Bishop Porphyry Uspenskij (EPU)

Identity area

Type of entity

Person

Authorized form of name

Bishop Porphyry Uspenskij (EPU)

Parallel form(s) of name

  • Constantine Alexandrovich Uspenskij (laic name)

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

    Other form(s) of name

      Identifiers for corporate bodies

      Description area

      Dates of existence

      1804-1885

      History

      The beginning of the Russian presence in Jerusalem is connected with the name of the prominent
      ecclesiastic, the first chief of the Russian mission in Palestine, Archimandrite (later Bishop) Porphyry Uspenskij. Porphyry (his secular name was Constantine Alexandrovich Uspenskij, 1804-83) was born in the family of a church lector in the provincial town of Kostroma. After finishing the local church school (1813-18), he studied in the Kostroma Theological Seminary (1818-24), and the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy (1825-29). After graduating from the Academy, he brought his monastic vows and was ordained deacon, and later priest. He started his career as a teacher in the Richelieu lyceum in Odessa. In 1838 he was appointed rector to the Kherson Theological Seminary and in 1840 priest to the Russian mission in Vienna. On November 14, 1842 the Russian Holy Synod delegated Porphyry to Jerusalem to gather information about the life of the Orthodox Christians in Palestine and Syria. His first stay in Jerusalem lasted from December 20, 1843 to August 7, 1844. On July 31, 1847 he was appointed chief of the first Russian ecclesiastical mission to Jerusalem, where he arrived in mid February 1848 and he stayed till the Crimean war (May 3, 1854). After the war Porphyry was not appointed head of the mission any more, and in 1860 he visited Jerusalem a third, and last time. During the years of Porphyry’s stay in Jerusalem he was not only busy with church and political activities, but also with intensive research work on the archeology and history of Palestine, Syria and Egypt, for which he gathered a huge collection of manuscripts and books. No other Russian representative in the Christian East of that time had a better knowledge of the life conditions of the non-Muslim population of Jerusalem.

      Places

      Legal status

      Functions, occupations and activities

      Mandates/sources of authority

      Internal structures/genealogy

      General context

      Relationships area

      Access points area

      Subject access points

      Place access points

      Occupations

      Control area

      Authority record identifier

      ERC337895-EPU

      Institution identifier

      Rules and/or conventions used

      Status

      Level of detail

      Dates of creation, revision and deletion

      January 2017

      Language(s)

      • English

      Script(s)

        Sources

        Lora A. Gerd and Yann Potin, “Foreign Affairs through Private Papers: Bishop Porphyry Uspenskij and his Archives about Jerusalem (1842-1860)”, in XXXX

        Theophanis George Stavrou, «Russian Interest in the Levant 1843-1848: Porfirii Uspenskii and Establishment of the First Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem», Middle East Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1/2 (Winter - Spring, 1963), pp. 91-103.

        Maintenance notes

        Authors : Lora A. Gerd (Historian, Institute of History, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg) http://iib-ac.academia.edu/LoraGerd
        Yann Potin (Historian, University of Paris XIII; Archivist, French National Archives) https://ceral.univ-paris13.fr/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Fiche-Potin-2015.pdf