Church and State before and after the Russian Revolution of 1917

Authors

  • Boris N. Mironov St. Petersburg State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2020.219

Abstract

The article discusses the collective monograph “1917: revolution, state, society and the Church” written by well-known Russian historians. According to the author of this review, the team prepared an interesting and useful study. Its characteristic features are: interdisciplinarity, relevance, rollbacks of the past with the present, good source base, high quality texts, good design. A serious shortage of the book is the lack of historiography. In all chapters there is no assessment made by the predecessors. The absence of a critical analysis of the existing literature on the issues studied in the monograph does not allow not only the readers, but also the authors themselves to adequately assess the meaning and novelty of the study. This is especially distressing in those cases when different, sometimes opposite points of view are expressed in the literature. For example, regarding the position of the episcopate and the clergy on the relationship between the Church and the state, the restoration of the patriarchate, the overthrow of the monarchy and the legitimization of the Provisional Government, the role of the Orthodox Church Council of 1917–1918 was expressed several points of view. For a long time, and probably still, most Russian and foreign researchers believe that during the synodal period the Russian Orthodox Church turned into a mute instrument in the hands of a secular state, without a murmur fulfilling its will, even if it was contrary to its spiritual duty and its corporate interests. Some authors of the collective monograph also adhere to this concept, although a fundamentally different concept is expressed in foreign and Russian historiography (G. Freeze, M. A. Babkin, P. G. Rogozny, etc.). If the authors would defended their points of view in an open discussion and critically evaluated the concepts of their opponents, the book would certainly have won.

Keywords:

Russian revolution of 1917, state, society, Russian Orthodox Church, late imperial Russia, Soviet Union

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Author Biography

Boris N. Mironov, St. Petersburg State University

Doctor in History, Professor

Published

2024-01-30

How to Cite

Mironov, B. N. (2024). Church and State before and after the Russian Revolution of 1917. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 65(2), 646–667. https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2020.219

Issue

Section

Reviews