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Kirill of Turov

Cyril of Turov, alternately Kirill of Turov (Church Slavonic Кѷриллъ Туровськiй, Belarusian: Кірыла Тураўскі, Russian: Кирилл Туровский; 1130–1182) was a bishop and saint of the Russian Orthodox Church. He was one of the first and finest theologians of Kievan Rus'; he lived in Principality of Turov, now southern Belarus.[3] His feast day in the Eastern Orthodox Church is on 28 April.[1][2]

Saint Kirill of Turov
Kirill of Turov
Born1130
Died1182
Venerated inEastern Orthodox church, Belarusian Greek Catholic Church
Feast28 April[1][2]

Cyril of Turov Edit

For centuries Cyril of Turov enjoyed considerable prestige as a writer; his works were continuously copied and imitated. According to Zenkovsky's assessment of Cyril's heritage: "Cyril, Bishop of Turov, was probably the most accomplished master of Orthodox theology and the Byzantine style of writing. He had an excellent command of Greek and his literary achievements surpass those of any other Russian man of letters of that era ... Of all his works, Cyril's sermon with the triumphant description of spring as the symbol of the Resurrection was the most popular."[4] Indeed, this sermon is one of his best known works in which he creates some of his more compelling images like a simile comparing the melting of ice in the spring and Thomas's dissolving doubts about Christ's resurrection: "Ныне зима греховнаа покаянием престала есть и лед невериа богоразумием растаяся... лед же Фомина невериа показанием Христов ребр растаяся." [Today the winter of sin has stopped in repentance, and the ice of unbelief is melted by wisdom spring appears...] It is often emphasized that Kirill was an accomplished author who exerted influence on subsequent generations of East Slavs (continuing through the 17th century). The question of Kirill's heritage is problematic to some degree. First of all, there is the problem with the historically verifiable existence of Kirill of Turov; the questions as to whether he ever existed and who he might have been have not been answered definitively.

Biographic details Edit

Biographic details are scant and because none come from sources contemporary with Kirill, many are debated. All we have in terms of his biography is a short Synaxarion Life: Life of Kirill of Turov (28 April) which was written no earlier than the mid-13th century. This terse formulaic composition draws heavily on the hagiographic conventions and yields very few historical details. He was born in a thriving town of Turov, the son of wealthy parents. He was characterized by extreme piety at a young age and he entered a monastery still a young man. In the monastery he was respected for his asceticism and his learned interpretation of biblical texts. He is said to be the consecrated bishop of Turov in the 1160s. With the support of the Metropolitan in 1169 he became involved in deposing Fedor, who occupied the bishopric of Rostov. Usually he is thought to have died in 1182. According to an alternative line of thought, he became a bishop after 1182, remaining a monk throughout the period of the 1160s and 1170s. Even the dates of Kirill's life and work are debated. The dates 1130-1182 had been commonly accepted but among notable scholars, Simon Franklin vigorously disputes them.[5] Kirill's title the Bishop of Turov is usually agreed to be a later invention arising out of a desire to designate an appropriately high status to the author of extremely popular and influential words. Even though Kirill came to be known as the Bishop of Turov his works deal most extensively with a theme of monasticism. It is often emphasized that Kirill's points of reference are located within the walls of the monastery. Monks are Kirill's most frequent addressees.

Alternative names and attributions Edit

Generally, Kirill's autographs are not available and the manuscript sources are separated from the assumed time of composition by centuries. The medieval habit of anonymity and pseudonymity further complicates the process of attribution. Apart from the very rare "Kirill of Turov" (even when this designation occurs, it tends to be just one of several variant readings), the headings in 'his' manuscripts include "Kirill the monk," "Kirill the philosopher," "Saint Kirill," "The Blessed father Kirill," "the blessed monk Kirill," "Kirill the unworthy monk," "the venerable Kirill." Given this variety of labels, 'Kirill's' texts invite several candidates for being their more likely authors (writers whose existence has been substantiated with historical facts). Hypothetically, each work can be allocated to one of several real Kirills and Cyrils: Cyril of Jerusalem (ca. 315-386); Cyril of Alexandria (d. 444); Cyril of Scythopolis (mid-sixth century); Konstantin-Cyril, apostle of the Slavs(d. 869); Metropolitan Kirill I of Kiev (1223–1233); Metropolitan Kirill II of Kiev (1243–1290); Bishop Kirill of Rostov (1231–1262); Kirill of Turov. There are also numerous Kirills who may have been active but were not recorded by chroniclers and hagiographers. Matters are further complicated by the fact, that these labels appear to have been used interchangeably as Simon Franklin points out.[6]

