The Kiev Theological Academy (1819âÂÂ1919) was one of the oldest higher educational institution of the Russian Orthodox Church, situated in Kiev, then in the Russian Empire (now Kyiv, Ukraine). It was considered to be the most senior one among similar academies in Moscow, Saint Petersburg, and Kazan. It was located at the Kiev Podol within the Kiev Epiphany Monastery. The Academy's predecessor was the Academia Mohileana, founded in the 17th century.
History
Predecessor Collegium Mohileanum in Kiev
The Kiev Theological Academy traces its history back to 1615, when Yelisey Pletenetsky founded a school at the Brotherhood Monastery in Kiev. Several decades later, Peter Mohyla, from 1632 an Orthodox Metropolitan of Kiev under the Patriarchate of Constantinople, merged it with a newly established Lavra school into the Mohyla Collegium (Latin: Collegium Kijovense Mohileanum). The Collegium alumni include Innokentiy Gizel, Lazar Baranovych, Dmitry Tuptalo, Stephen Yavorsky, Feofan Prokopovich and many other state activists and Orthodox clerics who helped reform the Russian Orthodox Church under the auspices of Patriarch Nikon and Peter the Great. In 1658 under the terms of the Treaty of Hadiach the Collegium obtained the status of an Academy, similar to Kraków Academy. This was recognized in 1694 by the Russian tsar Ivan V, then reaffirmed by Peter I in 1701, when it became the Mohyla Academy.
Establishment of the Theological Academy
The Mohyla Academy was closed in 1817 by the decree of Alexander I of Russia. In 1819, the Kiev Theological Academy, an ecclesiastical educational institution, was opened in the Brotherhood Monastery. In contrast to its predecessor, the Mohyla Academy, like all similar establishments in Russia at the time the Kiev Theological Academy admitted sons of clergy only. The Kiev Theological Academy continued under this name until its closure by the Soviets in 1919. Some unofficial courses were held even at a later period. An attempt to open the Kiev Orthodox Theological Academy within the walls of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra was made after the Second World War in 1947. The academy was revived in 1992 and is based on the grounds of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra. (The main cathedral of the Brotherhood Monastery was destroyed in 1935 by the Soviet authorities).
Upon the closure of the Kiev Theological Academy, its quarters were passed to the Soviet's Red Army Dnieper Flotilla staff headquarters.
After the Second World War the Kiev Theological Seminary was opened in 1947. It situated in the Kiev Golden-Domed Monastery (1947âÂÂ1949) and in the stylobate of St Andrew's Church in Kiev (1949âÂÂ1960).
Current successors
Since the 1990s, there have been three educational establishments in Ukraine that claim to be successors to the Kyiv Mohyla Academy:
References
Sources
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ÃÂøÃÂòþ-ÃÂõÃÂõÃÂÃÂÃÂúþàÃÂðòÃÂø à1947 ÃÂ. // ÃÂþóøûÃÂýÃÂÃÂúàÃÂøÃÂðýýà2021. ÃÂøòÃÂõýýàÃÂð ÷ñõÃÂõöõýýàúÃÂûÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂýþóþ ýðôñðýýÃÂ: ôþ 95-ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂà÷ðÃÂýÃÂòðýýàÃÂðÃÂÃÂþýðûÃÂýþóþ ÷ðÿþòÃÂôýøú ëÃÂøÃÂòþ-ÃÂõÃÂõÃÂÃÂÃÂúð ûðòÃÂðû. ÃÂñ. ýðÃÂú. ÿÃÂðÃÂÃÂ. â ÃÂ.: ÃÂðÃÂÃÂþýðûÃÂýøù ÷ðÿþòÃÂôýøú ëÃÂøÃÂòþ-ÃÂõÃÂõÃÂÃÂÃÂúð ûðòÃÂðû, ÃÂøôðòýøÃÂÃÂòþ ëäõýÃÂúÃÂû, 2021. â á.60âÂÂ66 [in Ukrainian].
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External links