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Avvakum Petrov (; 20 November 1620/1621 – 14 April 1682; also spelled Awakum) was a Russian
Old Believer Old Believers or Old Ritualists (Russian: староверы, ''starovery'' or старообрядцы, ''staroobryadtsy'') is the common term for several religious groups, which maintain the old liturgical and ritual practices of the Russian ...
and
protopope A protopope, or protopresbyter, is a priest of higher rank in the Eastern Orthodox and the Byzantine Catholic Churches, generally corresponding to Western Christianity's archpriest or the Latin Church's dean. History The rights and duties of th ...
of the Kazan Cathedral on
Red Square Red Square ( rus, Красная площадь, Krasnaya ploshchad', p=ˈkrasnəjə ˈploɕːɪtʲ) is one of the oldest and largest town square, squares in Moscow, Russia. It is located in Moscow's historic centre, along the eastern walls of ...
who led the opposition to
Patriarch Nikon Nikon (, ), born Nikita Minin (; 7 May 1605 – 17 August 1681) was the seventh Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus' of the Russian Orthodox Church, serving officially from 1652 to 1666. He was renowned for his eloquence, energy, piety and close t ...
's reforms of the
Russian Orthodox Church The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC; ;), also officially known as the Moscow Patriarchate (), is an autocephaly, autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Church, Eastern Orthodox Christian church. It has 194 dioceses inside Russia. The Primate (bishop), p ...
. His autobiography and letters to the tsar and other Old Believers such as
Feodosia Morozova Feodosia Prokopiyevna Morozova (; (); 21 May 1632 – 1 December 1675) was a Russian Russian nobility, noblewoman and one of the best-known partisans of the Old Believer movement. She was perceived as a martyr after she was arrested and died ...
are considered masterpieces of 17th-century
Russian literature Russian literature refers to the literature of Russia, its Russian diaspora, émigrés, and to Russian language, Russian-language literature. Major contributors to Russian literature, as well as English for instance, are authors of different e ...
.


Life and writings

He was born in , in present-day
Nizhny Novgorod Nizhny Novgorod ( ; rus, links=no, Нижний Новгород, a=Ru-Nizhny Novgorod.ogg, p=ˈnʲiʐnʲɪj ˈnovɡərət, t=Lower Newtown; colloquially shortened to Nizhny) is a city and the administrative centre of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast an ...
. Starting in 1652 Nikon, as the patriarch of the Russian Church, initiated a wide range of reforms in Russian
liturgy Liturgy is the customary public ritual of worship performed by a religious group. As a religious phenomenon, liturgy represents a communal response to and participation in the sacred through activities reflecting praise, thanksgiving, remembra ...
and
theology Theology is the study of religious belief from a Religion, religious perspective, with a focus on the nature of divinity. It is taught as an Discipline (academia), academic discipline, typically in universities and seminaries. It occupies itse ...
. These reforms were intended mostly to bring the Russian Church into line with the other
Eastern Orthodox Church The Eastern Orthodox Church, officially the Orthodox Catholic Church, and also called the Greek Orthodox Church or simply the Orthodox Church, is List of Christian denominations by number of members, one of the three major doctrinal and ...
es of Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Avvakum and others strongly rejected these changes. They saw them as a corruption of the Russian Church, which they considered to be the true Church of God. The other churches were more closely related to
Constantinople Constantinople (#Names of Constantinople, see other names) was a historical city located on the Bosporus that served as the capital of the Roman Empire, Roman, Byzantine Empire, Byzantine, Latin Empire, Latin, and Ottoman Empire, Ottoman empire ...
in their liturgies. Avvakum argued that Constantinople fell to the Turks because of these
heretical Heresy is any belief or theory that is strongly at variance with established beliefs or customs, particularly the accepted beliefs or religious law of a religious organization. A heretic is a proponent of heresy. Heresy in Christianity, Judai ...
beliefs and practices. For his opposition to the reforms, Avvakum was repeatedly imprisoned. First he was exiled to Siberia, to the city of
Tobolsk Tobolsk (, ) is a town in Tyumen Oblast, Russia, located at the confluence of the Tobol and Irtysh rivers. Founded in 1587, Tobolsk is the second-oldest Russian settlement east of the Ural Mountains in Asian Russia, and was the historic capita ...
, and partook in an exploration expedition under Afanasii Pashkov to the Chinese border. In 1664, after Nikon was no longer patriarch, Avvakum was allowed to return to Moscow, and was then exiled again to Mezen. He was then allowed to return to Moscow again for the Church Council of 1666–67, but due to his continued opposition to the reforms, he was exiled to
Pustozyorsk Pustozersk or Pustozyorsk () was the first town built by Russians north of the Arctic Circle. It was the administrative center of Yugra and Pechora River, Pechora regions of the Russian Empire. It was situated in what is today Nenets Autonomous Ok ...
, above the Arctic Circle, in 1667. For the last fourteen years of his life, he was imprisoned there in a pit or dugout (a sunken, log-framed hut). He and his accomplices were finally executed by being . The spot where he was burned has been commemorated by an ornate wooden cross. Avvakum's autobiography recounts hardships of his imprisonment and exile to the
Russian Far East The Russian Far East ( rus, Дальний Восток России, p=ˈdalʲnʲɪj vɐˈstok rɐˈsʲiɪ) is a region in North Asia. It is the easternmost part of Russia and the Asia, Asian continent, and is coextensive with the Far Easte ...
, the story of his friendship and fallout with Tsar
Alexei Mikhailovich Alexei Mikhailovich (, ; – ), also known as Alexis, was Tsar of all Russia from 1645 until his death in 1676. He was the second Russian tsar from the House of Romanov. He was the first tsar to sign laws on his own authority and his council ...
, his practice of exorcising demons and devils, and his boundless admiration for nature and other works of God. Numerous manuscript copies of the text circulated for nearly two centuries before it was first printed in 1861.


