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Saint Petersburg Theological Academy

The Saint Petersburg Theological Academy (Russian: Санкт-Петербургская духовная академия) is a higher education institution of the Russian Orthodox Church, located in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The academy preparing theologians, clergymen, singers and icon writers for the Eastern Orthodox Church and grants bachelor, master, candidate and doctorate degrees. It was founded in 1797 by Metropolitan Gabriel (Petrov) of Saint Petersburg, as part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra.[1]

Saint Petersburg Theological Academy
Санкт-Петербургская духовная академия
Established1797 (1797)
Location,
59°55′03″N 30°22′59″E / 59.91750°N 30.38306°E / 59.91750; 30.38306
Websitespbda.ru

At the turn of the 20th century the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy was one of four religious academies (with those of Moscow, Kiev and Kazan) of the Russian Orthodox Church.[2] The class of 1898 had a total of 235 students regularly attending classes.[2]

History edit

On July 11, 1721, Archbishop Theodosius (Yanovsky) of Novgorod, in pursuance of imperial decrees, ordered to "establish for the common benefit at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery, for the teaching of young children reading and writing, a Slavonic school". In the autumn of the same year, classes began. Initially, the school studied the alphabet, writing, arithmetic, grammar, listened to the interpretation of the Decalogue, the Lord's Prayer and the Beatitudes.

In 1726, under Empress Catherine I, the Slavonic School was renamed the Slavic-Greek-Latin Seminary. If the Slavic school provided only elementary literacy, then the seminary aimed to give future ministers of the Church both general and theological education. Its rector was Archimandrite Peter (Smelich), adviser to the Holy Synod, a Serb by birth, a former archimandrite of the Simonov Monastery in Moscow. Thanks to the efforts of teachers Grigory Kremenetsky and Andrey Zertis-Kamensky, the St. Petersburg seminary was competently organized. Those who completed the seminary course were entitled to the best places in the dioceses. According to the program of the Spiritual Regulations, in 1721, in St. Petersburg, in addition to the Alexander Nevsky Slavic School, Archbishop Theophan (Prokopovich) of Pskov, opened a second school, which immediately received the name of the seminary. It was located at the courtyard of the bishop on the embankment of the Karpovka River.

After the death of Archbishop Theophan in 1736, the seminary came under the jurisdiction of the Government Cabinet, but gradually began to decline. Finally, by the decree of Empress Anna Ioannovna of March 22, 1738, the senior pupils of this school were assigned to business, and the rest (in the number of 21 people) were transferred for further study to the Alexander Nevsky Slavic-Greek-Latin Seminary. Having received replenishment from the former school of Archbishop Theophan, the number of students of the Alexander Nevsky Seminary in 1740 reached 85. In addition to the establishment of secondary theological schools in St. Petersburg, it was supposed to open a proper theological academy named "Petergarten". It was planned to invite the most famous professors from Western universities to the positions of teachers. The construction of the building began in 1722, but was stopped due to lack of funds. In the same year, an already built building was provided for the academy – the house of the deceased Tsarevna Catherine Alekseyevna. In August 1724 The Holy Synod appealed to the Emperor with a request to allocate money for the maintenance of students, teachers and servants. However, the case dragged on until the death of Peter the Great, and under his successors it was completely discontinued. By order of the authorities or at their own request, many graduates of the Slavic-Greek-Latin Seminary could enroll in other higher and secondary educational institutions, in particular, in the gymnasium and university at the Academy of Sciences established in 1724 by decree of Peter the Great. In their first set, it was supposed to gather 30 students from the pupils of the Moscow Theological Academy, Alexander Nevsky and Novgorod seminaries.

In 1761, the Holy Synod gave permission to seminary graduates to study abroad with the payment of double salaries. They went to Cambridge and Oxford Universities (England), Göttingen (Germany).