Works Edit

 
Prayer book by Kirill of Turov, 16th century manuscript

Questions of authorship notwithstanding, a remarkable corpus of works in different genres has been attributed to Kirill of Turov: festal homilies, monastic commentaries, some letters, and a cycle of prayers, other hymnological texts, several versions of a penitential Prayer Canon, a Canon of Olga and an abecedarian prayer. These works constitute what came to be known as Corpus Cyrillianium (which at its core has only eleven works which are agreed by the majority to be by Kirill of Turov.)

This is a 19th-century consensus which is generally assumed but continuously questioned. In manuscript sources, there are 23 prayers attributed to Kirill, as well as an additional nine unattributed prayers that are regularly copied together as a group. The prayers form a seven-day liturgical cycle. His homilies are also a cycle based on the ecclesiastical calendar from Palm Sunday to the Sunday before Pentecost. His allegorical commentaries are directed at a monastic audience.

As a scholar of Kyrill, C.M. MacRobert summarizes the state of scholarship: "Even if further early copies of the texts attributed to Kirill of Turov come to light, it may well not be possible to reconstruct his kanon in the form in which he wrote it—supposing that he did write it—or to determine the original wording of his prayers. The attempt to establish a canon of his liturgical works may ultimately be vain: what we have to deal with is not necessarily the recognizable oeuvre of one man, but rather a devotional tradition, a profoundly penitential spirituality which was cultivated among the East Slavs during the medieval period and taken up by other Orthodox Slavs under the pressure of social and political vicissitudes."[7] Another problem that complicates any precise attribution is the traditionalism of the Corpus Cyrillianum and the genre itself. The Kirillic genres themselves are deliberately constructed so as to give an impression of timelessness and universality. Details of contemporary "relevance" yielding specific clues as to time, place, and people (like Kirill's admonition of Feodorek – Bishop Fedor of Rostov called so in depreciation) are rare and skillfully disguised.[8] Kirill-the author identifies himself as a humble monk (following the tradition of humility topos) who fades before the ultimate author and authority of God. Here is an example of Kyrill's humility topos taken from "A Tale of a layman, and on monasticism, and on the soul, and on repentance"; by the most sinful monk Kirill, for Vasilij, abbot of the Caves: "(52) And me: I beg you, do not spurn me like a dog, but remember me even here in your prayers, and there throw me scraps from that holy table, and may all Christians be judged worthy of that life, through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom glory with the Father and with the Holy Spirit, now and ever."[9] And another one from: A Sermon for Low Sunday by the unworthy monk Kirill in praise of the resurrection, and concerning the paschal bread, and concerning Thomas's resting of the Lord's ribs: "(1) The Church requires a great teacher and a wise interpreter to adorn the feast. But we are poor in word and dim in mind, and we lack the fire of the Holy Spirit to compose words to benefit the soul. Yet, for the love of the brethren that are with me, I shall say a few words concerning the renewal of the resurrection of Christ."[10]

Style: Kirill's traditionalism Edit

Most Kievan Rus' literature is based on the Eastern Christian tradition which came to Rus' from Byzantium via Slavonic translations originating mainly in Bulgaria. "The homiletic and exegetic genres are among the 'purest' versions of the rhetorical tradition inherited from Byzantium, relatively uncontaminated in language and structure," as Franklin affirms.[11] These genres within the tradition of Christian rhetoric became Kievan elite culture, eagerly imitated by Rus' medieval authors who "played the game according to received rules".[12] The Byzantines also valued the stability of form and expression-the impression of timelessness. Consequently, in creating their native tradition, Kievan writers drew on the "tradition one of whose higher aesthetic virtues was traditionalism itself".[12] As Franklin sees it, Kirill's "self-imposed task was to perpetuate a tradition, not to change or modernize it; to become authoritative by following authority rather than by challenging it".[13]