''The Life of the Archpriest Avvakum''

''The Life of the Archpriest Avvakum'', originally titled ''The Life Written By Himself'' () is a
hagiography A hagiography (; ) is a biography of a saint or an ecclesiastical leader, as well as, by extension, an adulatory and idealized biography of a preacher, priest, founder, saint, monk, nun or icon in any of the world's religions. Early Christian ...
and
autobiography An autobiography, sometimes informally called an autobio, is a self-written account of one's own life, providing a personal narrative that reflects on the author's experiences, memories, and insights. This genre allows individuals to share thei ...
written by the Old Believer and prototope (archpriest) Avvakum Petrovich. The text discusses Avvakum's struggle against Patriarch Nikon's reforms during the Schism of the Russian Church and extensively details the trials he experienced during various exiles in Siberia. The text is remarkable for its style, which blends high Old Church Slavonic with low Russian vernacular and profanity. ''The Life'' is considered "one of medieval Russia's finest literary works" and was regarded highly by both
Leo Tolstoy Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy Tolstoy pronounced his first name as , which corresponds to the romanization ''Lyov''. () (; ,Throughout Tolstoy's whole life, his name was written as using Reforms of Russian orthography#The post-revolution re ...
and
Fyodor Dostoevsky Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky. () was a Russian novelist, short story writer, essayist and journalist. He is regarded as one of the greatest novelists in both Russian and world literature, and many of his works are considered highly influent ...
.