In 1786, an education reform was launched in the Russian Empire. In accordance with this, Metropolitan Gabriel (Petrov) of Novgorod and St. Petersburg filed a petition for the transformation of the Alexander Nevsky Seminary into the Main Seminary. According to the decree of the Holy Synod of 1788, the best pupils of diocesan seminaries should be sent to study at the capital's Main Seminary. At the same time, higher classes of the Novgorod Seminary was transferred to the Alexander Nevsky Monastery and attached to the Main Seminary. The number of students in the Main Seminary has reached 200. After graduating from the Main Seminary, graduates were sent as teachers to their diocesan seminaries. New disciplines appeared: church history, mechanics, natural history, and a class of mathematics and experimental physics was also opened.

In 1797, the Holy Trinity Alexander Nevsky Monastery was renamed the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, and the Alexander Nevsky Main Seminary was transformed into the Alexander Nevsky Academy by decree of Paul I of 18 december 1797. In the Theological academies, in addition to general seminar courses, they decided to teach a complete system of philosophy and theology, higher eloquence, physics and languages: Latin, Hebrew, Greek, German and French. On behalf of Metropolitan Ambrose (Podobedov), Bishop Eugene (Bolkhovitinov) drew up a outline for the establishment of Theological schools in 1805. It formed the basis for the reform of the entire system of spiritual education in Russia. Theological academies became not only higher theological educational institutions, but also church-scientific centers, which were also entrusted with the tasks of educational and publishing activities. The mentors of the academy, in addition to their teaching activities, often carried out various kinds of special assignments of the Synod, reviewing books, compiling written refutations of sectarian and non-Orthodox teachings. Graduates of the Theological Academy were assigned as mentors to Theological seminaries and colleges, to parish ministry, priests at Russian missions abroad and embassies.

On June 26, 1808, Emperor Alexander I approved the draft reform of theological schools, and at the beginning of the following year, the Alexander Nevsky Academy was divided into three completely independent stages: the St. Petersburg Theological Academy - the first in Russia, organized according to the new charter (the highest stage), the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary (the middle stage) and the Alexander Nevsky Theological College (the lowest stage). The New Academy became a complex institution in structure, it was not only a higher theological school and an educational center, but also an administrative center for an entire educational district. Her tasks included spiritual education and preparation for higher ecclesiastical positions, dissemination of knowledge among the clergy, management of Theological seminaries and schools of the district, the caesura of spiritual writings. The Academy was under the jurisdiction of the Holy Synod and the diocesan bishop. After the development and adoption of the Charter, the grand opening of the St. Petersburg Theological Academy took place on February 17, 1809. It was still located in the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. In 1841, the seminary was also transferred beyond the walls of the Lavra to a specially constructed building.

In 1821, the academic journal "Christian Reading" was established, which published translations of the Holy Scriptures from Hebrew and ancient Greek into Russian, theological, ecclesiastical and historical works of professors and teachers of the Academy. Since the 1840s, the Academy began to accept representatives of other Local Orthodox Churches to study: from Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, Serbia and other countries.

During the First World War, from September 1915 to the beginning of 1918, the premises of the Alexander Nevsky Antoniev Theological College, the hospital and the southern part of the Theological Academy building and the 4th floor of the Seminary building were occupied by the Red Cross infirmary No. 279 for 150 wounded and sick soldiers, but educational institutions continued their work. In June 1918, members of the corporation and students of the Academy solemnly welcomed Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow and All Russia, who came to Petrograd. Shortly after the October Revolution – in the autumn of 1918 – the former theological schools of the Northern capital were closed.

In November 1945, Theological and pastoral courses were opened in Leningrad, in part of the building of the theological seminary. The Leningrad Theological Academy was established on September 1, 1946 by decree of His Holiness Patriarch Alexy I of Moscow and All Russia, and the Leningrad Theological Seminary was established by decree of His Holiness the Patriarch on the basis of Theological and pastoral courses that worked in Leningrad in the 1945/1946 academic year. On October 14, 1946, on the Day of the Intercession of the Theotokos, the grand opening of the Leningrad Theological Academy and Seminary took place in the presence of Patriarch Alexy I.