Kirill's works are not original in form because they closely follow the Byzantine style. In content it relies heavily on quotes from the Holy Texts. Kirill's texts are characterized by their extreme citationality. Simon Franklin in his most current English translation of the sermons numbers about 370 biblical quotation and allusions.[14] Further textual sources for almost all of Kirill's works are also identified. They are works by early Christian and Byzantine churchmen that would have been available to Kirill in Slavonic translations: John Chrysostom, Epiphanius of Salamis, Ephrem of Syrus, Gregory of Nazianzus, Eusebius of Caesarea, and the scholia of Nicetas of Heraclea, Titus of Bostra, Theophylact of Ohrid, and the chronicler George the monk (George Hamartolus).[13] As Ingunn Lunde points out, Kirill's technique of quotations is based on the convention of the epideictic discourse where the establishment of verbal correspondences and parallels through emphasis and amplification serve to invocation of the authority of the sacred texts. "What is essential is the recognition of certain layer of sacred texts or voice in the orators' discourse".[15] If we accept the conventional attributions of works to Kyrill of Turov, he can be justly named the most prolific extant writer of Kievan Rus'.

Churches named after St. Cyril Edit

There are several Belarusian Orthodox churches named after St. Cyril in Belarus, including, among others:

Besides that, several notable Orthodox and Greek Catholic churches of the Belarusian diaspora are named after St. Cyril of Turaŭ:

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ". ynaxaristis.gr (in Greek).
  2. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2012-03-24.
  3. ^ Nadson (1968)
  4. ^ Zenkovsky (1974), p. 90
  5. ^ Franklin (1991)
  6. ^ Franklin (1991), p. 1xxxiii
  7. ^ MacRobert (2000), p. 195
  8. ^ Franklin (1991), pp. 167, 1xxvii–1xxviii
  9. ^ Franklin (1991), p. 81
  10. ^ Franklin (1991), p. 108
  11. ^ Franklin (1991), p. civi
  12. ^ a b Franklin (1991), p. xvciii
  13. ^ a b Franklin (1991), p. xcii
  14. ^ Franklin (1991), pp. 96–157
  15. ^ Lunde (2000), p. 128
  16. ^ Минск. Церковь Кирилла Туровского при Соборном доме.
  17. ^ Кафедральный собор святителей Кирилла и Лаврентия Туровских
  18. ^ Храм святителя Кирилла Туровского, г.Светлогорск

Bibliography Edit

  • Franklin, Simon (1991). Sermons and Rhetoric of Kievan Rus'. Harvard Library of Early Ukrainian Literature. English Translations. Vol. V. Cambridge, MA: Distributed by Harvard University Press for the Ukrainian Research Institute of Harvard University. ISBN 9780916458416.
  • Lunde, Ingunn (2001). Verbal Celebrations: Kirill of Turov's Homiletic Rhetoric and its Byzantine Sources. Slavistische Veröffentlichungen. Vol. 86. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. ISBN 978-3-447-04358-8.
  • Lunde, Ingunn (2000). Ingunn Lunde (ed.). Kirill of Turov; Bishop, Preacher, Hymnographer. Slavica Bergensia. Vol. 2. Bergen: Department of Russian Studies, IKRR University of Bergen. ISBN 9788290249279.
  • MacRobert, C. M. (2000). "In Search of a Canon". In Ingunn Lunde (ed.). Kirill of Turov; Bishop, Preacher, Hymnographer. Slavica Bergensia. Vol. 2. Bergen: Department of Russian Studies, IKRR University of Bergen. ISBN 9788290249279.
  • Nadson, Alexander (1968). "Spiritual writings of St Cyril of Turaŭ". Eastern Churches Review. 1 (4): 347–358.
  • Zenkovsky, Serge A. (1974). Medieval Russia's Epics, Chronicles, and Tales. New York: Dutton. ISBN 9780525483663.

External links Edit

  • История Беларуси IX-XVIII веков: Life 2018-06-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • История Беларуси IX-XVIII веков: Works 2018-07-11 at the Wayback Machine
  • Кирилл Туровский. [Собрание из 68 сочинений]. || По изд.: Мельнікаў А.А. Кірыл, епіскап Тураўскі. Жыццё, спадчына, светапогляд. 2-е выд., Мн., 2000. - Эл. версия: О.Лицкевич, 2002-2003.

