide closely was in Slavonic under the brothers Cyril and Methodius, with the Bible completed by A.D. 880. This was a missionary translation but unusual again (from a modern point of view) because not a translation into the dialect spoken where the missionaries were. The brothers were Greeks who had been brought up in Macedonia.
  16. ^
    • 1. Philip Lief Group. Saintly Support: A Prayer For Every Problem. Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2003. p. 37. ISBN 9780740733369
    ...Cyril was born of Greek nobility connected with the senate of Thessalonica, although his mother may have been of Slavic descent...
    • 2. UNESCO Features: A Fortnightly Press Service. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization., 1984. University of Michigan
    ...They may have been of wholly Slavic descent or of mixed Greco-Slav origin...
  17. ^ Raymond Davis (1995). The Lives of the Ninth-century Popes (Liber Pontificalis): The Ancient Biographies of Ten Popes from A.D. 817-891. Liverpool University Press. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-85323-479-1.
  18. ^ "Pope Benedict XVI. "Saints Cyril and Methodius", General Audience 17 June 2009, Libreria Editrice Vaticana". W2.vatican.va. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  19. ^ Vizantiiskoe missionerstvo, Ivanov S. A., Iazyki slavianskoi kul'tury, Moskva 2003, p. 147
  20. ^ a b c Encyclopædia Britannica, Cyril and Methodius, Saints, O.Ed., 2008
  21. ^ "From Eastern Roman to Byzantine: transformation of Roman culture (500-800)". Indiana University Northwest. from the original on 16 September 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  22. ^ a b Abraham, Ladislas (1908). "Sts. Cyril and Methodius". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  23. ^ "Sts. Cyril and Methodius". Pravmir. from the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  24. ^ "Vir apostolicae vitae...sapientissimus vir" MGH Epist., 7/2, 1928, p. 436
  25. ^ "Sv. Gorazd a spoločníci" [St. Gorazd and his colleagues]. Franciscan Friars of Slovakia (in Slovak). from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2015.
  26. ^ David Farmer, The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, Fifth Edition Revised, OUP Oxford, 2011, ISBN 0191036730, p. 94.
  27. ^ "Seven Saints". Kashtite.com. 27 July 2016. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  28. ^ It was and is customary on becoming a monk in the Eastern Orthodox tradition to receive a new name.
  29. ^ Đorđe Radojičić (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. pp. 73–75.
  30. ^ Bowlus 1995, p. 165-186.
  31. ^ Goldberg 2006, p. 319-320.
  32. ^ Житїе Меөодїя (Life of Methodius), title & chap. XVIII - available on-line 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ Richard P. McBrien, Lives of the Popes, (HarperCollins, 2000), 144.
  34. ^ "In Pictures: Ohrid, Home of Cyrillic". Balkan Insight. 24 May 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  35. ^ Short Life of Cyril & Methodius. Translated by Ján STANISLAV: Životy slovanských apoštolov Cyrila a Metoda v legendách a listoch. Turčiansky Sv. Martin: Matica slovenská, 1950, p. 88. (Slovak)
  36. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, Major alphabets of the world, Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets, 2008, O.Ed. "The two early Slavic alphabets, the Cyrillic and the Glagolitic, were invented by St. Cyril, or Constantine (c. 827–869), and St. Methodius (c. 825–884). These men were Greeks from Thessalonica who became apostles to the southern Slavs, whom they converted to Christianity.
  37. ^ "Nikolaos Martis: MACEDONIA". www.hri.org. from the original on 2 May 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  38. ^ "История на България", Том 6 Българско Възраждане 1856–1878, Издателство на Българската академия на науките, София, 1987, стр. 106 (in Bulgarian; in English: "History of Bulgaria", Volume 6 Bulgarian Revival 1856–1878, Publishing house of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, 1987, page 106).
  39. ^ Jubilee speech of the Academician Ivan Yuhnovski, Head of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, held on 23 May 2003, published in Information Bulletin 3 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 3(62), Sofia, 27 June 2003 (in Bulgarian).
  40. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  41. ^ Announcement about the eleventh session of the Government of the Republic of Macedonia on 24 October 2006 from the official site 10 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine of the Government of the Republic of Macedonia (in Macedonian).
  42. ^ a b Votruba, Martin. "Holiday date". Slovak Studies Program. University of Pittsburgh. from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 11 March 2009.
  43. ^ "День Св. Кирила та Мефодія, просвітителів слов'янських" (in Ukrainian). Ukrainian Lutheran Church. 24 May 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  44. ^ "The Ljubljana Metropolitan Province". 5 March 2014. from the original on 5 March 2014.
  45. ^ "Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius". Sscm.org. 4 March 2002. from the original on 23 June 2013. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  46. ^ "Bulgaria's First Military Research Vessel Christened Ss. Cyril and Methodius". Bulgarian Telegraph Agency. 27 July 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2022.

Sources

  • Betti, Maddalena (2013). The Making of Christian Moravia (858-882): Papal Power and Political Reality. Leiden-Boston: Brill. ISBN 9789004260085.
  • Bowlus, Charles R. (1995). Franks, Moravians, and Magyars: The Struggle for the Middle Danube, 788-907. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812232769.
  • Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521815390.
  • Curta, Florin (2019). Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages (500-1300). Leiden and Boston: Brill. ISBN 9789004395190.
  • Dvornik, Francis (1962). The Slavs in European History and Civilization. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813507996.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (1991) [1983]. The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472081497.
  • Goldberg, Eric J. (2006). Struggle for Empire: Kingship and Conflict under Louis the German, 817-876. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801438905.
  • Komatina, Predrag (2015). "The Church in Serbia at the Time of Cyrilo-Methodian Mission in Moravia". Cyril and Methodius: Byzantium and the World of the Slavs. Thessaloniki: Dimos. pp. 711–718.
  • Moravcsik, Gyula, ed. (1967) [1949]. Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio (2nd revised ed.). Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies. ISBN 9780884020219.
