Innovations of socio-religious thought in Ukraine at the beginning of the 17th century

Main Article Content

Larysa Shvab
Yulia Tokarska

Abstract

The article analyzes the polemical socio-religious thought in Ukraine after the Union of Brest and the Union of the Kyiv Metropolitanate with Rome, aimed at finding the lost Orthodox tradition and reviving the idea of “God’s protection” of the city of Kyiv in the Russian Orthodox intellectual tradition of the early 17th century. After-union period in Ukrainian realities is characterized as crisis in the sense of decline of religious life, Russian bourgeoisie and fraternal movement and deviation from the policy of support of the Orthodox princely families. The entire plan of church reform, cultural and national revival of the “Commonwealth of the Russian People” was undermined in its foundations. Therefore, the intellectual religious thought of the early 17th century took into account the memory of the “good old days”, when national (regional) identity based on the Orthodox tradition was searched. However, from the point of view of the continued existence of the Orthodox Church, the defeat was only partial, as K. Ostrozkyi and his supporters among the nobility, clergy and burghers managed to preserve the Orthodox Church structure. The Cossacks demanded a rethinking of this new reality by intellectuals of the post-Brest era and Ukrainian polemicists were forced to look for an independent base for their socio-religious thought. The way out of the crisis was understood by Petro Mohyla, who was ready to recognize the primacy of the Pope in order to preserve the internal independence of the Church.

Article Details

How to Cite
Shvab, L., & Tokarska, Y. (2021). Innovations of socio-religious thought in Ukraine at the beginning of the 17th century. History Journal of Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University, (53), 43–53. Retrieved from https://www.hj.chnu.edu.ua/hj/article/view/122
Section
Articles
Author Biographies

Larysa Shvab, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University

PhD in History, Associate Professor

Yulia Tokarska, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University

Postgraduate student, Department of History of Ukraine and Archaeology