Crisis and Reform: The Kyivan Metropolitanate, the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and the Genesis of the Union of Brest

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Ukrainian Research Institute, Harvard University, 2001 - 492 pages

Crisis and Reform is a groundbreaking study that traces the Church history that led to the Union of Brest (1596), in which a majority of Ruthenian eparchies accepted the primacy of the Pope in Rome while retaining their Slavonic-Byzantine rite. Dr. Gudziak concentrates specifically on the significance of the Kievan metropolitanate and its struggle both with the Moscow metropolitanate and with the encroachment of Polish Roman-Catholicism and Protestantism on Ruthenian spiritual life. He also shows how these tensions, coupled with the aftermath of the visit to Muscovy (1588-1589) of Patriarch Jeremiah of Constantinople, led to the decision of the Ruthenian hierarchy to move toward union with Rome.

Crisis and Reform provides an excellent overview of the ecclesiastical structures in Eastern Slavic lands from their Christianization to the late sixteenth century. The book also contains maps and reproductions of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century illustrations of leading Church figures, polemicists, and sites important to the Union.

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Contents

Crisis in the Kievan Metropolitanate
64
Sixteenthcentury Orthodox Travellers from the Ouoman Empire to East Slavic
119
The Ruthenian Revival and Grock Prelates and Patriarchs
156

4 other sections not shown

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About the author (2001)

Borys A. Gudziak is Director of the Institute for Church History (Lviv, Ukraine) and Vice-Rector of the L'viv Theological Academy.

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