Historical background


Schism of the Russian Church

In the 17th century, the Russian Church underwent significant reforms spearheaded by
Patriarch Nikon Nikon (, ), born Nikita Minin (; 7 May 1605 – 17 August 1681) was the seventh Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus' of the Russian Orthodox Church, serving officially from 1652 to 1666. He was renowned for his eloquence, energy, piety and close t ...
and supported by Tsar
Alexei Mikhailovich Alexei Mikhailovich (, ; – ), also known as Alexis, was Tsar of all Russia from 1645 until his death in 1676. He was the second Russian tsar from the House of Romanov. He was the first tsar to sign laws on his own authority and his council ...
. The resulting split in the Russian Church between supporters of the reforms and their opponents, who came to be known as the
Old Believers Old Believers or Old Ritualists ( Russian: староверы, ''starovery'' or старообрядцы, ''staroobryadtsy'') is the common term for several religious groups, which maintain the old liturgical and ritual practices of the Russian ...
, is known as the
Schism of the Russian Church The Schism of the Russian Church, also known as (, , meaning 'split' or 'schism'), was the splitting of the Russian Orthodox Church into an official church and the Old Believers movement in the 1600s. It was triggered by the reforms of Patria ...
. Historian Georg Bernhard Michels writes that "the Russian Orthodox Church became a significant target of popular hostility during the second half of the seventeenth century."Michels, Georg B. ''At War with the Church: Religious Dissent in Seventeenth-Century Russia''. 1st edition. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 2000, 2. Having survived the destabilizing
Time of Troubles The Time of Troubles (), also known as Smuta (), was a period of political crisis in Tsardom of Russia, Russia which began in 1598 with the death of Feodor I of Russia, Feodor I, the last of the Rurikids, House of Rurik, and ended in 1613 wit ...
, the Church had become a "powerful bureaucracy" by the 1630s. As the Time of Troubles was seen as a punishment for impiety, the Church was "intensely conservative" and "aspired to restore the 'ancient piety' in its fullness."Камчатнов, А. М. История Русского Литературного Языка: XI— Первая Половина XIX Века. Москва, 2015, 185. This drive for strengthening and purification was further influenced by the Ruthenian Orthodox revival led by
Petro Mohyla Petro Mohyla or Peter Mogila (21 December 1596 – ) was the Metropolis of Kiev, Galicia and all Rus' (1620–1686), Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia and all Rus' in the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in the Eastern Orthodox Church from ...
in
Kiev Kyiv, also Kiev, is the capital and most populous List of cities in Ukraine, city of Ukraine. Located in the north-central part of the country, it straddles both sides of the Dnieper, Dnieper River. As of 1 January 2022, its population was 2, ...
in the 1630s to 1640s, who likewise sought to strengthen Orthodox religiosity and spirituality in
Ruthenia ''Ruthenia'' is an exonym, originally used in Medieval Latin, as one of several terms for Rus'. Originally, the term ''Rus' land'' referred to a triangular area, which mainly corresponds to the tribe of Polans in Dnieper Ukraine. ''Ruthenia' ...
. In Kiev and
Lviv Lviv ( or ; ; ; see #Names and symbols, below for other names) is the largest city in western Ukraine, as well as the List of cities in Ukraine, fifth-largest city in Ukraine, with a population of It serves as the administrative centre of ...
, "Orthodox brotherhoods set up schools under the direct patronage of the patriarch of Constantinople." In the late 1640s, Nikon and Avvakum were members of the Zealots of Piety (known also as ''bogolyubtsy'', i.e. "lovers of God"), a circle of ecclesiastical and secular figures who aimed to improve religious and civilian life and to purify and strengthen the influence of the Russian Orthodox Church. Gradually, a split appeared in this circle: while certain Zealots echoed the sentiments of the Ruthenian revival, others, most notably Avvakum, "felt that homespun truths were sufficient and suspected foreigners of unning which would adulterate the simple, strong native faith." When Nikon became the patriarch of Moscow and all Russia in 1652, he initiated ambitious reforms, entrusting "Jesuit-trained scholars from Ukraine and White Russia with a critical review of the forms of Russian worship." This exacerbated tensions with and among the Zealots, who "wanted to create a church which was morally pure and close to the ordinary Russian people". Tsar Alexei and Patriarch Nikon, by contrast, had imperial aspirations. Nikon's vision of ecclesiastical restoration assumed the "continued dominance of the church over state" and stretched beyond Muscovy to the "entire Eastern Christian ecumene."Hosking, Geoffrey. ''Russia and the Russians: A History''. First Edition. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2001, 167. Nikon's ambitions were further strengthened by his "contact with Greek and Ukrainian churchmen" and by Russian territorial gains in the Russo-Polish War of 1654–1667. After the Ruthenian revival, western Slavic Orthodox practices became closer to those of Greek Orthodoxy than to the Russian tradition, which had been increasingly isolated from the Greek Orthodox Church over the past several centuries. Nikon sought, likewise, to bring Russian church practice into line with Greek Orthodoxy. Russian linguist Alexander Komchatnov further emphasizes that that goal was in line with Muscovy's newly developed imperial aims, allowing Russia to position itself at the center of the whole Orthodox world instead of remaining a marginal religious entity. From 1653 to 1656, Nikon's reforms changed the manner of making the sign of the cross (from the ''dvoeperstie'', the two-fingered cross, to the ''troeperstie,'' the three-fingered cross), introduced new liturgical vestments modeled in the Greek style, and imposed a normalized revision of liturgical books. Those opposing Nikon's reforms came to be known as the
Old Believers Old Believers or Old Ritualists ( Russian: староверы, ''starovery'' or старообрядцы, ''staroobryadtsy'') is the common term for several religious groups, which maintain the old liturgical and ritual practices of the Russian ...
. Their texts painted the Schism as an apocalyptic contest between good and evil, with Nikon as the Antichrist. They were continually repressed, arrested, and exiled from the onset of Nikon's reforms. Nikon and Tsar Alexei soon fell out, and Nikon was placed in confinement, but the tsar continued to enforce his reforms. In 1666, the
Great Moscow Synod The Great Moscow Synod () was a Pan-Orthodox synod convened by Tsar Alexis of Russia in Moscow in April 1666 in order to depose Patriarch Nikon of Moscow. The council condemned the famous Stoglav of 1551 as heretical, because it had dogmatized ...
summoned by Tsar Alexei
anathematized The word anathema has two main meanings. One is to describe that something or someone is being hated or avoided. The other refers to a formal excommunication by a church. These meanings come from the New Testament, where an anathema was a person ...
all who refused to abide by Nikon's changes. A trial of the Zealots was held and leading Old Believers, Avvakum among them, were exiled beyond the Arctic Circle to
Pustozersk Pustozersk or Pustozyorsk () was the first town built by Russians north of the Arctic Circle. It was the administrative center of Yugra and Pechora regions of the Russian Empire. It was situated in what is today Nenets Autonomous Okrug, about 20 k ...
on the
Pechora River The Pechora (; Komi: Печӧра; Nenets: Санэроˮ яха) is the sixth-longest river in Europe. Flowing from Northwest Russia and into the Arctic Ocean, it lies mostly in the Komi Republic but the northernmost part crosses the Nenets A ...
, in today's Nenets-Autonomous Okrug, 27 km from
Naryan-Mar Naryan-Mar (; ) is a sea and river port town and the administrative center of the Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia. The town is situated on the right bank of the Pechora River, upstream from the river's mouth, on the Barents Sea. Naryan-Mar lies n ...
. The reforms and their enforcement prompted outright rebellions that continued over the next several decades. 