After the beginning of new anti-religious persecutions in 1958, the Council for the Affairs of the Russian Orthodox Church stopped any attempts to increase the number of students in seminaries and academies and expand their premises. On July 17, 1959, it was decided to gradually close the only correspondence sector of Leningrad theological Schools in the country, although its actual functioning in an abbreviated form continued until 1967. In 1961, at the height of the Khrushchev anti-religious campaign, the question of closing Leningrad theological schools arose. Due to the opposition of the Soviet authorities, only 8 people were able to enter the seminary in 1961, although 33 applications for admission were submitted. Metropolitan Nikodim (Rotov), appointed to the Leningrad Department in October 1963, took active measures to prevent the closure of the theological schools of Leningrad. As chairman of the DECR, Metropolitan Nikodim began to energetically include the Academy in international activities: foreign delegations began to come here, and academy professors began to go to various international conferences. At the initiative of Metropolitan Nikodim, 7 Africans from Uganda and Kenya were invited to study as part of the Christian exchange. In 1965, by the decision of the Holy Synod, the Faculty of African Christian Youth was established at the Leningrad Academy and Seminary, which was then transformed into the Faculty of Foreign Students.

In the 1960s, a regency circle began to operate for seminary and academy students. Since 1967, the Academy Council, headed by the rector, Bishop Miсhael (Mudyugin), decided to henceforth call the regency circle the Regency Class and to produce the first set of students from among the students of theological schools. At the head of the Regent class was an honored professor Nikolay Uspensky. On the initiative of the rector, Bishop Kirill (Gundyaev) of Vyborg, in 1979 the first enrollment for the Regency Department (formally formed in 1983) took place, where girls were admitted for the first time in the history of the revived theological schools. In 1988 an optional icon painting class was opened. At first it acted as an educational center for laypeople, then as a circle with a workshop and a repository of icons that were restored and used for the needs of the academy, and later as a class with teachers who worked on a voluntary basis.

Rectors edit

  • Archimandrite Eugraph (Muzalevsky-Platonov) (February 4 — November 11, 1809)
  • Archimandrite Sergius (Krylov-Platonov) (January 7, 1810 — March 3, 1812)
  • Bishop Philaret (Drozdov) (March 11, 1812 — March 13, 1819)
  • Bishop Gregory (Postnikov) (May 2, 1819 — January 4, 1826)
