Sylvester_Medvedev

Sylvester Medvedev

Sylvester Medvedev

Russian religious writer (1641–1691)


Sylvester (Russian: Сильвестр, romanized: Silvestr; secular name: Simeon Agafonovich Medvedev; 6 February 1641 – 21 February 1691) was a Russian writer, poet, and theologian.[1] He was a student of Simeon of Polotsk.[2]

Life

Sylvester was born in Kursk;[2] he was first a podyachy in Kursk and then Moscow.[3][4]

In 1665, he entered the newly established Slavic Greek Latin Academy of Simeon of Polotsk (1629–1680) in the Zaikonospassky Monastery, where he learnt Latin, poetics and rhetoric.[1] After Simeon's death, Sylvester re-established the school. In 1687, the school and the printing press schools were merged to form the Slavic Greek Latin Academy.[5]

Sylvester supported Sophia (r.1682–1689) during her regency and promoted the Roman Catholic understanding of the Eucharist,[6] which led to theological disputes during the 1680s.[7] In 1690, a sobor of the Russian Orthodox Church condemned the views of the Westernizing party.[6] After Sophia's overthrow, Sylvester was executed for high treason against Tsar Peter I. He was buried at the Zaikonospassky Monastery.

See also


References

  1. Johnston, William M. (4 December 2013). Encyclopedia of Monasticism. Routledge. p. 888. ISBN 978-1-136-78716-4.
  2. Likhachev, Dmitri Sergeevich; Dmitriev, Lev Aleksandrovich (1989). A History of Russian Literature, 11th-17th Centuries: A Textbook. Raduga Publishers. pp. 531–355. ISBN 978-5-05-001715-4.
  3. University of California Publications in History. University of California Press. 1952. p. 48.
  4. Charipova, Liudmila V. (19 September 2006). Latin Books and the Eastern Orthodox Clerical Elite in Kiev, 1632-1780. Manchester University Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-7190-7296-3.
  5. Zernov, Nicolas (1978). The Russians and Their Church. St Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-913836-36-1.

Sources


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Sylvester_Medvedev, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.