  • Ostrogorsky, George (1956). History of the Byzantine State. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
  • Subotin-Golubović, Tatjana (1999). "Reflection of the Cult of Saint Konstantine and Methodios in Medieval Serbian Culture". Thessaloniki - Magna Moravia: Proceedings of the International Conference. Thessaloniki: Hellenic Association for Slavic Studies. pp. 37–46. ISBN 9789608595934.
  • Vlasto, Alexis P. (1970). The Entry of the Slavs into Christendom: An Introduction to the Medieval History of the Slavs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521074599.
  • Whittow, Mark (1996). The Making of Orthodox Byzantium, 600–1025. Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN 9781349247653.

Further reading

  • Dvornik, F. (1964). "The Significance of the Missions of Cyril and Methodius". Slavic Review. 23 (2): 195–211. doi:10.2307/2492930. JSTOR 2492930. S2CID 163378481.

External links

  • Slavorum Apostoli by Pope John Paul II
  • Cyril and Methodius – Encyclical letter (Epistola Enciclica), 31 December 1980 by Pope John Paul II
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Sts. Cyril and Methodius" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • "Equal to Apostles SS. Cyril and Methodius Teachers of Slavs", by Prof. Nicolai D. Talberg
  • Pope Leo XIII, "Grande munus: on Saints Cyril and Methodius
  • Bulgarian Official Holidays, National Assembly of the Republic of Bulgaria: in English 9 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine, in Bulgarian 28 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • Bank holidays in the Czech Republic, Czech National Bank: in English, in Czech
  • 24 May – The Day Of Slavonic Alphabet, Bulgarian Enlightenment and Culture

cyril, methodius, saints, redirects, here, other, uses, saints, disambiguation, cyril, born, constantine, methodius, were, brothers, byzantine, christian, theologians, missionaries, their, work, evangelizing, slavs, they, known, apostles, slavs, saints, saints. Saints Cyril and Methodius redirects here For other uses see Saints Cyril and Methodius disambiguation Cyril born Constantine 826 869 and Methodius 815 885 were brothers Byzantine Christian theologians and missionaries For their work evangelizing the Slavs they are known as the Apostles to the Slavs 6 SaintsCyril and Methodius Saints Cyril and Methodius holding the Cyrillic alphabet a mural by Bulgarian iconographer Z Zograf 1848 Troyan MonasteryBishops and Confessors Equals to the Apostles Patrons of Europe Apostles to the SlavsBorn826 or 827 and 815Thessalonica Byzantine Empire present day Greece Died 869 02 14 14 February 869 and 885 04 06 6 April 885Rome and Velehrad Great MoraviaVenerated inEastern Orthodox ChurchCatholic ChurchAnglican Communion 1 Lutheranism 2 Feast11 and 24 May 3 Eastern Orthodox Church 14 February present Roman Catholic calendar 5 July Roman Catholic calendar 1880 1886 7 July Roman Catholic calendar 1887 1969 5 July Roman Catholic Czech Republic and Slovakia AttributesBrothers depicted together Eastern bishops holding up a church Eastern bishops holding an icon of the Last Judgment 4 Often Cyril is depicted wearing a monastic habit and Methodius vested as a bishop with omophorion PatronageBulgaria North Macedonia Czech Republic Slovakia Transnistria Serbia Archdiocese of Ljubljana Europe 4 Slovak Eparchy of Toronto Eparchy of Kosice 5 They are credited with devising the Glagolitic alphabet the first alphabet used to transcribe Old Church Slavonic 7 After their deaths their pupils continued their missionary work among other Slavs Both brothers are venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church as saints with the title of equal to apostles In 1880 Pope Leo XIII introduced their feast into the calendar of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church In 1980 the first Slav pope Pope John Paul II declared them co patron saints of Europe together with Benedict of Nursia 8 Contents 1 Early career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Mission to the Khazars 2 Mission to the Slavs 2 1 Great Moravia 2 2 Journey to Rome 2 3 Methodius alone 2 4 Methodius final years 3 Invention of the Glagolitic and Cyrillic alphabets 4 Commemoration 4 1 Saints Cyril and Methodius Day 4 2 Other commemoration 5 Gallery 6 Names in other relevant languages 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly careerEarly life The two brothers were born in Thessalonica at that time in the Byzantine province of the same name today in Greece Cyril in 827 828 and Methodius in 815 820 According to the Vita Cyrilli The Life of Cyril Cyril was reputedly the youngest of seven brothers he was born Constantine 9 but was given the name Cyril upon becoming a monk in Rome shortly before his death 10 11 12 Methodius was born Michael and was given the name Methodius upon becoming a monk in Polychron Monastery at Mysian Olympus present day Uludag in northwest Turkey 13 Their father was Leo a droungarios of the Byzantine theme of Thessalonica and their mother s name was Maria The exact ethnic origins of the brothers are unknown there is controversy as to whether Cyril and Methodius were of Slavic 14 or Greek 15 origin or both 16 The two brothers lost their father when Cyril was fourteen and the powerful minister Theoktistos who was logothetes tou dromou one of the chief ministers of the Empire became their protector He was also responsible along with the regent Bardas for initiating a far reaching educational program within the Empire which culminated in the establishment of the University of Magnaura where Cyril was to teach Cyril was ordained as priest some time after his education while his brother Methodius remained a deacon until 867 868 17 Mission to the Khazars About the year 860 Byzantine Emperor Michael III and the Patriarch of Constantinople Photius a professor of Cyril s at the University and his guiding light in earlier years sent Cyril on a missionary expedition to the Khazars who had requested a scholar be sent to them who could converse with both Jews and Saracens 18 It has been claimed that Methodius accompanied Cyril on the mission to the Khazars but this may be a later invention citation needed The account of his life presented in the Latin Legenda claims that he learned the Khazar language while in Chersonesos in Taurica today Crimea After his return to Constantinople Cyril assumed the role of professor of philosophy at the University His brother had by this time become a significant figure in Byzantine political and administrative affairs and an abbot of his monastery citation needed Mission to the SlavsGreat Moravia nbsp Cyril and Methodius painting