  • Archimandrite John (Dobrozrakov) (January 30, 1826 — August 5, 1830)
  • Archimandrite Smaragd (Kryzhanovsky) (August 27 1830 — September 20 1831)
  • Archimandrite Benedict (Grigorovich) (November 4, 1831 — June 8, 1833)
  • Archimandrite Vitaly (Shchepetev) (June 8, 1833 — June 1837)
  • Archimandrite Nicholas (Dobrokhotov) (July 5, 1837 — April 1841)
  • Bishop Athanasius (Drozdov) (April 21, 1841 — January 13, 1847)
  • Bishop Eusebius (Orlinsky) (January 17, 1847 — December 19, 1850)
  • Bishop Makarius (Bulgakov) (December 20, 1850 — May 1, 1857)
  • Archimandrite Theophan (Govorov) (June 13, 1857 — May 9, 1859)
  • Bishop Nectarius (Nadezhdin) (July 17, 1859 — September 29, 1860)
  • Archimandrite Joannicius (Rudnev) (October 5, 1860 — January 13, 1864)
  • Bishop John (Sokolov) (January 17 (29), 1864 — November 9 (21), 1866)
  • Protopresbyter John Yanyshev (November 29, 1866 — October 19, 1883)
  • Bishop Arsenius (Bryantsev) (October 22, 1883 — March 28, 1887)
  • Bishop Anthony (Vadkovsky) (April 15, 1887 - October 24, 1892)
  • Bishop Boris (Plotnikov) (October 30, 1892 — December 2, 1893)
  • Bishop Nikander (Molchanov) (December 13, 1893 — August 23, 1895)
  • Bishop John (Kratirov) (August 31, 1895 - January 16, 1899)
  • Bishop Boris (Plotnikov) (February 17, 1899 — January 20, 1901)
  • Bishop Sergius (Stragorodsky) (January 24, 1901 — October 15, 1905)
  • Bishop Sergius (Tikhomirov) (October 15, 1905 — March 21, 1908)
  • Bishop Theophan (Bystrov) (February 4, 1909 — October 19, 1910)
  • Bishop George (Yaroshevsky) (November 22, 1910 — May 13, 1913)
  • Bishop Anastasius (Alexandrov) (May 30, 1913 — June 23, 1918)
  • Archpriest John Bogoyavlensky (September 1, 1946 — June 22, 1947)
  • Archpriest Alexander Osipov (1947-1948) acting
  • Bishop Simeon (Bychkov) (April 20, 1948 — June 30, 1952)
  • Archpriest Mikhail Speransky (July 21, 1952 — August 16, 1966)
  • Bishop Michael (Mudyugin) (August 16, 1966 — July 30, 1968)
  • Bishop Herman (Timofeev) (November 28, 1968 — June 25, 1970)
  • Bishop Meliton (Solovyov) (June 25, 1970 — December 26, 1974)
  • Archbishop Kirill (Gundyaev) (December 26, 1974 — December 26, 1984)
  • Archimandrite Manuel (Pavlov) (December 29, 1984 — March 2, 1986) acting
  • Archpriest Nikolai Gundyaev (March 2, 1986 — June 22, 1987)
  • Archpriest Vladimir Sorokin (August 21, 1987 — August 12, 1992)
  • Archpriest Vasily Stoikov (August 12, 1992 — July 17, 1996)
  • Archbishop Constantine (Goryanov) (July 17, 1996 — October 6, 2008)
  • Archbishop Ambrose (Ermakov) (October 6, 2008 — July 14, 2018)
  • Bishop Seraphim (Amelchenkov) (July 14, 2018 — July 9, 2019)
  • Bishop Siluan (Nikitin) (since July 9, 2019)

