Hieromonk Ignatius Oksenovich-Starushich ; mind. October 30, 1651 ) - Hieromonk of the Kiev Metropolitanate of the Patriarchate of Constantinople , thinker, professor and rector of the Kiev-Mohyla Academy , hegumen of the Kiev Vydubitsky Monastery .
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Biography
Educated outside the Commonwealth [1] , possibly studied at the Academy of Ostrog [2] .
In 1639, a school operating under the auspices of the Kiev Collegium was transferred from Vinnitsa to Goshcha ; at the same time, Ignatius was appointed its rector and stayed in this position until 1640 [3] .
In October 1639, he became the head of the embassy sent to Moscow by Metropolitan Pyotr Mogila [4] .
He was a teacher at the Kiev-Mohyla Academy .
In 1641, he was appointed hegumen of the Brotherly Epiphany Monastery in Kiev .
He compiled “Kazan cellar” tombstone about Prince Ilya Chetvertinsky [5] , published in Kiev in 1641 [6] .
In 1642 he was transferred to the Vydubitsky Mikhailovsky Kiev Monastery .
In 1642, he was a member of the Cathedral in Iasi .
Known for devotion to Orthodoxy and the gift of preaching.
On July 12, 1650, he was elected bishop- coadjutor of Mstislavsky [7] , but died on October 30, 1651 in the rank of hieromonk [8] .
Notes
- ↑ Mironowicz A .: Diecezja białoruska w XVII i XVIII wieku. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku, 2008, s. 86. ISBN 978-83-7431-150-2
- ↑ Comments on volume 12 - Library - Church Scientific Center “Orthodox Encyclopedia”
- ↑ Enlightenment
- ↑ Florea B.N. Kiev Metropolitan Peter (Grave) and Russian authorities - Articles - Orthodox Church Encyclopedia Church Scientific Center
- ↑ Metropolitan Macarius of Moscow and Kolomna. The period of independence of the Russian Church (1589-1881). Patriarchate in Russia ...
- ↑ Ignatius (Oksenovich-Starushich) // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
- ↑ Russian Biographical Dictionary : In 25 volumes / under the supervision of A. A. Polovtsov. 1896-1918. [one]
- ↑ UKRAINIAN POETRY late XVI - mid XVII centuries NOTES (II) (mid XVII century) Archived copy of January 1, 2010 on the Wayback Machine