Aleksandr Lukich Krylov ( 1845 - 1916 [1] ) - Russian spiritual writer , teacher , master of the Kazan Theological Academy .
| Alexander Lukich Krylov | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | 1845 |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | 1916 |
| A place of death | |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | spiritual writer teacher , publicist |
| Language of Works | Russian |
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 Proceedings
- 3 notes
- 4 Literature
Biography
Born in 1845 .
In 1866 he graduated from the first category of Vladimir Theological Seminary . [2]
In 1870 he graduated from the Kazan Theological Academy with a master's degree in theology.
Since 1870, he was appointed a teacher in the class of theological sciences at the Don Theological Seminary .
Since 1878 he worked as an inspector of religious schools in the region of the Don Army, and was also a full member of the statistical committee of the Region of the Don Army
Since 1884 he was appointed director of the Molodechno Teachers' Seminary in the Vilnius province .
Since 1887, he served as director of the Novobug teacher’s seminary in the Kherson province .
Since 1895, he was the director of the Bessarabian People's Schools and the fellow chairman of the Bessarabian Scientific Archival Commission.
Proceedings
- “Archbishop Nikanor as a teacher” (Novocherkassk, 1893, 2nd additional edition: Chisinau, 1901);
- "In memory in Bose of the late Archbishop Nicanor." 1893.
- “Pedagogical essays” (issue I, 1895 ; issue II, 1899 ; issue III, 1900 );
- “The origin and essence of religion” (Chisinau, 1901 ).
- “Four years of academic life” (Kazan, 1914).
Notes
- ↑ History of Philosophy, 6 volumes / Edited by M. A. Dynnik, M. T. Iovchuk, B. M. Kedrov. Volume 5. - Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, 1957-1965
- ↑ Malitsky P. Graduates of Vladimir Theological Seminary
Literature
- Archive of N. I. Ilminsky as a source on the history of missionary work. Chapter 3
- Krylov, Alexander Lukich (master of the Kazan Theological Academy) // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.