Notable Alumni edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Theological Academy. Encyclopedia of Saint Petersburg.
  2. ^ a b Walter Sablinsky, The Road to Bloody Sunday: Father Gapon and the St. Petersburg Massacre of 1905. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976; pg. 42.

External links edit

  • Official website


saint, petersburg, theological, academy, confused, with, saint, petersburg, roman, catholic, theological, academy, russian, Санкт, Петербургская, духовная, академия, higher, education, institution, russian, orthodox, church, located, saint, petersburg, russia,. Not to be confused with Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy The Saint Petersburg Theological Academy Russian Sankt Peterburgskaya duhovnaya akademiya is a higher education institution of the Russian Orthodox Church located in Saint Petersburg Russia The academy preparing theologians clergymen singers and icon writers for the Eastern Orthodox Church and grants bachelor master candidate and doctorate degrees It was founded in 1797 by Metropolitan Gabriel Petrov of Saint Petersburg as part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra 1 Saint Petersburg Theological AcademySankt Peterburgskaya duhovnaya akademiyaEstablished1797 1797 LocationSaint Petersburg Russia59 55 03 N 30 22 59 E 59 91750 N 30 38306 E 59 91750 30 38306Websitespbda wbr ruAt the turn of the 20th century the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy was one of four religious academies with those of Moscow Kiev and Kazan of the Russian Orthodox Church 2 The class of 1898 had a total of 235 students regularly attending classes 2 Contents 1 History 2 Rectors 3 Notable Alumni 4 Footnotes 5 External linksHistory editOn July 11 1721 Archbishop Theodosius Yanovsky of Novgorod in pursuance of imperial decrees ordered to establish for the common benefit at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery for the teaching of young children reading and writing a Slavonic school In the autumn of the same year classes began Initially the school studied the alphabet writing arithmetic grammar listened to the interpretation of the Decalogue the Lord s Prayer and the Beatitudes In 1726 under Empress Catherine I the Slavonic School was renamed the Slavic Greek Latin Seminary If the Slavic school provided only elementary literacy then the seminary aimed to give future ministers of the Church both general and theological education Its rector was Archimandrite Peter Smelich adviser to the Holy Synod a Serb by birth a former archimandrite of the Simonov Monastery in Moscow Thanks to the efforts of teachers Grigory Kremenetsky and Andrey Zertis Kamensky the St Petersburg seminary was competently organized Those who completed the seminary course were entitled to the best places in the dioceses According to the program of the Spiritual Regulations in 1721 in St Petersburg in addition to the Alexander Nevsky Slavic School Archbishop Theophan Prokopovich of Pskov opened a second school which immediately received the name of the seminary It was located at the courtyard of the bishop on the embankment of the Karpovka River After the death of Archbishop Theophan in 1736 the seminary came under the jurisdiction of the Government Cabinet but gradually began to decline Finally by the decree of Empress Anna Ioannovna of March 22 1738 the senior pupils of this school were assigned to business and the rest in the number of 21 people were transferred for further study to the Alexander Nevsky Slavic Greek Latin Seminary Having received replenishment from the former school of Archbishop Theophan the number of students of the Alexander Nevsky Seminary in 1740 reached 85 In addition to the establishment of secondary theological schools in St Petersburg it was supposed to open a proper theological academy named Petergarten It was planned to invite the most famous professors from Western universities to the positions of teachers The construction of the building began in 1722 but was stopped due to lack of funds In the same year an already built building was provided for the academy the house of the deceased Tsarevna Catherine Alekseyevna In August 1724 The Holy Synod appealed to the Emperor with a request to allocate money for the maintenance of students teachers and servants However the case dragged on until the death of Peter the Great and under his successors it was completely discontinued By order of the authorities or at their own request many graduates of the Slavic Greek Latin Seminary could enroll in other higher and secondary educational institutions in particular in the gymnasium and university at the Academy of Sciences established in 1724 by decree of Peter the Great In their first set it was supposed to gather 30 students from the pupils of the Moscow Theological Academy Alexander Nevsky and Novgorod seminaries In 1761 the Holy Synod gave permission to seminary graduates to study abroad with the payment of double salaries They went to Cambridge and Oxford Universities England Gottingen Germany In 1786 an education reform was launched in the Russian Empire In accordance with this Metropolitan Gabriel Petrov of Novgorod and St Petersburg filed a petition for the transformation of the Alexander Nevsky Seminary into the Main Seminary According to the decree of the Holy Synod of 1788 the best pupils of diocesan