Metropolitan Anthony of Putna’s Flight to Russia and His Subsequent Defrocking (1739): A Historical and Canonical Reevaluation Cover Image
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Fuga Mitropolitului Antonie Putneanul în Rusia și caterisirea lui (1739). O reevaluare istorică și canonică
Metropolitan Anthony of Putna’s Flight to Russia and His Subsequent Defrocking (1739): A Historical and Canonical Reevaluation

Author(s): Iustin (Ionuț) Taban
Subject(s): Political history, Modern Age, 18th Century, Eastern Orthodoxy
Published by: Centrul de cercetare şi documentare ŞTEFAN CEL MARE
Keywords: Metropolitan Anthony; Moldavia; 1739; defrocking; Russian-Turkish War; 18th century;

Summary/Abstract: The present research investigates Metropolitan Anthony of Moldavia’s (1730–1739) leaving the hierarchical throne and fleeing to Russia in the context of the Russian-Turkish War of 1739. It also analyzes the canonical basis for his defrocking by the Patriarch of Constantinople at the request of Prince Gregory II Ghica (1726–1733, 1735–1739, 1739–1741), a punishment ignored by the Russian Church, which enthroned him as Metropolitan of Chernigov (1740–1742) and Belgorod (1742–1748). This study shows the persistence of the pro-Russian attitude among the metropolitans of Moldavia in the 18th century: Gedeon (1708–1722), Gabriel Callimachi (1760–1786), Leon Gheucă (1786–1788). This attitude needs to be understood, sine ira et studio, as a search for a way to liberate Moldavia from Ottoman domination and as an attempt to put Moldavia under a different canonical subordination than under the Patriarchate of Constantinople, which had become a pawn of the Ottoman agenda. For these reasons, the defrocking, in 1739–1740, of Metropolitan Anthony should be rather viewed as a political punishment than as a permanent church punishment tarnishing the memory of the hierarch.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 7-26
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: Romanian