Persecution of Avvakum and the Old Believers

In 1653, Avvakum and his family were exiled to Tobolsk, Siberia. In 1655, they were moved to
Yeniseysk Yeniseysk ( rus, Енисейск, p=jɪnʲɪˈsʲejsk) is a town in Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia, located on the Yenisei River. Population: 20,000 (1970). History Yeniseysk was founded in 1619 as a stockaded town—the first town on the Yenisei ...
, from which Avvakum departed with A.F. Pashkov's expedition to Dauria on the Chinese border, traveling past
Lake Baikal Lake Baikal is a rift lake and the deepest lake in the world. It is situated in southern Siberia, Russia between the Federal subjects of Russia, federal subjects of Irkutsk Oblast, Irkutsk Oblasts of Russia, Oblast to the northwest and the Repu ...
to
Nerchinsk Nerchinsk (; , ''Nershüü''; , ''Nerchüü''; mnc, m=, v=Nibcu, a=Nibqu) is a town and the administrative center of Nerchinsky District in Zabaykalsky Krai, Russia, located on the left bank of the Nercha River, above its confluence with th ...
. In 1664, Avvakum returned to Tobolsk, remaining for two years before being permitted to return to Moscow in 1664. Several months later he was once more exiled with his family to Mezen. He was permitted to return to Moscow for the Great Moscow Synod of 1666-1667, but was finally exiled to Pustozersk alongside his fellow Old Believers Lazar, Fyodor, and Epifany. From 1670 onward, they were condemned to life "on bread and water" in a
dugout Dugout may refer to: * Dugout (shelter), an underground shelter * Dugout (boat), a logboat * Dugout (smoking), a marijuana container Sports * In bat-and-ball sports, a dugout is one of two areas where players of the home or opposing teams sit whe ...
, where they lived until they were burned alive on 14 April 1682.Holl, Bruce T. "Avvakum and the Genesis of Siberian Literature."" In ''Between Heaven and Hell: The Myth of Siberia in Russian Culture'', edited by Galya Diment and Yuri Slezkine, 1993rd edition. Palgrave Macmillan, 1993, 34. During his imprisonment, Avvakum wrote his autobiography; the first version of ''The Life'' was drafted in 1669–1672, and the subsequent three redactions from 1672 to 1675. The trials he suffered in his numerous exiles are largely the subject of this text.