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For other uses see Cyril This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kirill of Turov news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Cyril of Turov alternately Kirill of Turov Church Slavonic Kѷrill Turovskij Belarusian Kiryla Turayski Russian Kirill Turovskij 1130 1182 was a bishop and saint of the Russian Orthodox Church He was one of the first and finest theologians of Kievan Rus he lived in Principality of Turov now southern Belarus 3 His feast day in the Eastern Orthodox Church is on 28 April 1 2 Saint Kirill of TurovKirill of TurovBorn1130Died1182Venerated inEastern Orthodox church Belarusian Greek Catholic ChurchFeast28 April 1 2 Contents 1 Cyril of Turov 2 Biographic details 3 Alternative names and attributions 4 Works 5 Style Kirill s traditionalism 6 Churches named after St Cyril 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksCyril of Turov EditFor centuries Cyril of Turov enjoyed considerable prestige as a writer his works were continuously copied and imitated According to Zenkovsky s assessment of Cyril s heritage Cyril Bishop of Turov was probably the most accomplished master of Orthodox theology and the Byzantine style of writing He had an excellent command of Greek and his literary achievements surpass those of any other Russian man of letters of that era Of all his works Cyril s sermon with the triumphant description of spring as the symbol of the Resurrection was the most popular 4 Indeed this sermon is one of his best known works in which he creates some of his more compelling images like a simile comparing the melting of ice in the spring and Thomas s dissolving doubts about Christ s resurrection Nyne zima grehovnaa pokayaniem prestala est i led neveria bogorazumiem rastayasya led zhe Fomina neveria pokazaniem Hristov rebr rastayasya Today the winter of sin has stopped in repentance and the ice of unbelief is melted by wisdom spring appears It is often emphasized that Kirill was an accomplished author who exerted influence on subsequent generations of East Slavs continuing through the 17th century The question of Kirill s heritage is problematic to some degree First of all there is the problem with the historically verifiable existence of Kirill of Turov the questions as to whether he ever existed and who he might have been have not been answered definitively Biographic details EditBiographic details are scant and because none come from sources contemporary with Kirill many are debated All we have in terms of his biography is a short Synaxarion Life Life of Kirill of Turov 28 April which was written no earlier than the mid 13th century This terse formulaic composition draws heavily on the hagiographic conventions and yields very few historical details He was born in a thriving town of Turov the son of wealthy parents He was characterized by extreme piety at a young age and he entered a monastery still a young man In the monastery he was respected for his asceticism and his learned interpretation of biblical texts He is said to be the consecrated bishop of Turov in the 1160s With the support of the Metropolitan in 1169 he became involved in deposing Fedor who occupied the bishopric of Rostov Usually he is thought to have died in 1182 According to an alternative line of thought he became a bishop after 1182 remaining a monk throughout the period of the 1160s and 1170s Even the dates of Kirill s life and work are debated The dates 1130 1182 had been commonly accepted but among notable scholars Simon Franklin vigorously disputes them 5 Kirill s title the Bishop of Turov is usually agreed to be a later invention arising out of a desire to designate an appropriately high status to the author of extremely popular and influential words Even though Kirill came to be known as the Bishop of Turov his works deal most extensively with a theme of monasticism It is often emphasized that Kirill s points of reference are located within the walls of the monastery Monks are Kirill s most frequent addressees Alternative names and attributions EditGenerally Kirill s autographs are not available and the manuscript sources are separated from the assumed time of composition by centuries The medieval habit of anonymity and pseudonymity further complicates the process of attribution Apart from the very rare Kirill of Turov even when this designation occurs it tends to be just one of several variant readings the headings in his manuscripts include Kirill the monk Kirill the philosopher Saint Kirill The Blessed father Kirill the blessed monk Kirill Kirill the unworthy monk the venerable Kirill Given this variety of labels Kirill s texts invite several candidates for being