Vladimir Mikhailovich Kuzminsky ( March 22, 1865 - October 4, 1951) - archpriest, member of the III State Duma from the Grodno province .
| Vladimir Mikhailovich Kuzminsky | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | March 22, 1865 |
| Date of death | October 4, 1951 (86 years old) |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | Member of the State Duma of the 3rd convocation from the Grodno province |
| Education | Lithuanian Theological Seminary |
| Religion | |
Biography
Orthodox.
At the end of the Lithuanian Theological Seminary (1884) [1] for three years he was a supervisor in it.
In 1887 he was ordained a priest to a church in the village of Masalyany of the Grodno district , and eight years later he was transferred to the Holy Trinity Church in the city of Slonim . In 1898 he was appointed rector of the Slonim Transfiguration Cathedral. From 1903 to 1907 he was a priest of the Nativity Church in the village of Gudevichi .
In addition, at different times, he was a district observer of parish schools , a member of the diocesan school council, a member of the board of the theological school, and also a law teacher for elementary schools and real schools . Of church awards he had a pectoral cross .
In 1907 he was elected a member of the III State Duma from the Grodno province. He was a member of the national group, from the 3rd session - into the Russian national faction. He was a member of the land commission.
In 1908 he was elevated to the archpriest and returned to the post of rector of the Slonim Cathedral. In the same year he was appointed rector of the Chesme Church in St. Petersburg [2] , and in 1915 he was transferred to the Church of the Holy Rev. Zosima and Savatiy Solovetsky [3] .
Fate after 1917 is unknown. Was married.
The grave is located at the Moscow Alekseevsky cemetery near the Tikhvin Church .
Notes
Sources
- Commemorative books of the Grodno province for 1888-1908. - Grodna, 1887-1907.
- 3rd convocation of the State Duma: portraits, biographies, autographs . - SPb. : edition of N. N. Olshansko, 1910.
- State Duma of the Russian Empire: 1906-1917 . - M .: ROSSPEN, 2008.