by Jan Matejko 1885 In 862 the brothers began the work which would give them their historical importance That year Prince Rastislav of Great Moravia requested that Emperor Michael III and the Patriarch Photius send missionaries to evangelize his Slavic subjects His motives in doing so were probably more political than religious Rastislav had become king with the support of the Frankish ruler Louis the German though he subsequently sought to assert his independence from the Franks That Cyril and Methodius might have been the first to bring Christianity to Moravia is a common misconception Rastislav s letter to Michael III states clearly that his people had already rejected paganism and adhere to the Christian law 19 Rastislav is said to have expelled missionaries of the Roman Church and instead turned to Constantinople for ecclesiastical assistance and presumably a degree of political support 20 The Emperor quickly chose to send Cyril accompanied by his brother Methodius 21 The request provided a convenient opportunity to expand Byzantine influence Their first work seems to have been the training of assistants In 863 they began the task of translating the Gospels and essential liturgical books into what is now known as Old Church Slavonic 22 and travelled to Great Moravia to promote it 23 This endeavour was amply rewarded However they came into conflict with German ecclesiastics who opposed their efforts to create a specifically Slavic liturgy For the purpose of this mission they devised the Glagolitic alphabet the first alphabet to be used for Slavonic manuscripts The Glagolitic alphabet was suited to match the specific features of the Slavic language Its descendant script the Cyrillic is still used by many languages today 20 The brothers wrote the first Slavic Civil Code which was used in Great Moravia The language derived from Old Church Slavonic known as Church Slavonic is still used in the liturgy by several Orthodox Churches and also in some Eastern Catholic churches Exactly how much the brothers translated is impossible to say for certain The New Testament and the Psalms seem to have been the first followed by other lessons from the Old Testament citation needed The Translatio speaks only of a version of the Gospels by Cyril and the Vita Methodii only of the evangelium Slovenicum though other liturgical selections may also have been translated Nor is it known for sure which liturgy whether of Rome or of Constantinople they took as a source They may well have used the Roman alphabet as hinted by liturgical fragments adhering closely to the Latin type This view is confirmed by the Prague Fragments and by certain Old Glagolitic liturgical fragments brought from Jerusalem to Kyiv and discovered there by Izmail Sreznevsky probably the oldest document in the Slavonic tongue examples of where they resemble the Latin type include the words Mass Preface and the name of one Felicitas Regardless the circumstances were such that the brothers could have hoped for no lasting success without having had authorization from Rome Journey to Rome This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cyril and Methodius news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Saints Cyril and Methodius in Rome Fresco in San Clemente The mission of Constantine and Methodius had great success among Slavs in part because they used the people s native language rather than Latin or Greek In Great Moravia Constantine and Methodius also encountered missionaries from East Francia They would have represented the western or Latin branch of the Church more particularly epitomizing the Carolingian Empire as founded by Charlemagne and intent on linguistic and cultural uniformity They insisted on the use of the Latin liturgy and they regarded Moravia and the Slavic peoples as part of their rightful mission field When friction developed the brothers unwilling to be a cause of dissension among Christians decided to travel to Rome to see the Pope and seek a solution that would avoid quarrelling between missionaries in the field In 867 Pope Nicholas I 858 867 invited the brothers to Rome Their evangelizing mission in Moravia had by this time become the focus of a dispute with Archbishop Adalwin of Salzburg 859 873 and Bishop Ermanrich of Passau 866 874 They claimed ecclesiastical control of the same territory and wished to see it use the Latin liturgy exclusively With them they brought the relics of Saint Clement and a retinue of disciples They passed through Pannonia the Balaton Principality where they were well received by Prince Koceľ This activity in Pannonia made a continuation of conflicts inevitable with the German episcopate and especially with the bishop of Salzburg whose prerogative Pannonia had been for seventy five years As early as 865 Bishop Adalwin was found to exercise Episcopal rights there The administration under him was in the hands of the archpriest Riehbald He was obliged to retire to Salzburg though his superior was instinctively disinclined to abandon his claim The brothers sought support from Rome and arrived there in 868 where they were warmly received This was partly due to their bringing with them the relics of Saint Clement rivalry with Constantinople over the territory of the Slavs would have inclined Rome to value the brothers and their influence 20 The brothers were praised for their learning and cultivated for their influence in Constantinople Anastasius Bibliothecarius would later call Cyril a man of apostolic life and a man of great wisdom 24 Their project in Moravia found support from the new Pope Adrian II 867 872 who formally authorized the use of the new Slavic liturgy Subsequently Methodius was ordained as priest by the pope himself and five Slavic disciples were ordained as priests Saint Gorazd Saint Clement of Ohrid and Saint Naum and as deacons Saint Angelar and Saint Sava by the prominent bishops Formosus and Gauderic 25 Since the 10th century Cyril and Methodius along with these five disciples are collectively venerated by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church as the Seven Saints 26 27 The newly made priests officiated in their own language at the altars of some of the principal churches Feeling his end approaching Cyril became a Basilian monk and was given the new name Cyril 28 He died in Rome fifty days later 14 February 869 There is some question whether he had been made a bishop as is asserted in the Translatio ix Upon Cyril s death Methodius was given the title of Archbishop of Sirmium now Sremska Mitrovica in Serbia with jurisdiction over all of Moravia and Pannonia and authority to use the Slavonic Liturgy 29 The