Inna Yurganova, Doctor of Sciences (History), leading researcher at the Institute of Russian History of the Russian Academy of Sciences; Institute for Humanitarian Research and North Indigenous Peoples Problems of the Siberian branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow; Yakutsk); ORCID: 0000-0002-7751-8540
pp. 148–169
DOI: 10.25803/26587599_2021_39_148
This study directs the reader’s attention to the publication of travel notes made by a Russian Priest in the Yakutsk Region at the end of the 19th c., which are published here for the first time. The document is considered in the context of the practice of the Russian Orthodox Church on the outskirts of the Russian empire. In far-reaching stretches of the empire, the Church acted as a unifying force in terms of the overall culture of the empire. Priests themselves were the conduit for Christian principles and, as such, became the initiators of intercultural dialogue. The document under consideration is a description of the trips that one priest undertook in Yakutia and the Tungusk region. Here we find evidence of the number of parishioners, the way in which locals related to Christian rites, and their degree of accedence to Orthodox Christianity. The notes bear witness to the presence of paganism in everyday life and to the cautious relationship of parishioners to Christian norms. The publication of these travel notes inaugurates the potential for furthering developing research into the activities of the Russian Orthodox Church on the periphery of the empire in historical retrospective vis-à-vis interaction with various ethnicities and cultures.
Keywords: theology, mission, Communication practices of the Russian Orthodox Church, missionary work, transient churches, Orthodoxy in Yakutia and Tungus, missionary travel notes, Christianization