Synopses & Reviews
William Palmer (1811-1879) was a theologian and ecumenist best known for his attempts to forge links between the Anglican and Orthodox churches. Palmer was elected a fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford in 1832, and became an adherent of the Oxford Movement, which emphasised the catholicity of the Anglican church. In the 1840s and 1850s Palmer visited Russia with the controversial aim of studying Orthodox theology and being admitted to communion by the Russian church. His request was refused, however, and his visit deemed a failure. Palmer converted to Roman Catholicism in 1855. Testimonies Concerning the Patriarch Nicon, the Tsar and the Boyars (1873) is Volume 2 of The Patriarch and the Tsar (1871-1876), Palmer's six-volume translation of documents relating to the life of Nicon (1605-1681), Patriarch of Moscow, whose theological reforms brought him into conflict with the Muscovite Tsar Alexis.
Synopsis
This 1873 book is the second of six volumes documenting the controversial life of Nicon (1605-1681), Patriarch of Moscow.
Synopsis
The theologian William Palmer (1811-1879), a member of the Oxford Movement, made several controversial visits to Russia to study the Orthodox Church. This book, first published in 1873, is Volume 2 of Palmer's six-volume translation of documents relating to the life of Nicon (1605-1681), Patriarch of Moscow.
Table of Contents
Preface; 1. Journey from Aleppo to Constantinople; 2. Stay in Moldavia, at Jassy, &c.; 3. Wallachia, at Tergovist, &c.; 4. The Kozak country; 5. The Kozak country; 6. Muscovy; 7. Muscovy; 8. Moscow; 9. Moscow; 10. Moscow; 11. Moscow; 12. Visit to the Iversky convent, and to Novgorod; 13. Novgorod and Moscow; 14. Moscow, and the Kozak country; 15. Moldavia and Wallachia; 16. Wallachia; 17. Black Sea, Anatolia; 18. Syria; Appendices.