Dimitry Pospielovsky
Dimitry Vladimirovich Pospielovsky (13 January 1935 – 12 September 2014) (
professor emeritus of history at the University of Western Ontario. He was a prominent researcher in the history of the Russian Orthodox Church.[1]
Pospielovsky was born in 1935 in Ryasniki, a village then in Poland, now in Rivne Oblast, Ukraine.
He also published a number of articles, in English and Russian, on other issues of Russian history, in particular, on workers' movement at the times of
Russian Revolutions and on Russian nationalism
.
Pospielovsky died in London, Ontario, on 12 September 2014.
Bibliography
- Pravoslavnaia tserkov’ v istorii Rusi, Rossii i SSSR. Moscow (1996) ISBN 5-87507-019-6
- Orthodox Church in the History of Russia. St Vladimir's Seminary Press (1998), ISBN 0-88141-179-5 [1]
- Orthodox Church in the History of Russia. St Vladimir's Seminary Press (1998),
- The Russian Church Under the Soviet Regime, 1917-1982 (Volume 1). ISBN 0-88141-015-2
- Soviet Antireligious Campaigns and Persecutions (History of Soviet Atheism in Theory and Practice and the Believers, Vol 2) ISBN 0-312-00905-4
- Soviet Studies on the Church and the Believer's Response to Atheism: A History of Soviet Atheism in Theory and Practice and the Believers, Vol 3, Palgrave Macmillan (August, 1988) hardcover: ISBN 0-312-01292-6
- A History of Marxist-Leninist Atheism and Soviet Antireligious Policies, Palgrave Macmillan (December, 1987) ISBN 0-312-38132-8
- Russian police trade unionism: Experiment or provocation? (research monograph), Weidenfeld & Nicolson (1971) ISBN 0-297-00355-0
- (Expanded and translated into Russian) На путях к рабочему праву. Профсоюзы в России ("On the Roads to the Workers' Right. Trade Unions in Russia"), Posev publishers, 1987
- (with Janis Sapiets and Keith Bosley) Russia's Underground Poets, ASINB000AY6VNQ
- Тоталитаризм и вероисповедание ("ISBN 5-89647-074-6(Need a good Russian source)
Sources
- How Stalin Was Resurrecting the Church (Как Сталин церковь возрождал), in Russian, published in Nezavisimaya Gazeta on July 12, 2000
References
- ISBN 978-1-58544-523-3. Retrieved 29 June 2011.