Peter Mogila
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Peter Mogila or Petro Mohyla (Ukrainian: Петро Могила; Romanian: Petru Movilă); December 21, 1596 – December 22, 1646) was a Metropolitan of Kiev and Halych from 1633 until his death. He was born into a Moldavian boyar family — the Movileşti — one that gave Moldavia and Wallachia several rulers, including his father, Ieremia Movilă. His mother, Margareta, was a Hungarian princess.
[edit] Life
Peter Mogila was an important political figure of his time and a profoundly influential theologian in the Eastern Orthodox Christianity, managing to reconcile the religious thesis of three of the most important East Orthodox churches: Constantinople Patriarchate, Russian/Ukrainian and Moldavian ones.
Mogila initiated the foundation of the Kiev-Mohyla Academy in Kiev, one of the oldest and most distinguished academic and theological schools in Eastern Europe. He also fought successfully for the consecration of the Orthodox Church inside the Polish kingdom and the scholasticity and the academism of the Orthodox religious education, along with the setting of a network of printing presses and education institutions. Mogila believed that the future of Orthodoxy in Ukraine depended on accommodation of Ukraine within the Polish Commonwealth as an equal partner and tried to undermine pro-Russian forces within the Church.[1]
[edit] Sainthood
Mogila was also Archimandrite of the Kiev Caves Lavra, and while archimandrite, glorified as saints all 125 Venerable Fathers and 61 Venerable Myrrh-bearing Heads of the Kiev Caves Lavra.
He is venerated as a saint in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, the Romanian Orthodox Church and the Polish Orthodox Church. His feastday is January 1, but is also commemorated October 5 together with the other sainted Metropolitans of Kiev.
[edit] References
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- Inline:
- ^ Magoscy, R. (1996). A History of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
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- General:
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
- Petro Mohyla in the online Encyclopedia of Ukraine
Categories: Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica | Eastern Orthodoxy stubs | Ukrainian people stubs | Romanian people stubs | 1596 births | 1647 deaths | Eastern Orthodox metropolitans | Romanian Orthodox bishops | Theologians | Ukrainian people | Eastern Orthodox saints | Ukrainian saints | Romanian saints | Polish saints