Archbishop Innokenty (in the world Konstantin Pavlovich Sokolov ; February 13, 1846 , Moscow Province , Russian Empire - August 14, 1937 , Nemchinovka Village, Moscow Region , USSR ) - Bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church , Archbishop of Biysk and Altai .
Archbishop Innokenty | ||
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1919 - 1927 | ||
Election | 1919 | |
Church | Russian Orthodox Church | |
Predecessor | himself as vicar bishop of the Tomsk diocese | |
Successor | Nikita (Profits) | |
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April 3, 1905 - 1919 | ||
Predecessor | Macarius (Pavlov) | |
Successor | vicarialism transformed into an independent diocese | |
Education | Moscow Theological Seminary | |
Birth name | Konstantin Sokolov | |
Birth | February 13, 1846 Moscow Province , Russian Empire | |
Death | August 14, 1937 (91 year) Nemchinovka village, Moscow region , USSR | |
Buried | Romashkovo village, Moscow region , USSR | |
Deacon's ordination | 1873 | |
Presbyter consecration | September 8, 1873 | |
Adoption of monasticism | February 2, 1902 | |
Episcopal consecration | April 3, 1905 |
Content
Biography
Born February 13, 1846 in the Moscow Diocese.
In 1867 he graduated from the Moscow Theological Seminary and was appointed teacher of the Perervinsky Theological School .
In 1871 he was accepted to serve in the Altai spiritual mission .
In 1872, he was appointed teacher of the Biysk Catechism School . [one]
In 1873, he was ordained deacon . On September 8 of that year, he was ordained a priest and was appointed a missionary of the Ursul branch of the Altai spiritual mission, which was located on the territory of the modern Onguday region of the Altai Republic . [one]
From 1890 to 1902 - dean of missionary churches.
In 1897 he was elevated to the rank of archpriest .
On February 2, 1902, he was tonsured a monk, elevated to the rank of archimandrite and appointed assistant chief of the Altai mission.
On April 3, 1905, he was ordained bishop of Biysky , vicar of the Tomsk diocese . The consecration took place in the Tomsk Cathedral ; the rite of consecration was performed by: Bishop of Tomsk Macarius (Nevsky) and Bishop of Yakutsk Macarius (Pavlov) .
On May 23 of the same year he was appointed head of the Altai spiritual mission.
On June 19, 1919, the clergy and laity of Biysk at the general meeting formed the Biysk diocesan administration headed by Bishop Innokenty.
In 1922 he was elevated to the rank of archbishop by Patriarch Tikhon "for fifty years of spiritual service." [2]
In 1922 he was arrested. He was imprisoned for 9 months.
February 12, 1923 was arrested in Biisk. From Biysk he was transferred through Novonikolayevsk to Moscow together with Archimandrite Vladimir (Yudenich) . Was in Butyrka prison . Released without the right to leave Moscow.
According to the memoirs of Abbess Juliana (Nevakovich):
When he was released, he went to the Donskoy Monastery , where the Most Holy Patriarch was imprisoned at that time. Coming out on the balcony to get some air, he had the opportunity to say two, three words to the people below. The archbishop began to ask where he should live and what to do, he was not allowed to return to Siberia by the GPU. His Holiness sent him to his old friend, Metropolitan Macarius [3] .
Until 1924, it is mentioned by the Archbishop of Biisk and Altai.
On March 4, 1926, he headed the funeral service of Metropolitan Macarius (Nevsky) in the church of the village of Kotelniki near Moscow.
In 1927, reckoned for peace. [4] [5]
In October 1928, he became the head of the funeral service of Zosimovsky elder ieroskhimonakh Alexy (Solovyov) in Sergiev Posad .
He died on August 14, 1937 near Moscow, Art. Nemchinovka of the Belarusian railway in the apartment of his son, Archpriest Alexei Sokolov, and reprimanded by the Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna Sergey (Stragorodsky) . He was buried on the southeast side of the main altar of the Nikolsky church in the village of Romashkovo , now the Odintsovsky district of the Moscow region, near the station. Nemchinovka [6] .
Works
- A trip in February, May and June 1907 from the city of Tomsk to the non-native village of Puty. - Tomsk, 1908. - 58 p.
- Altai spiritual mission in 1907. - SPb. , 1907. - 35 p.
- A trip to the missions of the mission in 1909 by the bishop of Biysk Innocent. - Tomsk, 1910. - 23 p.
- Report on the Altai Mission for 1908 - Tomsk, 1909. - 56 p.
- Report on the Altai Mission for 1909. - Tomsk, 1910. - 59 p.
- Report on the Altai Mission for 1910. - Tomsk, 1911. - 147 p.
- Report on the Altai Mission for 1911. - Tomsk, 1912. - 97 p. (in Russian and Altai languages)
- Remarkable cases of the Divine Providence in the Altai, which have been since the founding of the Altai mission to the present day. - Tomsk, 1912. - 108 p.
Awards [7]
- Order of St. Anne III (1888) and I degree (1911)
- Order of St. Vladimir III (1906)
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Archpriest George Kreydun. CORRESPONDENCE OF ST. MAKARIA (NEVSKY) WITH ALTAY MISSIONARIES: COLLECTION OF ARCHIVAL DOCUMENTS / S. G. Zaitsev. - Barnaul: Barnaul Theological Seminary, Altai House of Press, 2016. - p. 178. - 208 p. - ISBN 978-5-98550-378-4 .
- ↑ Archbishop Innokenty (Konstantin Pavlovich Sokolov) . The site of the Altai Metropolis of the Russian Orthodox Church (December 15, 2013).
- ↑ Hegumeness Juliana (Nevakovich) From the Memories Archival copy dated August 7, 2018 on the Wayback Machine // “ Russian Shepherd ” No. 37-38 / 2000
- ↑ INNOCENTS Unc . www.pravenc.ru. The appeal date is January 11, 2019.
- ↑ http://download.pstgu.ru/docs/acts_tikhon.pdf // Acts of the Holy Tikhon, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, later documents and correspondence about the canonical succession of the highest church authority, 1917–1943: Coll. in 2 parts / Comp. M.E. Gubonin M., 1994. P.169, 837, 914 ..
- ↑ NIKOLSKY TEMPLE of the village of Romashkovo, Odintsovo District, Moscow Region - Clergy until the closure of the St. Nicholas Church
- ↑ The composition of the Most Holy Governing All-Russian Synod and the Russian Church Hierarchy .... ... for 1915 .
Literature
- Pavlova O. A. Innokenty // Orthodox encyclopedia . - M .: Church-Scientific Center "Orthodox Encyclopedia" , 2010. - T. XXIII. - p. 24-25. - 752 s. - 39 000 copies - ISBN 978-5-89572-042-4 .