statement of the Vita that Methodius was made bishop in 870 and not raised to the dignity of an archbishop until 873 is contradicted by the brief of Pope John VIII written in June 879 according to which Adrian consecrated him archbishop John includes in his jurisdiction not only Great Moravia and Pannonia but Serbia as well Methodius alone nbsp Saint Cyril and Methodius by Stanislav Dospevski Bulgarian painter Methodius now continued the work among the Slavs alone not at first in Great Moravia but in Pannonia in the Balaton Principality Political circumstances in Greater Moravia were insecure Rastislav had been taken captive by his nephew Svatopluk in 870 then delivered over to Carloman of Bavaria and condemned in a diet held at Regensburg at the end of 870 Meanwhile the East Frankish rulers and their bishops decided to try and depose Methodius The archiepiscopal claims of Methodius were considered so threatening to the rights of Salzburg that he was captured and forced to answer to East Frankish bishops Adalwin of Salzburg Ermanrich of Passau and Anno of Freising After heated discussion they declared the intruder deposed and ordered him to be sent to Germany There he was kept prisoner in a monastery for two and a half years 30 Notwithstanding strong representations of the Conversio Bagoariorum et Carantanorum written in 871 to influence the pope though not conceding this purpose Rome declared emphatically for Methodius He sent a bishop Paul of Ancona to reinstate him and punish his enemies after which both parties were ordered to appear in Rome with the legate Thus in 873 new Pope John VIII 872 882 secured the release of Methodius but instructed him to stop using the Slavonic Liturgy 31 Methodius final years The papal will prevailed and Methodius secured his freedom and his archiepiscopal authority over both Great Moravia and Pannonia albeit without the use of Slavonic for Mass in the Catholic Church His authority in Pannonia was restricted after Koceľ s death when the principality was administered by German nobles However Svatopluk now ruled practically independently in Great Moravia and he expelled the German clergy It seems this secured an undisturbed field of operation for Methodius and the Vita x depicts the next few years 873 879 as a time of fruitful progress Methodius seems to have disregarded wholly or in part the prohibition of the Slavonic liturgy When Frankish clerics again ventured into the country revealing a permissive Svatopluk at odds with his punctilious archbishop this was made a cause of complaint against him at Rome coupled with charges regarding the Filioque In 878 Methodius was summoned to Rome on charges of heresy and using Slavonic This time Pope John was convinced by the arguments that Methodius made in his defence and sent him back cleared of all charges and with permission to use Slavonic The Carolingian bishop who succeeded him Wiching a Swabian suppressed the Slavonic Liturgy and forced the followers of Methodius into exile Many found refuge with Knyaz Boris the Baptizer in Bulgaria under whom they reorganized a Slavic speaking Church Meanwhile Pope John s successors adopted a Latin only policy which lasted for centuries Methodius vindicated his orthodoxy and promised to obey with regard to the liturgy He could the more easily defend his omission of Filioque from the creed as this also pertained in Rome at the time Though Filioque could by the 6th century be heard in some Latin speaking churches in the west it was not to be until 1014 that Rome followed suit see Nicene Creed Methodius critics were mollified by Methodius having to accept the appointment of Wiching as his coadjutor When relations between the two factions again became strained John VIII steadfastly supported Methodius After his death December 882 it was the archbishop himself whose position looked insecure His need for political support visiting the Eastern emperor inclined Goetz to accept the account in the Vita xiii After Methodius died on 6 April 885 32 animosity erupted into open conflict Gorazd whom Methodius had designated as his successor was not recognised by Pope Stephen V This pope now also forbade the Slavic liturgy 33 and placed as Methodius successor the infamous Wiching He promptly sent disciples of Cyril and Methodius into exile from Great Moravia They fled to the First Bulgarian Empire to be welcomed and commissioned to establish two theological schools the Ohrid Literary School in Ohrid and the Preslav Literary School in Preslav This had been originally established in Pliska but was moved in 893 In Preslav the Cyrillic script was devised from the Greek and Glagolitic alphabets 34 Cyrillic gradually replaced Glagolitic as the alphabet of the Old Church Slavonic language which became the official language of the First Bulgarian Empire and later spread to the Eastern Slav lands of Kievan Rus Cyrillic eventually spread throughout most of the Slavic world to become the standard alphabet in the Eastern Orthodox Slavic countries In this way the work of Cyril and Methodius and their disciples enabled the spread of Christianity throughout Eastern Europe Methodius body was buried in the main cathedral church of Great Moravia It still remains an open question which city was capital of Great Moravia As a result the location of Methodius remains remains uncertain 35 Invention of the Glagolitic and Cyrillic alphabets nbsp The Baska tablet is an early example of the Glagolitic from Croatia nbsp A cartoon about Saints Cyril and Methodius from Bulgaria in 1938 The caption reads Brother Cyril go tell those who are inside to learn the alphabet so they know freedom Bulgarian svoboda and anarchy Bulgarian slobodiya are not the same The Glagolitic and Cyrillic alphabets are the oldest known Slavic alphabets and were created by the two brothers and or their students to translate the Gospels and liturgical books 22 into the Slavic languages 36 The early Glagolitic alphabet was used in Great Moravia between 863 the arrival of Cyril and Methodius and 885 the expulsion of their students for government and religious documents and books and at the Great Moravian Academy Veľkomoravske uciliste founded by Cyril where followers of Cyril and Methodius were educated by Methodius himself among others The alphabet has been traditionally attributed to Cyril That seems confirmed explicitly by the papal letter Industriae tuae 880 approving the use of Old Church Slavonic which says that the alphabet was invented by Constantine the Philosopher Invention need not exclude the brothers having possibly made use of earlier letterforms Before that time the Slavic languages had no distinct script of