Genre

Avvakum referred to his memoir as a hagiography (), which might suggest that he was characterizing himself as a saint, though he may have referred to it that way because, simply, no other word for what we would today call ''autobiography'' had yet been coined. D. S. Mirsky writes, "It is not an all-round autobiography: it was written for purposes of edification and propaganda. It is in essence an ''
Apologia An apologia (Latin for ''apology'', from , ) is a formal defense of an opinion, position or action. The term's current use, often in the context of religion, theology and philosophy, derives from Justin Martyr's '' First Apology'' (AD 155–157) ...
'' '' pro vita mea'', not a disinterested exposition of all the facts of his life." Scholars such as Alan Wood consider ''The Life'' a prototype of Siberian prison literature, a tradition that would most famously be continued by
Fyodor Dostoevsky Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky. () was a Russian novelist, short story writer, essayist and journalist. He is regarded as one of the greatest novelists in both Russian and world literature, and many of his works are considered highly influent ...
( ''Notes from the House of the Dead'') in the 19th century and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn. (11 December 1918 – 3 August 2008) was a Soviet and Russian author and Soviet dissidents, dissident who helped to raise global awareness of political repression in the Soviet Union, especially the Gulag pris ...
(''
The Gulag Archipelago ''The Gulag Archipelago: An Experiment in Literary Investigation'' () is a three-volume nonfiction series written between 1958 and 1968 by Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a Soviet dissident. It was first published in 1973 by the Parisian ...
'') in the 20th. 


Content


Early life

Avvakum's account largely follows his biography. He was born circa 1620 in Grigorevo in present-day
Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Nizhny Novgorod Oblast () is a federal subjects of Russia, federal subject of Russia (an oblast). Its administrative center is the types of inhabited localities in Russia, city of Nizhny Novgorod. It has a population of 3,119,115 as of the 2021 Ru ...
to an alcoholic priest named Pyotr, who died while Avvakum was a child, and a nun, Maria. Avvakum married a merchant's daughter, Nastasya Markovna, at age 17, became a deacon at 21, a priest at 23, and an Archpriest in Yurevyets at 28. By his own account, Avvakum appears to be a passionate, faithful man, who was nonetheless often harsh and unforgiving in his religious zeal. Before the Nikonian reforms, he dealt harshly with harlequins (''
skomorokhi A skomorokh (, Ukrainian language, Ukrainian and Russian language, Russian: , , . Compare with the Old Polish , ) was a medieval East Slavic harlequin or actor, who could also sing, dance, play musical instruments and compose for oral/musical a ...
''), lechery, and unbelievers. His zeal causes continuous conflicts with local
boyar A boyar or bolyar was a member of the highest rank of the feudal nobility in many Eastern European states, including Bulgaria, Kievan Rus' (and later Russia), Moldavia and Wallachia (and later Romania), Lithuania and among Baltic Germans. C ...
s and officials. Eventually, Avvakum flees to Moscow, where he encounters Nikon as the latter is rising in prominence. The two are initially friends, but Nikon begins his reforms soon thereafter, forcing several dissenting members of the clergy to undergo shearings, markings, and exile. Avvakum himself is also seized, and is exiled with his family to Siberia.


