An essay in universal history from an Orthodox Christian Point ofView part the age of revolution



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424

 Tolstoy, Sebastopol Sketches; quoted in Figes, op. cit., p. 445.

425

 Fet, in Figes, op. cit., p. 446

426

 C. Aksakov, in E.N. Annenkov, "'Slaviano-Khristianskie' idealy na fone zapadnoj tsivilizatsii, russkie spory 1840-1850-kh gg." ("'Slavic-Christian' ideas against the background of western civilization, Russia quarrels in the 1840s and 50s"), in V.A. Kotel'nikov (ed.), Khristianstvo i Russkaia Literatura (Christianity and Russian Literature), St. Petersburg: "Nauka", 1996, pp. 143-144. Cf. Yury Samarin: “We were defeated not by the external forces of the Western alliance, but by our own internal weakness… Stagnation of thought, depression of productive forces, the rift between government and people, disunity between social classes and the enslavement of one of them to another… prevent the government from deploying all the means available to it and, in emergency, from being able to count on mobilising the strength of the nation” (“O krepostnom sostoianii i o perekhode iz nego k grazhdanskoj svobode” (“On serfdom and the transition from it to civil liberty”), Sochinenia (Works), vol. 2, Moscow, 1878, pp. 17-20; quoted in Hosking, op. cit., p. 317).

427

 Simms, Europe: The Struggle for Supremacy, London: Allen Lane, 2013, pp. 223-224, 222.

428

 At least one Saint worked on the Chinese mission-field in this period: Archbishop Gurias of Tauris, who worked for twenty years in the Peking Spiritual mission, translating into Chinese the Gospels, Service Book, Lives of the Saints, as well as other religious works. In 1929 his body was found to be incorrupt (http://orthodox.cn/saints/20080421gurykarpov_en.htm).

429

 Lebedev, Velikorossia, pp. 324, 325.


430

 Lieven, Empire, London: John Murray, 2000, pp. 212-213.

431

 Lebedev, op. cit., p. 324.

432

 S.M. Kaziev (ed.), Shamil, Moscow: Ekho Kavkaza, 1997, p. 31.

433

 Kaziev, op. cit., p. 53.

434

 Snychev, op. cit., p. 325.

435

 Lieven, op. cit., pp. 213-214. The historian referred to is David Gillard.


436

 Sand, The Invention of the Jewish People, London: Verso, 2009, pp. 46-47.

437

 Payne, “Nationalism and the Local Church: The Source of Ecclesiastical Conflict in the Orthodox Commonwealth”, Nationalities Papers, Vol. 35, No. 5, November 2007.

438

 Payne, op. cit.

439

 Beaton, “Romanticism in Greece”, in Roy Porter and Mikulas Teich, Romanticism in National Context, Cambridge University Press, 1988, p. 95.

440

 Kolettis, in Glenny, op. cit. Italics mine (V.M.).


441

 Runciman, The Great Church in Captivity, Cambridge University Press, 1968, pp. 407-410.

442

 Leontiev, "Natsional'naia politika kak orudie vsemirnoj revoliutsii" (National Politics as a Weapon of Universal Revolution), in Vostok, Rossia i Slavianstvo, op. cit., pp. 513, 514-515.


443

 Leontiev, "Plody natsional'nykh dvizhenij na pravoslavnom Vostoke", op. cit., pp. 536-537, 538.


444

 Adrian Fortescue, The Orthodox Eastern Church, London: Catholic Truth Society, 1920, p. 308. Originally, the Karlovtsy metropolitanate had jurisdiction over the Romanians of Hungarian Transylvania. However, in 1864 the authorities allowed the creation of a separate Romanian Church in Hungary, the metropolitanate of Hermannstadt (Nagy-Szeben) (Fortescue, op. cit., p. 316). From 1873 there was also a metropolitanate of Černovtsy with jurisdiction over all the Orthodox (mainly Serbs and Romanians) in the Austrian lands (Fortescue, op. cit., pp. 323-325). Significantly, when the Russian Church in Exile sought refuge in Serbia in the 1920s, their administration was set up in the former capital of the Serbian Church's exile, Karlovtsy.

