• Source: Kazan Theological Seminary
  • Kazan Theological Seminary (Russian: Казанская духовная семинария) is the principal Russian Orthodox seminary in the Diocese of Kazan and Tatarstan.


    History


    Orthodox Christian Theological education in Kazan has its roots dating back to 1718, when a school for the children of clergy was established. This was followed by the opening of the Kazan Slavonic-Latin School in 1723, which was reorganized as the Kazan Theological Seminary in 1732.
    An attempt to provide higher education was made in 1798 through the establishment of the Kazan Theological Academy. However, this proved unsustainable and the institution was returned to the Kazan Theological Seminary in 1818. However, in 1842, the Theological Academy was revived and continued to function until the 1917 revolution, during which time it became the fourth-ranked theological academy in the Russian Empire.
    In 1847, the Academy supported the missionary efforts of the Kazan Diocese by organizing a committee to oversee the translation of texts to reach non-Christian peoples. During the tenure of Bishop Grigory Postnikov (1848 to 1856), the Academy received the extensive library of the Solovetsky Monastery. In 1895, Anthony of Kiev became the rector of the Academy, serving until 1900.


    Notable people associated with the academy


    The Kazan Academy produced over eighty students who later were consecrated bishops. Some of these became regarded as martyrs by the Russian Orthodox Church, including;

    Gavrill Abolimov
    Anatoly Grisyuk, the rector of the academy
    Nikolay Ilminsky, professor
    Athanasy Malinin
    Juvenaly Maslovsky, bishop
    Victor Ostrovidov
    Ioann Poyarkov
    Iov Rogozhin
    German Ryashentsev
    Dmitry Mikhailovich Shishokin, priest
    Gury Stepanov
    Ioasaf Udalov
    Notable alumni include;

    Victor Pokrovsky, a Russian missionary, translator and musician
    Nikolay Nikolsky, historian and folklorist
    Bishop Euthymius, Bishop of Lukhovitsy
    Ilia Berdnikov - an expert in church law
    Nikolai Ostroumov - educationalist
    Viktor Ivanovič Nesmelov - a philosopher
    Gordiy Sablukov - an expert on Islam, who produced the first Russian translation of the Koran
    Peter Znamensky - a historian


    References



    This article incorporates text from Kazan Theological Academy at OrthodoxWiki which is licensed under the CC-BY-SA and GFDL.
    Kazan Diocese

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