Exile in Siberia and expedition to Dauria

Avvakum extensively describes his first exile to Tobolsk and his experience on the forced expedition to
Dauria Dauriya (, also romanized as ''Dauriia'' or ''Dauria'') is a historical and geographical region of Russia spanning modern Buryatia, Zabaykalsky Krai and the Amur Region. The toponym is given according to the Daur people who inhabited the region ...
, led by Afanasy Pashkov.Petrovich, Avvakum. (1979). ''Archpriest Avvakum: The Life written by Himself'' (K. N. Brostrom, Ed.; B. Kenneth, Trans.). Michigan Slavic Publications, 59. Pashkov orders that Avvakum be beaten, but Avvakum's prayer alleviates his pain. The travelers become so hungry that they eat a newborn foal, along with its blood and afterbirth, but two of Avvakum's sons eventually die. Amidst these trials, Avvakum heals the mad and the ill and urges them to repent. Avvakum also denounces
shamanism Shamanism is a spiritual practice that involves a practitioner (shaman) interacting with the spirit world through altered states of consciousness, such as trance. The goal of this is usually to direct spirits or spiritual energies into ...
. In one episode, Pashkov sends his son Eremej to battle in Mongolian territory, but first asks a shaman to predict the outcome of the war. The shaman predicts victory. Avvakum is angered, knowing the shaman to be channeling devils, and prays for the demise of Pashkov's men. However, recalling the previous kindness of Eremej, he is overcome by pity, and asks the Lord to pardon him. Pashkov's men are decimated but Eremej is spared, and a vision of Avvakum appears to Eremej to lead him back home from the wilderness. Pashkov is nonetheless angry with Avvakum for his malignant prayers. Avvakum concludes his description of Pashkov's military expedition thus: "Ten years he tormented me, or I him — I don't know. It will be sorted out on Judgement Day." Avvakum also extensively describes the beauties and bounty of the land explored during the expedition to Dauria. Avvakum describes saving a man by lying about his whereabouts. Avvakum asks whether, having lied, he has sinned and should seek penance. The narrative is then interrupted by words of absolution attributed to Avvakum's confessor, Epifany:
''"God doth forgive and bless thee in this age and that to come, together why thy helpmate Anastasia and thy daughter, and all they house. Ye have acted rightly and justly. Amen."''


Return to Moscow and imprisonment in Pustozersk

Returning from exile, Avvakum writes of being well received in Moscow by the boyars and the tsar, whom Avvakum describes charitably despite the oppression he himself faced. However, due to Avvakum's continued condemnation of the reforms, the tsar eventually exiles him once more, this time to Mezen, where Avvakum spends a year and half with his family. He is brought to Moscow again during the Great Moscow Synod of 1666–67, though this time he is received poorly and is imprisoned in Pafnut'yev monastery and in a cell in St. Nikola's. Avvakum publicly denounces the Nikonian reforms before the Eucemenical Council of Patriarchs. (92–93). After this, he and Lazar, Fyodor, and Epifany are banished to Pustozersk. During this time, many of Avvakum's followers are punished. Though Avvakum's fellows in Pustozersk are physically mutilated by their guards and their tongues, fingers, or hands cut off, God grants them all supernatural healing. Soon after, they are imprisoned in a dugout cabin.


Exorcisms of Devils

Avvakum concludes ''The Life'' with several accounts of exorcisms performed by him, culminating in the attempted exorcism of a woman in Tobolsk. During the protracted struggle between Avvakum and the devils who possess the woman, she dies for four days. When she wakes, she tells Avvakum she had been led by angels to a beautiful mansion which, they told her, belong to Avvakum. Avvakum eventually heals her and she becomes a nun named Agafya. Avvakum ends by beseeching his confessor Epifany to write down his own life story, and to speak not for himself, but for the love of Christ.