their more likely authors writers whose existence has been substantiated with historical facts Hypothetically each work can be allocated to one of several real Kirills and Cyrils Cyril of Jerusalem ca 315 386 Cyril of Alexandria d 444 Cyril of Scythopolis mid sixth century Konstantin Cyril apostle of the Slavs d 869 Metropolitan Kirill I of Kiev 1223 1233 Metropolitan Kirill II of Kiev 1243 1290 Bishop Kirill of Rostov 1231 1262 Kirill of Turov There are also numerous Kirills who may have been active but were not recorded by chroniclers and hagiographers Matters are further complicated by the fact that these labels appear to have been used interchangeably as Simon Franklin points out 6 Works Edit Prayer book by Kirill of Turov 16th century manuscriptQuestions of authorship notwithstanding a remarkable corpus of works in different genres has been attributed to Kirill of Turov festal homilies monastic commentaries some letters and a cycle of prayers other hymnological texts several versions of a penitential Prayer Canon a Canon of Olga and an abecedarian prayer These works constitute what came to be known as Corpus Cyrillianium which at its core has only eleven works which are agreed by the majority to be by Kirill of Turov This is a 19th century consensus which is generally assumed but continuously questioned In manuscript sources there are 23 prayers attributed to Kirill as well as an additional nine unattributed prayers that are regularly copied together as a group The prayers form a seven day liturgical cycle His homilies are also a cycle based on the ecclesiastical calendar from Palm Sunday to the Sunday before Pentecost His allegorical commentaries are directed at a monastic audience As a scholar of Kyrill C M MacRobert summarizes the state of scholarship Even if further early copies of the texts attributed to Kirill of Turov come to light it may well not be possible to reconstruct his kanon in the form in which he wrote it supposing that he did write it or to determine the original wording of his prayers The attempt to establish a canon of his liturgical works may ultimately be vain what we have to deal with is not necessarily the recognizable oeuvre of one man but rather a devotional tradition a profoundly penitential spirituality which was cultivated among the East Slavs during the medieval period and taken up by other Orthodox Slavs under the pressure of social and political vicissitudes 7 Another problem that complicates any precise attribution is the traditionalism of the Corpus Cyrillianum and the genre itself The Kirillic genres themselves are deliberately constructed so as to give an impression of timelessness and universality Details of contemporary relevance yielding specific clues as to time place and people like Kirill s admonition of Feodorek Bishop Fedor of Rostov called so in depreciation are rare and skillfully disguised 8 Kirill the author identifies himself as a humble monk following the tradition of humility topos who fades before the ultimate author and authority of God Here is an example of Kyrill s humility topos taken from A Tale of a layman and on monasticism and on the soul and on repentance by the most sinful monk Kirill for Vasilij abbot of the Caves 52 And me I beg you do not spurn me like a dog but remember me even here in your prayers and there throw me scraps from that holy table and may all Christians be judged worthy of that life through Jesus Christ our Lord to whom glory with the Father and with the Holy Spirit now and ever 9 And another one from A Sermon for Low Sunday by the unworthy monk Kirill in praise of the resurrection and concerning the paschal bread and concerning Thomas s resting of the Lord s ribs 1 The Church requires a great teacher and a wise interpreter to adorn the feast But we are poor in word and dim in mind and we lack the fire of the Holy Spirit to compose words to benefit the soul Yet for the love of the brethren that are with me I shall say a few words concerning the renewal of the resurrection of Christ 10 Style Kirill s traditionalism EditMost Kievan Rus literature is based on the Eastern Christian tradition which came to Rus from Byzantium via Slavonic translations originating mainly in Bulgaria The homiletic and exegetic genres are among the purest versions of the rhetorical tradition inherited from Byzantium relatively uncontaminated in language and structure as Franklin affirms 11 These genres within the tradition of Christian rhetoric became Kievan elite culture eagerly imitated by Rus medieval authors who played the game according to received rules 12 The Byzantines also valued the stability of form and expression the impression of timelessness Consequently in creating their native