Metropolis of Kiev, Galicia and all Ruthenia (Ruthenian Uniate Church)
The Metropolis of Kiev, Galicia and all Ruthenia was an ecclesiastical territory or
Ecclesiastical structure
Within the Commonwealth, the metropolis had the following
- Archeparchy of Polotsk
- Archeparchy of Smolensk (1625-1778)
- Eparchy of Lutsk and Ostroh (1594-1636, 1702-1795 and 1789–1839) During the Great Northern War, Volhynia was occupied by Russian troops and the eparchy was converted to Orthodoxy until the withdrawal of troops.
- Eparchy of Turov and Pinsk
- Eparchy of Volodymyr and Brest
- Eparchy of Lviv
- Eparchy of Chełm
- Eparchy of Przemyśl and Sambir
Pope Clement VIII's 1596 bull Decet Romanum Pontificem gave metropolitans the same rights that Kievan metropolitans had enjoyed under Constantinople. In elections for the office, candidates were chosen by direct vote of the assembled bishops and by the Superior-General (Proto-Archimandrite) of the Basilian order. He would then be nominated by the Polish king and confirmed by the pope.
History
For much of the 17th century, the
While most Orthodox bishops in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth supported the Union of Brest, as with the previous
By 1686, Russia had complete sovereignty over the lands of the
The end of the Commonwealth came with the partitions of Poland when the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Prussia and the Habsburg monarchy divided the realm between them. Following the partitions, its successor states treated the Uniate Church differently:
- In the territory annexed by the Russian Empire, the Church was effectively dissolved; most of the eparchies were forcibly converted to the Russian Orthodox Church.
- In the territory annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia, the Eparchy of Supraśl operated from 1798 to 1809. Following the Treaties of Tilsit, the territory was annexed by the Russian Empire. As a result, the Church was effectively dissolved and the eparchy was forcibly converted to the Russian Orthodox Church.
- In the territory annexed by the Austrian Empire, the Church continued to operate as a Greek Catholic Church. A similar situation continued in the Second Polish Republic of 1918 to 1939. It was suppressed in the Soviet Union from 1946[5] but survived to become the core of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church from 1989.
List of metropolitans
The below is a list of metropolitans of "Kiev, Galicia and all Ruthenia":[6]
- 1596—1599 Michael Rohoza[7]
- 1600—1613 Hypatius Pociej[8]
- 1613—1637 Joseph Velamin-Rutski[9]
- 1637—1640 Rafajil Korsak
- 1641—1655 Antin Sielava
- 1666—1674 Havryil Kolenda
- 1674—1693 Kyprian Zochovskyj
- 1694—1708 Lev Zalenskyj
- 1708—1713 Yurij Vynnyckyj
- 1714—1729 Lev Kiszka
- 1729—1746 Athanasius Szeptycki
- 1748—1762 Florian Hrebnicki
- 1762—1778 Felicjan Filip Wołodkowicz
- 1778—1779 Leo Szeptycki
- 1780—1786 Jason Smogorzewski
- 1787—1805 Theodosius Rostocki
References
- ^ Polish-Cossack War
- ^ "Khmelnitsky Massacre in Polonnoe - סגולה". Archived from the original on 2021-02-28.
- Britannica
- ISBN 978-0-275-96481-8.
- )
- ^ Pelesz, Julian (1881). Geschichte der Union der ruthenischen Kirche mit Rom. Woerl. pp. 1083–84.
- ^ T. Kempa, Metropolita Michał Rahoza a unia brzeska, "Klio", t. 2: 2002, s. 56–62
- ^ Pelesz, Julian (1881). Geschichte der Union der ruthenischen Kirche mit Rom. Woerl. pp. 35–59.
- ^ Ludvik Nemec, "The Ruthenian Uniate Church in Its Historical Perspective", Church History; Vol. 37, No. 4 (Dec., 1968), pp. 365-388
Further reading
- Frick, David A. (1984). "Meletij Smotryc'kyj and the Ruthenian Question in the Early Seventeenth Century". Harvard Ukrainian Studies. 8 (3–4): 351–375. JSTOR 41036202.
- Litwin, Henryk (1987). "Catholicization among the Ruthenian Nobility and Assimilation Processes in the Ukraine during the Years 1569–1648" (PDF). Acta Poloniae Historica. 55: 57–83.
- Nemec, Ludvik (1968). "The Ruthenian Uniate Church in its Historical Perspective". Church History. 37 (4): 365–388. S2CID 154527129.
- Shipman, Andrew J. (1912a). "Ruthenian Rite". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company. pp. 276–277.
- Shipman, Andrew J. (1912b). "Ruthenians". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company. pp. 277–279.
- Wolff, Larry (2003). "The Uniate Church and the Partitions of Poland: Religious Survival in an Age of Enlightened Absolutism". Harvard Ukrainian Studies. 26 (2002–2003) (1–4): 153–244. JSTOR 41036852.