their own The early Cyrillic alphabet was developed by the disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodius at the Preslav Literary School previously in Pliska as Pliska Literary School at the end of the 9th century as a simplification of the Glagolitic alphabet which more closely resembled the Greek alphabet After the death of Cyril Clement of Ohrid accompanied Methodius from Rome to Pannonia and Great Moravia After the death of Methodius in 885 Clement headed the struggle against the German clergy in Great Moravia along with Gorazd After spending some time in jail he was expelled from Great Moravia and in 885 or 886 reached the borders of the Bulgarian Empire together with Naum Angelar and possibly Gorazd other sources suggest Gorazd had already died by that time Clement and Naum were afterwards sent to the Bulgarian capital of Pliska where they were commissioned by Boris I to instruct the future clergy of the state in the Slavonic language After the adoption of Christianity in 865 religious ceremonies in Bulgaria were conducted in Greek by clergy sent from the Byzantine Empire Fearing growing Byzantine influence and weakening of the state Boris viewed the adoption of the Old Slavonic language as a way to preserve the political independence and stability of Bulgaria so he established two literary schools academies in Pliska and Ohrid where theology was to be taught in the Slavonic language While Naum of Preslav stayed in Pliska working on the foundation of the Pliska Literary School Clement was commissioned by Boris I to organise the teaching of theology to future clergymen in Old Church Slavonic at the Ohrid Literary School Over seven years 886 893 Clement taught some 3 500 students in the Slavonic language and the Glagolitic alphabet CommemorationSaints Cyril and Methodius Day nbsp Saints Cyril and Methodius procession Compared to nowadays the process leading to canonization was less involved in the decades following Cyril s death Cyril was regarded by his disciples as a saint soon after his death His following spread among the nations he evangelized and subsequently to the wider Christian Church With his brother Methodius he was famous as a man of holiness From the crowds lining the Roman streets during his funeral procession there were calls for Cyril to be accorded saintly status The brothers first appearance in a papal document is in Grande Munus of Leo XIII in 1880 They are known as the Apostles of the Slavs and are still highly regarded by both Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christians Their feast day is currently celebrated on 14 February in the Roman Catholic Church to coincide with the date of St Cyril s death on 11 May in the Eastern Orthodox Church though for Eastern Orthodox Churches which use the Julian Calendar this is 24 May according to the Gregorian calendar and on 7 July according to the old sanctoral calendar before the revisions of the Second Vatican Council The celebration also commemorates the introduction of literacy and the preaching of the gospels in the Slavonic language by the brothers The brothers were declared Patrons of Europe in 1980 37 The first recorded secular celebration of Saints Cyril and Methodius Day as the Day of the Bulgarian script as traditionally accepted by Bulgarian history was held in the town of Plovdiv on 11 May 1851 At the same time a local Bulgarian school was named Saints Cyril and Methodius Both acts had been instigated by the prominent Bulgarian educator Nayden Gerov 38 However an Armenian traveller referred to a celebration of the Bulgarian script when he visited the town of Shumen on 22 May 1803 39 Cyril and Methodius are remembered in the Church of England with a Lesser Festival 40 and with a lesser feast on the Episcopal Church calendar 1 on 14 February The day is now celebrated as a public holiday in the following countries In Bulgaria it is celebrated on 24 May and is known as the Bulgarian Education and Culture and Slavonic Script Day Bulgarian Den na blgarskata prosveta i kultura i na slavyanskata pismenost a national holiday celebrating Bulgarian culture and literature as well as the alphabet It is also known as Alphabet Culture and Education Day Bulgarian Den na azbukata kulturata i prosveshenieto Saints Cyril and Methodius are patrons of the National Library of Bulgaria There is a monument to them in front of the library Saints Cyril and Methodius are the most celebrated saints in the Bulgarian Orthodox church and icons of the two brothers can be found in every church In North Macedonia it is celebrated on 24 May and is known as the Saints Cyril and Methodius Slavonic Enlighteners Day Macedonian Sv Kiril i Metodiј Den na slovenskite prosvetiteli a national holiday The Government of the Republic of Macedonia enacted a statute of the national holiday in October 2006 and the Parliament of the Republic of Macedonia passed a corresponding law at the beginning of 2007 41 Previously it had only been celebrated in the schools It is also known as the day of the Solun Brothers Macedonian Solunskite braќa In the Czech Republic and Slovakia the two brothers were originally commemorated on 9 March but Pope Pius IX changed this date to 5 July for several reasons 42 Today Saints Cyril and Methodius are revered there as national saints and their name day 5 July Sts Cyril and Methodius Day is a national holiday in Czech Republic and Slovakia In the Czech Republic it is celebrated as Slavic Missionaries Cyril and Methodius Day Czech Den slovanskych verozvestu Cyrila a Metodeje in Slovakia it is celebrated as St Cyril and Metod Day Slovak Sviatok svateho Cyrila a Metoda 42 In Russia it is celebrated on 24 May and is known as the Slavonic Literature and Culture Day Russian Den slavyanskoj pismennosti i kultury celebrating Slavonic culture and literature as well as the alphabet Its celebration is ecclesiastical 11 May in the Church s Julian calendar It is not a public holiday in Russia The saints feast day is celebrated by the Eastern Orthodox Church on 11 May and by the Roman Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion on 14 February as Saints Cyril and Methodius Day The Lutheran Churches of Western Christianity commemorate the two saints either on 14 February or 11 May The Byzantine Rite Lutheran Churches celebrate Saints Cyril and Methodius Day on 24 May 43 Other commemoration The national library of Bulgaria in Sofia Ss Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje in the North Macedonia and St Cyril and St Methodius University of Veliko Tarnovo in Bulgaria and in Trnava Slovakia bear the name of the two saints Faculty of Theology at Palacky University in Olomouc