Religion, Identity and Empire: A Greek Archbishop in the Russia of Catherine the Great

Front Cover
East European Monographs, 1997 - Biography & Autobiography - 279 pages
During the early Russian Empire, tensions between the state and the church, and the beliefs of many ethnic minorities and social groups shaped the religious culture of Russia's southern frontier. This work explores the dynamic between religion and both religious and political institutions. It recreates the struggle of the government and church to consolidate its diverse population into a single, unified, secular Russia. It illuminates historical and cultural aspcets of this era, including the attempts of Archbishop Nikiforos to bring the correct message of Christ to ethically diverse parishioners for their religious, moral and civic benefit. In addition, the text provides accounts of those who strayed, offering a glimpse of daily lives and struggles on the frontier as well as the stigmatization that resulted from their nonconformity.

Contents

OTTOMAN SUBJECT ORTHODOX BELIEVER
1
THEOTOKIS
28
REDEMPTION AND EDUCATION
61
CONSECRATING THE LANDCONSTRUCTING
94
BOUNDARIES
135
ASTRAKHAN
177
STRUGGLE FOR A FREE GREECE
209
CONCLUSION
220
ILLUSTRATIONS
233
BIBLIOGRAPHY
241
INDEX
271
Copyright

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