seminaries should be sent to study at the capital s Main Seminary At the same time higher classes of the Novgorod Seminary was transferred to the Alexander Nevsky Monastery and attached to the Main Seminary The number of students in the Main Seminary has reached 200 After graduating from the Main Seminary graduates were sent as teachers to their diocesan seminaries New disciplines appeared church history mechanics natural history and a class of mathematics and experimental physics was also opened In 1797 the Holy Trinity Alexander Nevsky Monastery was renamed the Alexander Nevsky Lavra and the Alexander Nevsky Main Seminary was transformed into the Alexander Nevsky Academy by decree of Paul I of 18 december 1797 In the Theological academies in addition to general seminar courses they decided to teach a complete system of philosophy and theology higher eloquence physics and languages Latin Hebrew Greek German and French On behalf of Metropolitan Ambrose Podobedov Bishop Eugene Bolkhovitinov drew up a outline for the establishment of Theological schools in 1805 It formed the basis for the reform of the entire system of spiritual education in Russia Theological academies became not only higher theological educational institutions but also church scientific centers which were also entrusted with the tasks of educational and publishing activities The mentors of the academy in addition to their teaching activities often carried out various kinds of special assignments of the Synod reviewing books compiling written refutations of sectarian and non Orthodox teachings Graduates of the Theological Academy were assigned as mentors to Theological seminaries and colleges to parish ministry priests at Russian missions abroad and embassies On June 26 1808 Emperor Alexander I approved the draft reform of theological schools and at the beginning of the following year the Alexander Nevsky Academy was divided into three completely independent stages the St Petersburg Theological Academy the first in Russia organized according to the new charter the highest stage the St Petersburg Theological Seminary the middle stage and the Alexander Nevsky Theological College the lowest stage The New Academy became a complex institution in structure it was not only a higher theological school and an educational center but also an administrative center for an entire educational district Her tasks included spiritual education and preparation for higher ecclesiastical positions dissemination of knowledge among the clergy management of Theological seminaries and schools of the district the caesura of spiritual writings The Academy was under the jurisdiction of the Holy Synod and the diocesan bishop After the development and adoption of the Charter the grand opening of the St Petersburg Theological Academy took place on February 17 1809 It was still located in the Alexander Nevsky Lavra In 1841 the seminary was also transferred beyond the walls of the Lavra to a specially constructed building In 1821 the academic journal Christian Reading was established which published translations of the Holy Scriptures from Hebrew and ancient Greek into Russian theological ecclesiastical and historical works of professors and teachers of the Academy Since the 1840s the Academy began to accept representatives of other Local Orthodox Churches to study from Bulgaria Greece Romania Serbia and other countries During the First World War from September 1915 to the beginning of 1918 the premises of the Alexander Nevsky Antoniev Theological College the hospital and the southern part of the Theological Academy building and the 4th floor of the Seminary building were occupied by the Red Cross infirmary No 279 for 150 wounded and sick soldiers but educational institutions continued their work In June 1918 members of the corporation and students of the Academy solemnly welcomed Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow and All Russia who came to Petrograd Shortly after the October Revolution in the autumn of 1918 the former theological schools of the Northern capital were closed In November 1945 Theological and pastoral courses were opened in Leningrad in part of the building of the theological seminary The Leningrad Theological Academy was established on September 1 1946 by decree of His Holiness Patriarch Alexy I of Moscow and All Russia and the Leningrad Theological Seminary was established by decree of His Holiness the Patriarch on the basis of Theological and pastoral courses that worked in Leningrad in the 1945 1946 academic year On October 14 1946 on the Day of the Intercession of the Theotokos the grand opening of the Leningrad Theological Academy and Seminary took place in the presence of Patriarch Alexy I After the beginning of new anti religious persecutions in 1958 the Council for the Affairs of the Russian Orthodox Church stopped any attempts to increase the number of students in seminaries and academies and expand their premises On July 17 1959 it was decided to gradually close the only correspondence sector of Leningrad theological Schools in the country although its actual functioning in an abbreviated form continued until 1967 In 1961 at the height of the Khrushchev anti religious campaign the question of closing Leningrad theological schools arose Due to the opposition of the Soviet authorities only 8 people were able to enter