Czech Republic bears the name Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology In the United States SS Cyril and Methodius Seminary in Orchard Lake Michigan bears their name The Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius established in 1846 was short lived a pro Ukrainian organization in the Russian Empire to preserve Ukrainian national identity Saints Cyril and Methodius are the main patron saints of the Archdiocese of Ljubljana Ljubljana Cathedral stands at Cyril and Methodius Square Slovene Ciril Metodov trg 44 They are also patron saints of the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Kosice Slovakia 5 and the Slovak Greek Catholic Eparchy of Toronto St Cyril Peak and St Methodius Peak in the Tangra Mountains on Livingston Island South Shetland Islands in Antarctica are named for the brothers Saint Cyril s remains are interred in a shrine chapel within the Basilica di San Clemente in Rome The chapel holds a Madonna by Sassoferrato The Basilica of SS Cyril and Methodius in Danville Pennsylvania the only Roman Catholic basilica dedicated to SS Cyril and Methodius in the world is the motherhouse chapel of the Sisters of SS Cyril and Methodius a Roman Catholic women s religious community of pontifical right dedicated to apostolic works of ecumenism education evangelization and elder care 45 The Order of Saints Cyril and Methodius originally founded in 1909 is part of the national award system of Bulgaria In 2021 a research vessel newly acquired by the Bulgarian Navy was re christened Ss Cyril and Methodius after the saints with actress Maria Bakalova as the sponsor 46 Gallery nbsp Basilica of St Cyril and Methodius in Moravian Velehrad Czech Republic nbsp Cross Procession in Khanty Mansiysk on Saints Cyril and Methodius Day in May 2006 nbsp Inauguration of the monument to Saints Cyril and Methodius in Saratov on Slavonic Literature and Culture Day nbsp Thessaloniki monument of the two Saints gift from the Bulgarian Orthodox Church nbsp Bulgaria Statue of the two Saints in front of the SS Cyril and Methodius National Library in Sofia nbsp Bulgaria Statue of the two Saints in front of the National Palace of Culture in Sofia nbsp North Macedonia The monument in Ohrid nbsp North Macedonia Statue of Cyril and Methodius near the Stone Bridge in Skopje nbsp Czech Republic Statue of Saints Cyril and Methodius at the Charles Bridge in Prague nbsp Czech Republic Saints Cyril and Methodius monument in Mikulcice nbsp Czech Republic Statue of Saint Methodius at the Holy Trinity Column in Olomouc in Moravia nbsp Ukraine The monument in Kyiv nbsp Russia the monument in Khanty Mansiysk nbsp Serbia the monument to Saints Cyril and Methodius in Belgrade nbsp Opening of Cyril and Methodius monument in Donetsk nbsp Statue Saints Cyril and Methodius Trebic Czech RepublicNames in other relevant languagesArmenian Կիրիլ և Մեթոդիոս Kiril ev Metodios Greek Kyrillos kaὶ Me8odios Kyrillos kai Methodios Old Church Slavonic Kѷrill i Meѳodyii Belarusian Kiryla i Myafodzij Kiryla i Miafodzij or Kiryla i Myatoda Kiryla i Miatoda Bulgarian Kiril i Metodij Kiril i Metodiy Croatian Ciril i Metod Czech Cyril a Metodej Kazakh Kirill zhәne metodius Kirill jane metodiws Macedonian Kiril i Metodiј Kiril i Metodij New Church Slavonic Kѷri ll i Meѳo dyij Kỳrill i Methodij Polish Cyryl i Metody Romanian Chiril și Metodie Russian Kiri ll i Mefodij Kirill i Mefodij pre 1918 spelling Kirill i Meѳodij Kirill i Methodij Serbian Ћirilo i Metodiјe Cirilo i Metodije Slovak Cyril a Metod Slovene Ciril in Metod Ukrainian Kirilo i Mefodij Kyrylo i Mefodij See also nbsp Biography portal nbsp Saints portal nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Byzantine Empire portal Cyrillo Methodian studies Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius Byzantine Empire Glagolitic alphabet SS Cyril and Methodius Seminary SS Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje SS Cyril and Methodius National Library in Sofia St Cyril and Methodius University of Veliko Tarnovo Saints Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology Palacky University of OlomoucReferencesCitations a b Cyril and Methodius Missionaries 869 885 The Episcopal Church Retrieved 21 July 2022 Notable Lutheran Saints Resurrectionpeople org Archived from the original on 16 May 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2019 In the 21st century this date in the Julian Calendar corresponds to 24 May in the Gregorian Calendar a b Jones Terry Methodius Patron Saints Index Archived from the original on 19 February 2007 Retrieved 18 February 2007 a b History of the Eparchy of Kosice Archived 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine Slovak Figures of trans national religious memory of the Orthodox southern Slavs before 1945 an outline on the examples of SS Cyril and Methodius ResearchGate Retrieved 15 November 2018 Liturgy of the Hours Volume III 14 February Egregiae Virtutis Archived from the original on 4 January 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2009 Apostolic letter of Pope John Paul II 31 December 1980 in Latin Cyril and Methodius Encyclopaedia Britannica 2005 Vita Constantini slavica Cap 18 Denkschriften der kaiserl Akademie der Wissenschaften 19 Wien 1870 p 246 Chapter 18 of the Slavonic Life of Constantine Archived 15 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine an English translation English Translation of the 18th Chapter of the Vita Constantini Liturgy of the Hours Proper of Saints 14 February SS Cyril and Methodius www carpatho rusyn org Archived from the original on 17 March 2016 Retrieved 2 May 2018 1 Mortimer Chambers Barbara Hanawalt Theodore Rabb Isser Woloch Raymond Grew The Western Experience with Powerweb Eighth Edition McGraw Hill Higher Education 2002 University of Michigan p 214 ISBN 9780072565447 Two Christian brothers of Slavic descent Cyril and Methodius set out in about 862 as missionaries from the Byzantine 2 Balkan Studies Volume 22 Hidryma Meletōn Chersonesou tou Haimou Thessalonike Greece The Institute 1981 Original fromthe University of Michigan p 381 Being of Slavic descent both of them spoke the old Slavic language fluently 3 Loring M Danforth The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World Princeton University Press 1995 p 49 ISBN 9780691043562 In the ninth century two brothers Cyril and Methodius Macedonian educators of Slavic origin from Solun brought literacy and Christianity to the Slavs 4 Ihor Sevcenko Byzantium and the Slavs In Letters and Culture Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute 1991 p 481 ISBN 9780916458126 63 68 Cyril and Methodius were Slavs There remains that