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The Chernihiv Collegium () was one of the first educational institutions in the
Cossack Hetmanate The Cossack Hetmanate (; Cossack Hetmanate#Name, see other names), officially the Zaporozhian Host (; ), was a Ukrainian Cossacks, Cossack state. Its territory was located mostly in central Ukraine, as well as in parts of Belarus and southwest ...
to provide complete secondary and, subsequently, higher spiritual education on the left bank of the Dnieper. In the period of its highest prosperity, the collegium became a major educational and intellectual center and gained fame in
Russia Russia, or the Russian Federation, is a country spanning Eastern Europe and North Asia. It is the list of countries and dependencies by area, largest country in the world, and extends across Time in Russia, eleven time zones, sharing Borders ...
as “Chernigov Athens”. In historiography, the Chernihiv Collegium is considered one of the "first offspring" of the Kyiv-Mohyla Collegium. The collegium is located in the center of
Chernihiv Chernihiv (, ; , ) is a city and municipality in northern Ukraine, which serves as the administrative center of Chernihiv Oblast and Chernihiv Raion within the oblast. Chernihiv's population is The city was designated as a Hero City of Ukraine ...
, on the edge of the rampart of the former fortress, next to the St. Boris and Gleb Cathedral at the
Dytynets Park Dytynets Park is a park in Chernihiv located on the site of the Chernihiv Dytynets, the Kievan Rus'-era fortified region of the city. It is a hill on the bank of the Desna River, where a defense complex is situated. The park houses numerous chu ...
.


Description

An architectural monument of national importance, according to the Decree of the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR dated August 24, 1963 No. 970 with security No. 813 called Collegium. The collegium in Chernigov in 1700 was founded on the basis of the Slavic-Latin and Slavic-mathematical elementary schools of
Novgorod-Seversky Novhorod-Siverskyi (, , , ''Novgorod-Severskiy''), historically known as Novhorod-Siversk () or Novgorod-Seversk (), is a historic city in Chernihiv Oblast, northern Ukraine. It serves as the administrative center of Novhorod-Siverskyi Raion, alth ...
by the Archbishop of Chernigov and Novgorod-Seversky at the expense of the hetman's office of
Ivan Mazepa Ivan Stepanovych Mazepa (; ; ) was the Hetman of the Zaporozhian Host and the Left-bank Ukraine in 1687–1708. The historical events of Mazepa's life have inspired Cultural legacy of Mazeppa, many literary, artistic and musical works. He was ...
in accordance with the decree of Tsar Peter the Great on the "establishment of collegiums for the purpose of education. The collegium building was built in the
Cossack baroque Ukrainian Baroque (), also known as Cossack Baroque () or Mazepa Baroque, is an artistic style that was widespread in Ukraine in the 17th and 18th centuries. It was the result of a combination of local traditions and European Baroque. History ...
style.


History

The Collegium was founded in 1700 by Ioan Maksimovich Vasilkovsky, Archbishop of Chernigov and Novgorod-Seversky, and later, Archbishop of Tobolsk. Initially, the Chernihiv Collegium was called the
Little Russian Little Russia, also known as Lesser Russia, Malorussia, or Little Rus', is a geographical and historical term used to describe Ukraine. At the beginning of the 14th century, the patriarch of Constantinople accepted the distinction between what ...
Collegium. The Chernigov Collegium included the schools of
Lazar Baranovich Lazar Baranovych or Baranovich (, , ; 1620 – 3 (13) September 1693 in Chernihiv, Tsardom of Russia) was a Ruthenians, Ruthenian Eastern Orthodox archbishop of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and then of the Tsardom of Russia. Early life E ...
(Slavic-Latin and Slavic-mathematical), transferred from Novgorod-Seversk to Chernigov in 1689. The Slavic school was originally located in the Borisoglebsky Monastery. The building of the monastery refectory (the central part of the building is the first floor), built in the second half of the 17th century, was assigned to the collegium. In 1700–1702. a two-tiered bell tower was erected over the western part of the building. The lower tier was intended for bells, the upper one housed the Church of St. John the Theologian. At the same time, construction is underway on the entire eastern part of the building with a second floor built on top of the refectory. It houses a large refectory hall and the Church of All Saints. In the collegium in grammar classes, languages were studied: Latin, Polish, Church Slavonic, and later, from the 30s of the 18th century, Russian. Initially, four classes were opened in the collegium, in which grammar and syntax were taught in Latin and Polish. Latin courses in rhetoric, poetics and philosophy were taught only after passing grammar classes. The full course of study took six years. At first there were only two teachers and a prefect, from the 30s there were three teachers. The composition of the students was all-class: Not only the children of the clergy, but also nobles, burghers and Cossacks, as well as at the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, studied at the collegium. By the mid-1930s, poetics had not yet been singled out in a separate class at the Chernigov Collegium, but was expounded along with rhetoric, logic and dialectics by one teacher, namely the prefect. In the courses of poetics and rhetoric, they studied the theoretical foundations of ancient poetry and eloquence, learned to write poetic works in Latin and Polish, compose and deliver speeches, panegyrics, sermons, etc. Starting from the 40s. In the 18th century speeches in Russian also appear. According to the academic tradition that existed back in the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, at the Chernihiv Collegium, each teacher of poetics, rhetoric and philosophy had to prepare his own course of lectures, which he dictated to students. Only a small number of manuscript courses from the Chernihiv Collegium have survived to this day. A detailed description of the courses of the Chernigov Collegium was first carried out by the historian N. I. Petrov. In 1705, a collection of syllabic verses, Mirror from Divine Scripture, was published at the Collegium. In 1716, the teachers of the collegium translated the history of Rome by
Titus Livius Titus Livius (; 59 BC – AD 17), known in English as Livy ( ), was a Roman historian. He wrote a monumental history of Rome and the Roman people, titled , covering the period from the earliest legends of Rome before the traditional founding i ...
into Church Slavonic. In 1717, the teacher of the Chernihiv Collegium, Archimandrite of the Trinity-Ilyinsky Monastery German Kononovich, published the New Testament for the first time in Chernigov. In it, he commented on vague passages from the New Testament for the reader. In 1749, on the initiative of Ambrose Dubnevich, a philosophical class was opened, which, for lack of space, began to be taught in the refectory hall. Philosophy, together with the course of theology that followed it, constituted a higher stage of the sciences superiora than the course of rhetoric, which preceded philosophy. Philosophy studied for two years. Since the second half of the 18th century, courses in German, Greek and French, arithmetic, geometry and planimetry appeared in the collegium. In 1784–1786. The Chernihiv Collegium was reorganized into the Chernihiv Theological Seminary. She organized a museum of church antiquities and a church-archaeological commission. The teachers of the seminary were engaged in scientific work, published in the "Chernigov Diocesan News" and the journal "Faith and Life". At the end of the 18th century, the reconstruction of the building began in connection with the placement of offices in it. In the 19th century, during the restructuring, the entire facade decor of the building was destroyed, the walls were smoothly plastered. In 1891, a vestibule with a porch in the Russian style was added on the western side. This was followed by restructuring to adapt the building for housing. In 1951–1953 the monument has been restored. In 1970–1980 the building was being refurbished. Currently, the Chernihiv Collegium is part of the National Architectural and Historical Reserve "
Ancient Chernihiv The Ancient Chernihiv () is the National Architecture-Historical Reserve located in the north-eastern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv. It was created at first as an affiliate of the National Reserve "Sophia of Kyiv". Since August 1, 1967, the site is ...
".


