Belokrinitskaya Hierarchy

Belokrinitskaya Hierarchy (Russian: Белокриницкая иерархия, Belokrinitskoe Soglasiye, Russian: Белокриницкое согласие) is the first full and stable church hierarchy created by the Old Believers.

History

After the reforms of Patriarch Nikon of Moscow in the 1650s, many members of the Russian Orthodox Church refused to acknowledge the changes which he had made to bring the church in line with the Greek Orthodox Church.[1]

The Belokrinitskaya hierarchy was created in 1846 by acceptance of the Greek Metropolitan Ambrose.[2] The hierarchy is called after the name of the see of the First Hierarch Belaya Krinitsa, Bukovina, in Austria-Hungary (currently Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine).[3]

Major sponsorship for organizing this hierarchy (search for a metropolitan, organizing the necessary facilities, smuggling of candidates for priesthood etc. through the Russian border in both directions) came also from the Russian Old Believers merchant families, such as Ryabushinskie and Morozovy.

Some confusions may occur when using the term Belokrinitskoe soglasie in respect to a schism of Okruzhniki (Encyclicalists) and Neokruzhniki (Non-Encyclicalists). From one point of view, both sides of a schism originated from the Rogozhskoe cemetery administrative system and so both belong to the Belokrinitskoe soglasie From the other side, the Rogozhskoe cemetery priests and authorities were Okruzhniki almost entirely, so the term Belokrinitskoe soglasie can sometimes mean Okruzhniki.

Branches

Currently, there are two administratively independent branches of the Belokrinitskaya Hierarchy.

Literature

  • Панкратов, А. В. (2002). "Белокриницкая иерархия". Православная энциклопедия. Vol. 4. Moscow. pp. 542–556.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Мануил (Чибисов), игумен (2008). Белокриницкая иерархия: Споры вокруг вопроса о её каноничности в России во второй половине XIX - начале XX вв. Кострома: Костромской государственный университет имени Н. А. Некрасова. ISBN 978-5-7591-0939-6.

References

  1. ^ "The Old Believers".
  2. ^ "History". Church of the Nativity.
  3. ^ europe, hidden (August 8, 2006). "hidden europe | Old Believers on the Ukraine-Romania border". www.hiddeneurope.eu.