argument for Cyril s and Methodius Slavic origin which has to do with the Slavic translation of the Gospels and 5 Roland Herbert Bainton Christianity An American Heritage Book Series Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2000 p 156 ISBN 9780618056873 Two missionaries of Slavic origin Cyril baptized Constantine and Methodius adapted the Greek alphabet and translated both the Bible and the liturgy into the Slavic tongue 6 John Shea Macedonia and Greece The Struggle to Define a New Balkan Nation McFarland 1997 p 56 ISBN 9780786437672 Byzantine emperor Michael on the request of the Moravian prince Ratislav decided to send Slav priests as educators he chose the Salonika brothers Cyril and Methodius 7 UNESCO Features A Fortnightly Press Service UNESCO United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization 1984 University of Michigan They may have been of wholly Slavic descent or of mixed Greco Slav origin 8 The Pakistan Review Volume 19 Ferozsons Limited 1971 University of California p 41 century in Salonika then one of the largest towns in the Byzantine Empire The brothers were of Slav origin 9 Balkania Volume 7 Balkania Publishing Company 1973 Indiana University p 10 Cyril and Methodius not only lived among Slavs of Slavonic which they not only spoke and understood but in which they also wrote translated and composed and for which they invented an alphabet is proof of their Slav origin 10 Bryce Dale Lyon Herbert Harvey Rowen Theodore S Hamerow A History of the Western World Volume 1 Rand McNally College Pub Co 1974 Northwestern University p 239 brothers of Slavic origin Cyril and Methodius who after being ordained at Constantinople preached the Gospel to the Slavs 11 Roland Herbert Bainton The history of Christianity Nelson 1964 p 169 Two missionaries of Slavic origin Cyril baptized Constantine and Methodius adapted the Greek alphabet and translated both the Bible and the liturgy into the Slavic tongue 12 Carl Waldman Catherine Mason Encyclopedia of European Peoples Facts on File library of world history Infobase Publishing 2006 p 752 ISBN 9781438129181 There is disagreement as to whether Cyril and his brother Methodius were Greek or Slavic but they knew the Slavic dialect spoken in Macedonia 13 Frank Andrews Ancient Slavs Worzalla Publishing Company 1976 University of Wisconsin Madison p 163 Cyril and Methodius derived from a rich family of Salonica perhaps of Slavic origin but Grecized in those times Methodius 815 885 14 Johann Heinrich Kurtz John Macpherson Church History Hodder and Stoughton 1891 University of California p 431 Born at Thessalonica and so probably of Slavic descent at least acquainted with the language of the Slavs 15 William Leslie King Investment and Achievement A Study in Christian Progress Jennings and Graham 1913 Columbia University This man and his brother Cyril became the Methodius and Cyril apostles of the Slavic people These two brothers seemed to have been raised up for such a mission They were probably of Slavic descent Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2001 05 s v Cyril and Methodius Saints Greek missionaries brothers called Apostles to the Slavs and fathers of Slavonic literature Encyclopaedia Britannica Major alphabets of the world Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets 2008 O Ed The two early Slavic alphabets the Cyrillic and the Glagolitic were invented by St Cyril or Constantine c 827 869 and St Methodius c 825 884 These men were Greeks from Thessalonica who became apostles to the southern Slavs whom they converted to Christianity Encyclopedia of World Cultures David H Levinson 1991 p 239 s v Social Science Eric M Meyers The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East p 151 1997 Lunt Slavic Review June 1964 p 216 Roman Jakobson Crucial problems of Cyrillo Methodian Studies Leonid Ivan Strakhovsky A Handbook of Slavic Studies p 98 V Bogdanovich History of the ancient Serbian literature Belgrade 1980 p 119 Hastings Adrian 1997 The construction of nationhood ethnicity religion and nationalism Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 0 521 62544 0 The activity of the brothers Constantine later renamed Cyril and Methodius aristocratic Greek priests who were sent from Constantinople Fletcher R A 1999 The barbarian conversion from paganism to Christianity Berkeley California University of California Press p 327 ISBN 0 520 21859 0 Cizevskij Dmitrij Zenkovsky Serge A Porter Richard E 1971 Comparative History of Slavic Literatures Vanderbilt University Press p vi ISBN 0 8265 1371 9 Two Greek brothers from Salonika Constantine who later became a monk and took the name Cyril and Methodius The illustrated guide to the Bible New York Oxford University Press 1998 p 14 ISBN 0 19 521462 5 In Eastern Europe the first translations of the Bible into the Slavonic languages were made by the Greek missionaries Cyril and Methodius in the 860s Smalley William Allen 1991 Translation as mission Bible translation in the modern missionary movement Macon Ga Mercer p 25 ISBN 978 0 86554 389 8 The most important instance where translation and the beginning church did coincide closely was in Slavonic under the brothers Cyril and Methodius with the Bible completed by A D 880 This was a missionary translation but unusual again from a modern point of view because not a translation into the dialect spoken where the missionaries were The brothers were Greeks who had been brought up in Macedonia 1 Philip Lief Group Saintly Support A Prayer For Every Problem Andrews McMeel Publishing 2003 p 37 ISBN 9780740733369 Cyril was born of Greek nobility connected with the senate of Thessalonica although his mother may have been of Slavic descent 2 UNESCO Features A Fortnightly Press Service United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization 1984 University of Michigan They may have been of wholly Slavic descent or of mixed Greco Slav origin Raymond Davis 1995 The Lives of the Ninth century Popes Liber Pontificalis The Ancient Biographies of Ten Popes from A D 817 891 Liverpool University Press p 254 ISBN 978 0 85323 479 1 Pope Benedict XVI Saints Cyril and Methodius General Audience 17 June 2009 Libreria Editrice Vaticana W2 vatican va Retrieved 29 January 2019 Vizantiiskoe missionerstvo Ivanov S A Iazyki slavianskoi kul tury Moskva 2003 p 147 a b c Encyclopaedia Britannica Cyril and Methodius Saints O Ed 2008 From Eastern Roman to Byzantine transformation of Roman culture 500 800 Indiana University Northwest Archived from the original on 16 September 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 a b Abraham Ladislas 1908 Sts Cyril and Methodius The Catholic