the seminary in 1961 although 33 applications for admission were submitted Metropolitan Nikodim Rotov appointed to the Leningrad Department in October 1963 took active measures to prevent the closure of the theological schools of Leningrad As chairman of the DECR Metropolitan Nikodim began to energetically include the Academy in international activities foreign delegations began to come here and academy professors began to go to various international conferences At the initiative of Metropolitan Nikodim 7 Africans from Uganda and Kenya were invited to study as part of the Christian exchange In 1965 by the decision of the Holy Synod the Faculty of African Christian Youth was established at the Leningrad Academy and Seminary which was then transformed into the Faculty of Foreign Students In the 1960s a regency circle began to operate for seminary and academy students Since 1967 the Academy Council headed by the rector Bishop Mishael Mudyugin decided to henceforth call the regency circle the Regency Class and to produce the first set of students from among the students of theological schools At the head of the Regent class was an honored professor Nikolay Uspensky On the initiative of the rector Bishop Kirill Gundyaev of Vyborg in 1979 the first enrollment for the Regency Department formally formed in 1983 took place where girls were admitted for the first time in the history of the revived theological schools In 1988 an optional icon painting class was opened At first it acted as an educational center for laypeople then as a circle with a workshop and a repository of icons that were restored and used for the needs of the academy and later as a class with teachers who worked on a voluntary basis Rectors editArchimandrite Eugraph Muzalevsky Platonov February 4 November 11 1809 Archimandrite Sergius Krylov Platonov January 7 1810 March 3 1812 Bishop Philaret Drozdov March 11 1812 March 13 1819 Bishop Gregory Postnikov May 2 1819 January 4 1826 Archimandrite John Dobrozrakov January 30 1826 August 5 1830 Archimandrite Smaragd Kryzhanovsky August 27 1830 September 20 1831 Archimandrite Benedict Grigorovich November 4 1831 June 8 1833 Archimandrite Vitaly Shchepetev June 8 1833 June 1837 Archimandrite Nicholas Dobrokhotov July 5 1837 April 1841 Bishop Athanasius Drozdov April 21 1841 January 13 1847 Bishop Eusebius Orlinsky January 17 1847 December 19 1850 Bishop Makarius Bulgakov December 20 1850 May 1 1857 Archimandrite Theophan Govorov June 13 1857 May 9 1859 Bishop Nectarius Nadezhdin July 17 1859 September 29 1860 Archimandrite Joannicius Rudnev October 5 1860 January 13 1864 Bishop John Sokolov January 17 29 1864 November 9 21 1866 Protopresbyter John Yanyshev November 29 1866 October 19 1883 Bishop Arsenius Bryantsev October 22 1883 March 28 1887 Bishop Anthony Vadkovsky April 15 1887 October 24 1892 Bishop Boris Plotnikov October 30 1892 December 2 1893 Bishop Nikander Molchanov December 13 1893 August 23 1895 Bishop John Kratirov August 31 1895 January 16 1899 Bishop Boris Plotnikov February 17 1899 January 20 1901 Bishop Sergius Stragorodsky January 24 1901 October 15 1905 Bishop Sergius Tikhomirov October 15 1905 March 21 1908 Bishop Theophan Bystrov February 4 1909 October 19 1910 Bishop George Yaroshevsky November 22 1910 May 13 1913 Bishop Anastasius Alexandrov May 30 1913 June 23 1918 Archpriest John Bogoyavlensky September 1 1946 June 22 1947 Archpriest Alexander Osipov 1947 1948 acting Bishop Simeon Bychkov April 20 1948 June 30 1952 Archpriest Mikhail Speransky July 21 1952 August 16 1966 Bishop Michael Mudyugin August 16 1966 July 30 1968 Bishop Herman Timofeev November 28 1968 June 25 1970 Bishop Meliton Solovyov June 25 1970 December 26 1974 Archbishop Kirill Gundyaev December 26 1974 December 26 1984 Archimandrite Manuel Pavlov December 29 1984 March 2 1986 acting Archpriest Nikolai Gundyaev March 2 1986 June 22 1987 Archpriest Vladimir Sorokin August 21 1987 August 12 1992 Archpriest Vasily Stoikov August 12 1992 July 17 1996 Archbishop Constantine Goryanov July 17 1996 October 6 2008 Archbishop Ambrose Ermakov October 6 2008 July 14 2018 Bishop Seraphim Amelchenkov July 14 2018 July 9 2019 Bishop Siluan Nikitin since July 9 2019 Notable Alumni editSaint Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow and All Russia Saint Mardarije Uskokovic of America and Canada Patriarch Sergius of Moscow and All Russia Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia Metropolitan Nikodim Rotov of Leningrad and Novgorod Metropolitan Vladimir Sabodan of Kiev and All Ukraine Moron Mar Baselius Marthoma Mathews III the Catholicose of East and Primate of Indian Orthodox Church Footnotes edit Theological Academy Encyclopedia of Saint Petersburg a b Walter Sablinsky The Road to Bloody Sunday Father Gapon and the St Petersburg Massacre of 1905 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1976 pg 42 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Petersburg Theological Academy Official website nbsp nbsp This Russian university college or other education institution article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte nbsp This seminary related article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Petersburg Theological Academy amp oldid 1180123011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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