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Przemysl and Gorlitsky diocese

Przemysl and Gorlitsky diocese ( Polish. Diecezja przemysko-gorlicka ) - diocese of the Polish Orthodox Church with a center in Gorlice . It is geographically located within the Subcarpathian and eastern parts of Lesser Poland Voivodeship. Headed by Bishop Paisiy (Martyniuk) .

Przemysl and Gorlitsky diocese
Polish Orthodox Church
Gorlice, cerkiew Świętej Trójcy, widok od strony zachodniej.jpg
Holy Trinity Cathedral in Gorlice
General information
A countryPoland
Diocesan CenterGorlice
Founded byXI - XII century
Control
Ruling bishopArchbishop Peremyshlsky and Gorlitsky Paisiy (Martynyuk)
Cathedral ChurchHoly Trinity Cathedral (Gorlice)
Statistics
Deanery3
Parishes23 ( 2016 )
Monasteries1 (male)
Map
Diecezja przemysko-nowosądecka PAKP (2014) .svg

A feature of the diocese is that services are performed according to the Galician rite in the Church Slavonic language of the Kiev exodus .

Content

  • 1 Names
  • 2 History
  • 3 Bishops
  • 4 Deaneries
  • 5 Monasteries
  • 6 notes
  • 7 References

Names

  • Przemysl and Cherven (since 1220)
  • Peremyshl and Sambir (from 1241, again from 1347)
  • Przemysl, Sambir and Sanok (since June 1662)
  • Peremyshl and Sambir (November 1680-1691 / 1692)
  • Przemysl and Sanok (since 1983)
  • Przemysl and Novosondetskaya
  • Przemysl and Gorlitskaya

History

The year of the establishment of the Orthodox diocese in Przemysl is indicated by 1026, 1087, or 1120. She was brought from the Vladimir-Volyn diocese

For some time it belonged to the Galicia Metropolis , and in 1692 a significant part of the clergy and believers evaded the union . Those who rejected the union suffered economically, some were persecuted. The last Orthodox monastery, which did not accept the union - Manyavsky Skete, was destroyed in July 1786 by Austrian artillery [1] .

By the Second World War, the Orthodox Church in Galicia , in particular, in the Lemkovschina , acted illegally. During the German occupation in the Governor-General for the Orthodox Lemks and Galicians , the Krakow, Lemkovsky and Lviv diocese operated. After the Second World War, the Orthodox parishes of Lemkovschina belonged to the Lodz Diocese .

In 1983, the Orthodox Przemysl diocese was revived, being separated from the Warsaw diocese . Mostly the diocese served ethnic Ukrainians. According to the recollections of Archbishop Adam (Dubts) : “In the 80s, when“ Solidarity ”came, the circumstances in the state and the policy towards us Ukrainians changed. Then our people turned to the Metropolis and the central government of Poland with a request to restore the Peremis Orthodox diocese, and they asked me to be ordained bishop. It was not easy for me at that time to make a decision, to agree, but our believers insisted: “There is an opportunity, and when the state agrees, then we must take advantage of it” ” [2] .

After the democratization of Poland in the late 1980s - early 1990s and the introduction of religious freedom, the position of the diocese improved. In 1994, the Greek Catholic Vuykovitsky Monastery was transferred to the jurisdiction of the diocese.

On April 1, 2008, the Gorlitsky vicar department was created, to which Archimandrite Gabriel (Giba) , deputy governor of the Supral monastery, was appointed, but he refused. March 10, 2009 Bishop Paisiy (Martynyuk) was appointed to the department.

Bishops

List
  • ... (the names of the bishops were not preserved)
  • Anthony (Andreykovich) (1220-1225)
  • Hilarion (? - 1254)
  • Abraham (1254 - mentioned 1271)
  • Jeremiah (mentioned 1282)
  • Sergius (1283-1287)
  • Memnon (1287–1292)
  • Hilarion (1292-1302 [3] )
  • Euthymius (1302 -?)
  • George (mentioned 1315)
  • Joachim (? - 1328)
  • Mark (May 1328 - Mentioned 1341)
  • Cyril (Voloshin) (mentioned 1353)
  • Hilarion (1366–1370)
  • Basil (1371 - mentioned 1375)
  • Hilarion (1387–1392)
  • Athanasius (1397 - mentioned 1407)
  • Pavel (Chervensky) (1410-1414) [4]
  • Gelasius (1414-1421)
  • Elijah (Isaiah) (1421 - mentioned October 12, 1422 [5] )
  • Athanasius (Dragoevsky-Korchan) (1440-1443)
  • Anthony (1449 -?)
  • Ioannikius (1451 -?)
  • John (Biretsky) (mentioned 1462-1467 [6] )
  • Ioannikiy (Ivanka) ( or Ivonka ; 1469-1476) [7]
  • Ioannikius (mentioned 1491-1497)
  • Anthony (Oniki) (1499-1520)
  • Joachim (1522-1528 [8] )
  • Lavrenti (Terletsky) (1528 - mentioned 1535)
  • Arseny (1539-1549)
  • Anthony (Radilovsky) (1549-1581)
  • John (Radilovsky) (1578-1580)
  • Stefan (Brylinsky) (1581 - February 1591)
  • Gideon (Balaban) (1591) Lviv
  • Michael (Kopistensky) (August 1591 - January 1610)
  • Athanasius (Kruletsky) (May 20, 1610 -?)
  • Isaiah (Kopinsky-Borisovich) (October 6, 1620 - until August 15, 1628)
  • John (Popel) (1633-1634) w / y
  • Sylvester (Gulevich-Voyutinsky) (1636-1645 / 1650)
  • Anthony (Vinnitsky) (1659–1679) until June 27, 1662, high school, archim., Named bishop. Peremshlsky
  • George (Goshovsky) (1667-1675)
  • Innocent (Vinnitsky) (1677-1691) until November 21, 1680 - a high school, priest., Named bishop. Przemyslsky [9]
1691/1692 - 1983 - stopped
  • Adam (Dubets) October 30, 1983 [10] - 2016
  • Paisiy (Martynyuk) 2016 - pr.

Deanery

  • Gorlitsky
  • Przemysl
  • Sanok

Monasteries

  • Convent of the Protection of the Holy Virgin in Vysova Zdroj
eliminated
  • Monastery of Saints Cyril and Methodius (male; Uykovice, Commune Przemysl , Przemysl County , Subcarpathian Voivodeship )

Notes

  1. ↑ Orthodoxy is native to Poland. About the monastery of St. Cyril and Methodius near Przemysl. Priest Andrei Phillips - WORLD OF ORTHODOXY - Poland - Europe - Russia in colors (neopr.) . Date of treatment January 21, 2013. Archived February 3, 2013.
  2. ↑ “We came to serve people, not people to us,” - Archbishop ADAM (Dubets), Orthodox Church in Poland
  3. ↑ Hilarion (Bishop of Przemysl) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  4. ↑ Pavel (Chervensky) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  5. ↑ Elijah (Bishop of Przemysl of Galitsky) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  6. ↑ John (Biretsky) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  7. ↑ Ioannikiy (Ivonka) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  8. ↑ Joachim (Bishop of Przemysl) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  9. ↑ Innocent (Vinnitsa) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  10. ↑ Przemyslsky diocese

Links

  • Przemysl and Novondonde diocese of the Polish Orthodox Church
  • Przemysl Diocese
  • From the history of the approval of the union in Western Russia
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peremyshlskaya_and_Gorlitskaya_ eparchy&oldid = 102051499


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