Themes


Protest of Nikonian heresy

Avvakum describes the schism in apocalyptic terms: "God poured forth the vials of his wrath upon the kingdom! And still those poor souls didn't come to their senses, and kept right on stirring up the Church. Then Neronov spoke, and he told the tsar the three pestilences that come of the schism in the Church: the plague, the sword, and division." He writes of being mindful that his wife and children bear the punishment as a consequence of his dissent, but he also writes of his wife's insistence that he remain true to the faith. In response to his doubt, the Archpriestess Nastasya Markova hardens his resolve:
"Now stand up and preach the Word of God like you used to and don't grieve over us.... Now go on, get to the church, Petrovič, unmask the whoredom of heresy!" Well, sir, I bowed low to her for that, and shaking off the blindness of a heavy heart, I began to preach and teach the Word of God about the tows and everywhere, and yet again did I unmask the Nikonian heresy with boldness.


Endurance of physical violence

''The Life'' is full of accounts of violent beatings and trials that Avvakum endures without resistance. This theme is further extended to Avvakum's endurance of his fate. Avvakum describes how, when his barge was swept away on the Khilok River, he expressed no bitterness: "Everything was smashed to bits! But what could be done if Christ and the most immaculate Mother of God deigned it so? I was laughing coming out of the water, but the people there were oh'ing and ah'ing as they hung my clothes around on bushes." An episode with Avvakum's wife Nastasya Markovna further emphasizes the theme of endurance:
The poor Archpriestess tottered and trudged along, and then she'd fall in a heap — fearful slippery it was! Once she was trudging along and she caved in, and another just as weary up into her and right there caved in himself. They were both shouting, but they couldn't get up. The peasant was shouting "Little mother, my Lady, forgive me!" But the Archpriestess was shouting, "Why'd you crush me, father?" I came up, and the poor dear started in on me, saying, "Will these sufferings go on a long time, Archpriest?" And I said, "Markovna, right up to our very death." And so she sighed and answered, "Good enough, Petrovič, then let's be getting on."Petrovich, Avvakum. (1979). ''Archpriest Avvakum: The Life written by Himself'' (K. N. Brostrom, Ed.; B. Kenneth, Trans.). Michigan Slavic Publications, 68.


Holy and supernatural elements

Avvakum frequently relies on prayer and God's grace to survive the many trials he is put through and to conquer the forces he encounters. For instance, Avvakum and his family are saved from a storm on the Tunguska river by God's grace in response to his prayer. In an episode in which he heals two madwomen, Avvakum describes at length how to drive the devil out of the body: "The devil's no peasant, he's not afraid of a club. He's afraid of the Cross of Christ, and of holy water, and of holy oil, and of plain cuts and runs before the Body of Christ." The madwomen are only rid of their madness when they live with Avvakum, becoming mad again the moment they are sent away. Avvakum is also able to sense the devils summoned by the shaman invited by Pashkov:
That evening this peasant sorcerer brought out a live ram close by my shelter and started over conjuring it, twisting it this way and that, and he twisted its head off and tossed it aside. Then he started galloping around and dancing and summoning devils, and after considerable shouting he slammed himself against the ground and foam ran out of his mouth. The devils were crushing him, but he asked of them, "Will the expedition be successful?" And the devils said, "You will come back with a greatly victory and with much wealth."
Avvakum also describes how once, during winter in Dauria, he had to travel across a great stretch of ice but fell from weariness and thirst. In his response to his prayer for water, God splintered and parted the ice, leaving him a small hole from which to drink. Avvakum draws a parallel between this episode and God's mercy to the Israelites wandering in the Sinai. In other instances, the
holy fool Foolishness for Christ (; ) refers to behavior such as giving up all one's worldly possessions upon joining an ascetic order or religious life, or deliberately flouting society's conventions to serve a religious purpose—particularly of Christia ...
Fyodor is chained but, "by God's will," the chains fall to pieces, and various others whose tongues are cut out miraculously grow new tongues.