tradition Kievan writers drew on the tradition one of whose higher aesthetic virtues was traditionalism itself 12 As Franklin sees it Kirill s self imposed task was to perpetuate a tradition not to change or modernize it to become authoritative by following authority rather than by challenging it 13 Kirill s works are not original in form because they closely follow the Byzantine style In content it relies heavily on quotes from the Holy Texts Kirill s texts are characterized by their extreme citationality Simon Franklin in his most current English translation of the sermons numbers about 370 biblical quotation and allusions 14 Further textual sources for almost all of Kirill s works are also identified They are works by early Christian and Byzantine churchmen that would have been available to Kirill in Slavonic translations John Chrysostom Epiphanius of Salamis Ephrem of Syrus Gregory of Nazianzus Eusebius of Caesarea and the scholia of Nicetas of Heraclea Titus of Bostra Theophylact of Ohrid and the chronicler George the monk George Hamartolus 13 As Ingunn Lunde points out Kirill s technique of quotations is based on the convention of the epideictic discourse where the establishment of verbal correspondences and parallels through emphasis and amplification serve to invocation of the authority of the sacred texts What is essential is the recognition of certain layer of sacred texts or voice in the orators discourse 15 If we accept the conventional attributions of works to Kyrill of Turov he can be justly named the most prolific extant writer of Kievan Rus Churches named after St Cyril EditThere are several Belarusian Orthodox churches named after St Cyril in Belarus including among others Church of the Holy Bishop Cyril of Turov at the Cathedral House Minsk Russian Orthodox 16 Cathedral of St Bishops Cyril of Turov and Lawrence of Turov Turau Russian Orthodox 17 Church of the Holy Bishop Cyril of Turov Svietlahorsk Russian Orthodox 18 Besides that several notable Orthodox and Greek Catholic churches of the Belarusian diaspora are named after St Cyril of Turaŭ Church of St Cyril of Turau and All the Patron Saints of the Belarusian People London Belarusian Greek Catholic St Cyril of Turau Cathedral Brooklyn Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church of St Cyril of Turau Toronto Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Cathedral of St Cyril of Turau New York Church of St Cyril of Turau Toronto Church of St Cyril of Turau and All the Patron Saints of the Belarusian People LondonReferences Edit a b MEGAS SYNA3ARISTHS ynaxaristis gr in Greek a b 28 May 11 Orthodox Calendar Archived from the original on 2012 03 24 Nadson 1968 Zenkovsky 1974 p 90 Franklin 1991 Franklin 1991 p 1xxxiii MacRobert 2000 p 195 Franklin 1991 pp 167 1xxvii 1xxviii Franklin 1991 p 81 Franklin 1991 p 108 Franklin 1991 p civi a b Franklin 1991 p xvciii a b Franklin 1991 p xcii Franklin 1991 pp 96 157 Lunde 2000 p 128 Minsk Cerkov Kirilla Turovskogo pri Sobornom dome Kafedralnyj sobor svyatitelej Kirilla i Lavrentiya Turovskih Hram svyatitelya Kirilla Turovskogo g Svetlogorsk Bibliography Edit Franklin Simon 1991 Sermons and Rhetoric of Kievan Rus Harvard Library of Early Ukrainian Literature English Translations Vol V Cambridge MA Distributed by Harvard University Press for the Ukrainian Research Institute of Harvard University ISBN 9780916458416 Lunde Ingunn 2001 Verbal Celebrations Kirill of Turov s Homiletic Rhetoric and its Byzantine Sources Slavistische Veroffentlichungen Vol 86 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 04358 8 Lunde Ingunn 2000 Ingunn Lunde ed Kirill of Turov Bishop Preacher Hymnographer Slavica Bergensia Vol 2 Bergen Department of Russian Studies IKRR University of Bergen ISBN 9788290249279 MacRobert C M 2000 In Search of a Canon In Ingunn Lunde ed Kirill of Turov Bishop Preacher Hymnographer Slavica Bergensia Vol 2 Bergen Department of Russian Studies IKRR University of Bergen ISBN 9788290249279 Nadson Alexander 1968 Spiritual writings of St Cyril of Turaŭ Eastern Churches Review 1 4 347 358 Zenkovsky Serge A 1974 Medieval Russia s Epics Chronicles and Tales New York Dutton ISBN 9780525483663 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cyril of Turov Istoriya Belarusi IX XVIII vekov Life Archived 2018 06 27 at the Wayback Machine Istoriya Belarusi IX XVIII vekov Works Archived 2018 07 11 at the Wayback Machine Kirill Turovskij Sobranie iz 68 sochinenij Po izd Melnikay A A Kiryl episkap Turayski Zhyccyo spadchyna svetapoglyad 2 e vyd Mn 2000 El versiya O Lickevich 2002 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kirill of Turov amp oldid 1162020281, 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