445

 The Serbian Pe

Patriarchate was founded as an autocephalous archiepiscopate by St. Savva in 1218-19, raised to the rank of a patriarchate with its see in Pe

in 1375, and abolished in 1766. It should not be confused with the Bulgarian Ochrid archiepiscopate, which was founded by Emperor John Tsimiskes in Preslava in 971, moved to Sophia, Voden, Prespa and finally Ochrid, and was abolished on January 16, 1767.


446

 Winder, Danubia, London: Picador, 2013, p. 286.

447

 Judah, The Serbs, London: Yale University Press, 1997, pp. 51-52, 52-54.

448

 Mazower, op. cit., p. 95.

449

 Glenny, op. cit., p. 17.

450

 Misha Glenny, The Balkans, 1804-1999, London: Granta Books, 2000, p. 46.

451

 Etty, “Serbian Nationalism and the Great War”, History Today, February 27, 2014.

452

 Adrian Fortescue, The Orthodox Eastern Church, London: Catholic Truth Society, 1920, p. 309.

453

 He is not to be confused with is uncle, St. Peter of Cetinije, Metropolitan-Prince of Montenegro, who died on October 18, 1830. He became a monk at the age of twelve, and in 1782, at the age of twenty-three, succeeded Metropolitan Sabas. He brought peace to the land, defeated Napoleon's forces at the battle of Boka in Dalmatia, but always lived in a narrow monastic cell. His incorrupt relics and many healings are a witness to his sanctity. See https://oca.org/saints/lives/2015/10/18/108067-st-peter-of-cetinje.

454

 Quotations in Anzulovi

, Heavenly Serbia, London and New York: New York University Press, 1999, pp. 51-52, 55.



455

 Velimirovi

, Religija Njegoševa (The Religion of Njegoš), p. 166, quoted in Anzulovi



, p. 55.

456

 Zamoyski, Holy Madness, p. 318.

457

 Glenny, op. cit., pp. 58-59.

458

 Glenny, op. cit., pp. 58-60.

459

 Glenny, op. cit., pp. 62-63.

460

 Glenny, op. cit., p. 64.

461

 Jelavich, History of the Balkans: vol. 2, Twentieth Century, Cambridge University Press, 1983, p. 4.

462

 Patriarch Justinian of Romania, "St. Callinicus: Abbot, Bishop, Man of God", in A.M. Allchin (ed.), The Tradition of Life: Romanian Essays in Spirituality and Theology, London: Fellowship of St. Alban and St. Sergius, 1971, p. 15.

463

 Glenny, op. cit., p. 68.

464

 Fr. Dumitru Staniloae, "St. Callinicus of Cernica", in Allchin, op. cit., p. 29.


465

 Zhukov, Russkaia Pravoslavnaia Tserkov' na Rodine i za Rubezhom (The Russian Orthodox Church in the Homeland and Abroad), Paris, 2005, pp. 18-19.


466

 Fomin & Fomina, op. cit., vol. I, pp. 331-333.

467

 Hieromonk Anthony of the Holy Mountain, Ocherki Zhizni i Podvigov Startsa Ieroskhimonakha Ilariona Gruzina (Sketches of the Life and Struggles of Elder Hieroschemamonk Hilarion the Georgian), Jordanville, 1985, p. 95.

468

 St, Macarius, Letter 165 to Monastics, in Fr. Leonid Kavelin, Elder Macarius of Optina, Platina, Ca.: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood Press, 1995, pp. 309-310.

469

 Neale, in Christopher K. Birchall, Embassy, Emigration, and Englishmen: The Three-Hundred Year History of a Russian Orthodox Church in London, Jordanville, N.Y.: Holy Trinity Publications, 2014, pp. 98-99.


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