Depiction of Siberian nature

Valerie Kivelson remarks that Avvakum's depictions of Siberia present an image of "excessive, luxuriant bounty." On the journey to Dauria, Avvakum writes of the extremes of nature that he encountered:
Around it mountains were high and the cliffs of rock, fearfully high; twenty-thousand versts and more I've dragged myself, and I've never seen their like anywhere. Along their summits are halls and turrets, gates and pillars, stone walls and courtyards, all made by God. Onions grow there and garlic, bigger than the Romanov onion and uncommonly sweet.
He writes that there is "no end of to the birds, geese and swans."Petrovich, Avvakum. (1979). ''Archpriest Avvakum: The Life written by Himself'' (K. N. Brostrom, Ed.; B. Kenneth, Trans.). Michigan Slavic Publications, 78. He recounts the many different kinds of fish that live alongside seals and sea lions, commenting that the fish are so oily that "you can't cook them in a pan — there'd be nothing but fat left!" Bruce T. Holl notes that Avvakum depicted Siberia both as hell and as heaven. In ''The Life,'' the horrific struggle against vast Siberian distances, the harsh cold and the ensuing hunger and thirst — which prompt hellish instances of eating infant foals and carrion — are interposed with rhapsodies waxing poetic about the beautiful Siberian landscape and the God-given bountiful excess it keeps as its treasure.


Style

Avvakum's ''The Life'' has been greatly valued for its unique style. Russian linguist Viktor Vinogradov observed that ''The Life'' uniquely combined two entirely different linguistic registers, mixing high literary language with low vernacular, colloquialisms, and profanity.Виноградов, Виктор. "О Задачах Стилистики и Наблюдения Над Стилем Жития Протопопа Аввакума." In О Языке Художественной Прозы, 1–41. Москва: Наука, 1980. Vinogradov further remarks that this mixture of linguistic forms is simultaneously present on the level of imagery, as Avvakum combines high, exalted imagery with the low, bodily, and material.


Legacy

Despite his persecution and death, groups rejecting the liturgical changes persisted. They came to be referred to as
Old Believers Old Believers or Old Ritualists ( Russian: староверы, ''starovery'' or старообрядцы, ''staroobryadtsy'') is the common term for several religious groups, which maintain the old liturgical and ritual practices of the Russian ...
.


English translations

*''Archpriest Avvakum: The Life written by Himself''. Trans. by Kenneth N. Brostrom. Michigan Slavic Publications, 1979. . Reprint: Columbia University Press, 2021.


References


Further reading

* P. Hunt, Russia's 17th century Crisis of Modernization: The Autobiographical Saint's Life of the Archpriest Avvakum, The Seventeenth Century, 38:1, 155–171. A Review Article of Kenneth Brostrom's Translation of the "Life." * P. Hunt, The Theology in Avvakum's "Life" and His Polemic with the Nikonians, The New Muscovite Cultural History, eds. M. Flier, V. Kivelson, N. S. Kollman, K. Petrone (Bloomington, In: Slavica, 2009), 125–140. * P. Hunt, The Holy Foolishness in the "Life" of the Archpriest Avvakum and the Problem of Innovation, Russian History, ed. L. Langer, P. Brown, 35:3-4 (2008), 275–309. * Priscilla Hunt, Avvakum's "Fifth Petition" to the Tsar and the Ritual Process, Slavic and East European Journal, 46.3 (2003), 483–510


External links


''The Life of Archpriest Avvakum by Himself''
Jane Harrison and
Hope Mirrlees (Helen) Hope Mirrlees (8 April 1887 – 1 August 1978) was a British poet, novelist and translator. She is best known for the 1926 '' Lud-in-the-Mist'', an influential fantasy novel, David Langford and Mike Ashley, "Mirrlees, Hope", in David ...
, transl. (Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, 1963) (retrieved Aug. 11, 2024).
''Life of Avvakum''
academic edition with commentary (in Russian)
Avvakum's letters to the Tzar and Old Believers
(pub. Paris, 1951, in Russian)



{{Use dmy dates, date=May 2024 1621 births 1682 deaths People from Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Old Believer saints 17th-century Russian people 17th-century Christian saints People executed by Russia by burning People executed for heresy Monastery prisoners