List of prefects of hieromonks

Here below the List of prefects of hieromonks of the Chernihiv Collegium: * Anthony Stakhovsky (1700-1709) * John Dubinsky (1721, 1724–1725) * Justin Boguslavsky (1722) * Faddey Kokuylovich (1722, 1723–1724) * Dmitry Smyalovsky (1726-1727) * Varlaam Demchinsky (1727-1728) * Ephraim Boldinsky (1727, 1729–1730) * Meletiy Zhurakovsky (1730-1731) * Tovia Smorzhevsky (1732-1734) * Josaf Lipiatsky (1735-1737) * Sophrony Ziminsky (1737-1739) * Pankraty Chernisky (1739-1742) * Simon Boretsky (1742-1744) * Iona Narozhnitsky (1744-1748) * Sylvester Nowopolsky (1749-1752) * Gabriel Oginsky (1753-1756) * Jeremiah Gusarevsky (1756-1758) * Petroniy Gankevich (1759-1761) * Patricy Kotelnetsky (1761-1768) * Callist Zvenigorodsky (1769-1776) * Iona Levitsky (1776-1778) * Pallady Lukashevich (1778-1782) * David (1783-1786)


Architectural appearance

The building is an elongated rectangle in plan, oriented from west to east. Above the western part of the building is a bell tower. The length of the building with attached vestibule and porch is 48 m. The height of the bell tower is 40 m. The masonry is made of grooved bricks, the foundation and plinth masonry is made of huge boulders. The ceilings of the original building are vaulted and flat. The ceilings of the Church of St. John the Evangelist are a closed vault with ledges decorated with rods with beads, on the vault there is a stucco ornament. Overlapping of the rest of the rooms with closed and semicircular vaults with formwork. In the Church of All Saints, the domes have been lost, but the supporting part of the large drum and the sail in the apse have been preserved. The facade is richly decorated with pilasters, three-quarter columns, niches, curbs, tile inserts, and a columnar arched belt. The windows are framed with platbands, columns and kokoshniks of various shapes. The frieze of the bell tower has stucco rosettes and ceramic plot reliefs. The architecture and decor of the collegium is a vivid example of Ukrainian baroque, a monument of national importance.


Gallery

File:Чернігівський колегіум, зима.jpg File:Вхід в церкву.jpg File:Чернігівський колегіум 004.jpg File:Чернігівський колегіум Колегіум.jpg File:Чернігівський колегіум 003.jpg File:Collegium-dytynets-Chernihiv-2.jpg File:Collegium-dytynets-Chernihiv-1.jpg File:Kollegium cupola.jpg File:Tschernihiw Kollegium 1.jpg File:Герб Івана Мазепи з Чернігівського колегіуму.jpg


References


External links


wikimapia.org
{{Chernihiv Tourist attractions in Chernihiv Tourist attractions in Chernihiv Oblast Buildings and structures in Chernihiv Monuments and memorials in Ukraine Monuments and memorials in Chernihiv Education in Chernihiv Tourism in Chernihiv Ukrainian Baroque architecture