Vladimir Ivanovich Talyzin ( July 19, 1904 , Ryazan - October 4, 1967 , Moscow ) - Russian specialist in the field of church law .
| Talyzin, Vladimir Ivanovich | |
|---|---|
Photo of associate professor V.I. Talyzin from the graduation album of the Moscow Theological Seminary in 1953. It is stored in the archives of the Church and Archaeological Office of the Moscow Theological Academy. | |
| Date of Birth | July 19, 1904 |
| Place of Birth | Ryazan |
| Date of death | October 4, 1967 (63 years old) |
| A place of death | Moscow |
| A country | |
| Occupation | Professor, teacher of the Moscow Theological Academy |
He graduated from the Electrical Engineering Institute ( 1928 ), the Moscow Institute of Mechanization and Electrification ( 1938 ), a mechanical engineer. He worked in engineering positions.
He graduated from the Moscow Theological Academy with a candidate of theology degree ( 1950 , first in graduation; Ph.D. theme: "Legal relations of the Russian Church with the Byzantine Church from the time of the baptism of Rus to the fall of Constantinople ").
In 1950-1951 he was a professor scholarship holder (scholarship report: “A Survey of the Sources of Church Law of the Russian Orthodox Church ”). Master of Theology ( 1964 ; thesis: "Inter-Church Relations of Orthodox Autocephalous Churches as a Branch of Orthodox Church Law").
Since 1951 - associate professor, since 1964 - professor at the Moscow Theological Academy in the department of church law. He also taught at the Moscow Theological Seminary: A Practical Guide for Shepherds (1951-1958), Basic Theology (since 1958), Comparative Theology (since 1960 ).
Memories
Skurat Konstantin Efimovich, Honored Professor of the Moscow Theological Academy, Doctor of Church History:
“ Professor Vladimir Ivanovich Talyzin can be considered a distinctive originality of teachers. His originality consisted in the fact that he lectured on Church law word for word on a synopsis - at first we checked it on purpose, then stopped. But surprisingly, he read it by heart! At the department he had no notes. If we stopped him with a question, he answered and continued again, without dropping a single stroke from the textbook we had and written by him. His memory was phenomenal. " [1]
Bibliography
- Professor Vladimir Ivanovich Talyzin (obituary) // Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate. M., 1967. No. 11.
Notes
- ↑ K.E. Skurat: Since 1947 AND ... BEFORE . old.glinskie.ru. Date of treatment November 7, 2017.