The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926

The article deals with the topical issue of the social composition of parishes and parish councils of the Russian Church of the 1920s. The importance of this topic is due to the fact that the arguments about the social composition of parishes were actively used by the Bolsheviks, who planted the opi...

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Main Author: Timofey Balyko
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: St. Tikhon's Orthodox University 2023-12-01
Series:Вестник Православного Свято-Тихоновского гуманитарного университета: Серия ИИ. История, история Русской Православной Церкви
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Online Access:https://periodical.pstgu.ru/ru/pdf/article/8057
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author Timofey Balyko
author_facet Timofey Balyko
author_sort Timofey Balyko
collection DOAJ
description The article deals with the topical issue of the social composition of parishes and parish councils of the Russian Church of the 1920s. The importance of this topic is due to the fact that the arguments about the social composition of parishes were actively used by the Bolsheviks, who planted the opinion that the members of the Church are exclusively backward strata of the population and representatives of counter-revolutionary-reactionary circles. Based on archival materials of the re-registration of religious societies initiated by the Soviet authorities in 1922-1923, the author of the article managed to identify meaningful documents reflecting the social composition of the parishes of the temples of the settlements of the Shchelkovsky industrial bush, which was an advanced region of the textile industry in the Moscow province. The workers of this region were not only participants in the revolutionary demonstrations in 1905 and in October 1917, but also the heroes of the first issue of the revolutionary underground newspaper Iskra in 1901. Bolshevik agitation strenuously attributed to the "real proletarians" of such factory districts stable anti-religious beliefs. However, the study of this problem showed that in the religious communities of those settlements of the Shchelkovsky bush, next to which large textile industrial productions were located, there were former ones. Fryanovo Wool-spinning Manufactory Partnership, former. The Partnership of the Gorodishchenskaya Cloth Factory of Chetverikov and a number of other large factories - workers made up a significant part of the active parishioners who acted as founders of religious societies in 1923, and were part of the parish councils. It is also worth noting that the process of re-registration of religious societies coincided with the most acute phase of the Renovationist schism caused by the organization of the Renovationist Council of 1923, which adopted a number of anti-church decisions. The identification - based on documents from local archives - of the names of active believers at the most difficult moment in the history of the Russian Orthodox Church, associated with the attempts of the Soviet government to destroy the Church by the hands of Renovationists, can open additional ways for church historical work on the ground and actualize for the descendants of these people the church past of their surnames in the 1920s.
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series Вестник Православного Свято-Тихоновского гуманитарного университета: Серия ИИ. История, история Русской Православной Церкви
spelling doaj-art-84f528df17a9456ba12110ffb5340dbd2025-08-20T03:07:10ZrusSt. Tikhon's Orthodox UniversityВестник Православного Свято-Тихоновского гуманитарного университета: Серия ИИ. История, история Русской Православной Церкви1991-64342409-48112023-12-01110110152165http://dx.doi.org/10.15382/sturII2023110.152-1655The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926Timofey Balyko0St. Tikhon’s Orthodox University; 23b, Novokuznetskaya st., Moscow 115184, Russian FederationThe article deals with the topical issue of the social composition of parishes and parish councils of the Russian Church of the 1920s. The importance of this topic is due to the fact that the arguments about the social composition of parishes were actively used by the Bolsheviks, who planted the opinion that the members of the Church are exclusively backward strata of the population and representatives of counter-revolutionary-reactionary circles. Based on archival materials of the re-registration of religious societies initiated by the Soviet authorities in 1922-1923, the author of the article managed to identify meaningful documents reflecting the social composition of the parishes of the temples of the settlements of the Shchelkovsky industrial bush, which was an advanced region of the textile industry in the Moscow province. The workers of this region were not only participants in the revolutionary demonstrations in 1905 and in October 1917, but also the heroes of the first issue of the revolutionary underground newspaper Iskra in 1901. Bolshevik agitation strenuously attributed to the "real proletarians" of such factory districts stable anti-religious beliefs. However, the study of this problem showed that in the religious communities of those settlements of the Shchelkovsky bush, next to which large textile industrial productions were located, there were former ones. Fryanovo Wool-spinning Manufactory Partnership, former. The Partnership of the Gorodishchenskaya Cloth Factory of Chetverikov and a number of other large factories - workers made up a significant part of the active parishioners who acted as founders of religious societies in 1923, and were part of the parish councils. It is also worth noting that the process of re-registration of religious societies coincided with the most acute phase of the Renovationist schism caused by the organization of the Renovationist Council of 1923, which adopted a number of anti-church decisions. The identification - based on documents from local archives - of the names of active believers at the most difficult moment in the history of the Russian Orthodox Church, associated with the attempts of the Soviet government to destroy the Church by the hands of Renovationists, can open additional ways for church historical work on the ground and actualize for the descendants of these people the church past of their surnames in the 1920s.https://periodical.pstgu.ru/ru/pdf/article/8057re-registration of religious societies 1923 shchelkovsky district workers social composition of parishes parish councils renovationist schismперерегистрация религиозных обществ 1923 щелковский район рабочие социальный состав приходов церковно-приходские советы обновленческий раскол
spellingShingle Timofey Balyko
The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926
Вестник Православного Свято-Тихоновского гуманитарного университета: Серия ИИ. История, история Русской Православной Церкви
re-registration of religious societies
1923
shchelkovsky district
workers
social composition of parishes
parish councils
renovationist schism
перерегистрация религиозных обществ
1923
щелковский район
рабочие
социальный состав приходов
церковно-приходские советы
обновленческий раскол
title The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926
title_full The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926
title_fullStr The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926
title_full_unstemmed The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926
title_short The social makeup of Church parishes of Shchyolkovo industrial area of Moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies, 1923‒1926
title_sort social makeup of church parishes of shchyolkovo industrial area of moscow region in the 1920s as evidenced by documents on the renewal of registration of religious societies 1923 1926
topic re-registration of religious societies
1923
shchelkovsky district
workers
social composition of parishes
parish councils
renovationist schism
перерегистрация религиозных обществ
1923
щелковский район
рабочие
социальный состав приходов
церковно-приходские советы
обновленческий раскол
url https://periodical.pstgu.ru/ru/pdf/article/8057
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AT timofeybalyko socialmakeupofchurchparishesofshchyolkovoindustrialareaofmoscowregioninthe1920sasevidencedbydocumentsontherenewalofregistrationofreligioussocieties19231926