資料來源: Google Book
At war with the church :religious dissent in seventeenth-century Russia
- 作者: Michels, Georg Bernhard.
- 出版: Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press 1999.
- 稽核項: x, 354 p. ;24 cm.
- 標題: Dissenters, Religious Russia -- History -- 17th century. , Russkaia pravoslavnaia tserkov History -- 17th century. , Dissenters, Religious , Russkaia pravoslavnaia tserkov , Russia Church history -- 17th century. , Church history , Russia , History
- ISBN: 0804733589 , 9780804733588
- 附註: 九十一年度「輔導新設國立大學健全發展計畫」藏書. Includes bibliographical references (p. 305-333) and index.
- 系統號: 005238865
- 資料類型: 圖書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
This detailed study examines the social, religious, and institutional conflicts accompanying the Russian Schism of the seventeenth century. By analyzing who opposed the reforms of Patriarch Nikon (1652-58) and under what circumstances, the author presents a complex and multi-faceted world of popular religious resistance that has been hidden from view for centuries. The documentary records of Russian church and state archives--most studied here for the first time--reveal that the schism evolved in two phases. The first phase began in 1652 and encompassed the activities of Old Believer literati as well as unrelated protests by social outcasts and independent-minded individuals. The second phase began in 1666 with a systematic church campaign to enforce the Nikonian forms of worship. The author argues that the vast majority of ordinary Russians rejected Nikonian symbols such as the three-finger sign of the cross and the new service book because they perceived them as tokens of obedience to church authority, and not because they responded to the teachings of Old Believers. In fact, the book demonstrates that seventeeth-century Old Believers' literary and moralist concerns aroused little interest among contemporaries. The Russian Schism's central feature was the assertion of religious autonomy by clerics and laymen. Countless small, locally endowed hermitages and a few larger monasteries, having never been integrated into the church's institutional structure, were now in revolt; monks and nuns living outside of official monasteries preached heterodox ideas and violence, or founded alternative communities in the forests; defrocked and unemployed priests, deeply hostile to the church, participated in local uprisings; and a number of parish priests defended themselves with force against attempts to depose them. Manifestations of lay dissent included attacks by peasants and brigands on church representatives in Siberia and at Lake Onega; group suicides; quasi-Protestant quests for religious salvation by individual peasants and artisans; and underground religious networks sponsored by Novgorod and Pskov merchants. The book provides a thorough reassesment of the Russian Schism, relying primarily on archival documents and thus departing from the traditional focus on Old Believer writings and biographies.
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
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