Encyclopedia Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 9 August 2020 Sts Cyril and Methodius Pravmir Archived from the original on 7 March 2012 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Vir apostolicae vitae sapientissimus vir MGH Epist 7 2 1928 p 436 Sv Gorazd a spolocnici St Gorazd and his colleagues Franciscan Friars of Slovakia in Slovak Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 27 August 2015 David Farmer The Oxford Dictionary of Saints Fifth Edition Revised OUP Oxford 2011 ISBN 0191036730 p 94 Seven Saints Kashtite com 27 July 2016 Retrieved 29 January 2019 It was and is customary on becoming a monk in the Eastern Orthodox tradition to receive a new name Đorđe Radojicic 1971 Zivan Milisavac ed Jugoslovenski knjizevni leksikon Yugoslav Literary Lexicon in Serbo Croatian Novi Sad SAP Vojvodina SR Serbia Matica srpska pp 73 75 Bowlus 1995 p 165 186 Goldberg 2006 p 319 320 Zhityie Meoodyiya Life of Methodius title amp chap XVIII available on line Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Richard P McBrien Lives of the Popes HarperCollins 2000 144 In Pictures Ohrid Home of Cyrillic Balkan Insight 24 May 2017 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Short Life of Cyril amp Methodius Translated by Jan STANISLAV Zivoty slovanskych apostolov Cyrila a Metoda v legendach a listoch Turciansky Sv Martin Matica slovenska 1950 p 88 Slovak Encyclopaedia Britannica Major alphabets of the world Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets 2008 O Ed The two early Slavic alphabets the Cyrillic and the Glagolitic were invented by St Cyril or Constantine c 827 869 and St Methodius c 825 884 These men were Greeks from Thessalonica who became apostles to the southern Slavs whom they converted to Christianity Nikolaos Martis MACEDONIA www hri org Archived from the original on 2 May 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Istoriya na Blgariya Tom 6 Blgarsko Vzrazhdane 1856 1878 Izdatelstvo na Blgarskata akademiya na naukite Sofiya 1987 str 106 in Bulgarian in English History of Bulgaria Volume 6 Bulgarian Revival 1856 1878 Publishing house of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia 1987 page 106 Jubilee speech of the Academician Ivan Yuhnovski Head of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences held on 23 May 2003 published in Information Bulletin Archived 3 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences 3 62 Sofia 27 June 2003 in Bulgarian The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Announcement about the eleventh session of the Government of the Republic of Macedonia on 24 October 2006 from the official site Archived 10 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine of the Government of the Republic of Macedonia in Macedonian a b Votruba Martin Holiday date Slovak Studies Program University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on 14 May 2011 Retrieved 11 March 2009 Den Sv Kirila ta Mefodiya prosvititeliv slov yanskih in Ukrainian Ukrainian Lutheran Church 24 May 2014 Retrieved 19 September 2018 The Ljubljana Metropolitan Province 5 March 2014 Archived from the original on 5 March 2014 Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius Sscm org 4 March 2002 Archived from the original on 23 June 2013 Retrieved 14 June 2013 Bulgaria s First Military Research Vessel Christened Ss Cyril and Methodius Bulgarian Telegraph Agency 27 July 2021 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Sources Betti Maddalena 2013 The Making of Christian Moravia 858 882 Papal Power and Political Reality Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 9789004260085 Bowlus Charles R 1995 Franks Moravians and Magyars The Struggle for the Middle Danube 788 907 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812232769 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521815390 Curta Florin 2019 Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1300 Leiden and Boston Brill ISBN 9789004395190 Dvornik Francis 1962 The Slavs in European History and Civilization New Brunswick Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813507996 Fine John Van Antwerp Jr 1991 1983 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472081497 Goldberg Eric J 2006 Struggle for Empire Kingship and Conflict under Louis the German 817 876 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801438905 Komatina Predrag 2015 The Church in Serbia at the Time of Cyrilo Methodian Mission in Moravia Cyril and Methodius Byzantium and the World of the Slavs Thessaloniki Dimos pp 711 718 Moravcsik Gyula ed 1967 1949 Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Administrando Imperio 2nd revised ed Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies ISBN 9780884020219 Ostrogorsky George 1956 History of the Byzantine State Oxford Basil Blackwell Subotin Golubovic Tatjana 1999 Reflection of the Cult of Saint Konstantine and Methodios in Medieval Serbian Culture Thessaloniki Magna Moravia Proceedings of the International Conference Thessaloniki Hellenic Association for Slavic Studies pp 37 46 ISBN 9789608595934 Vlasto Alexis P 1970 The Entry of the Slavs into Christendom An Introduction to the Medieval History of the Slavs Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521074599 Whittow Mark 1996 The Making of Orthodox Byzantium 600 1025 Basingstoke Macmillan ISBN 9781349247653 Further readingDvornik F 1964 The Significance of the Missions of Cyril and Methodius Slavic Review 23 2 195 211 doi 10 2307 2492930 JSTOR 2492930 S2CID 163378481 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saints Cyril and Methodius Slavorum Apostoli by Pope John Paul II Cyril and Methodius Encyclical letter Epistola Enciclica 31 December 1980 by Pope John Paul II Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Sts Cyril and Methodius Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Equal to Apostles SS Cyril and Methodius Teachers of Slavs by Prof Nicolai D Talberg Pope Leo XIII Grande munus on Saints Cyril and Methodius Bulgarian Official Holidays National Assembly of the Republic of Bulgaria in English Archived 9 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine in Bulgarian Archived 28 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Bank holidays in the Czech Republic Czech National Bank in English in Czech 24 May The Day Of Slavonic Alphabet Bulgarian Enlightenment and Culture Portals nbsp Saints nbsp Biography nbsp Christianity nbsp Greece nbsp Bulgaria Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cyril and Methodius amp oldid 1213945814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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