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Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2
Tytuł:
„Jezuickie intrygi” a problem stylu w ukraińskiej architekturze cerkiewnej drugiej połowy XIX wieku
„Jesuit Plots” and the Problem of Style in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Architecture of the Second Half of the 19th Century
Autorzy:
Krasny, Piotr
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1954622.pdf
Data publikacji:
2002
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
One of the main elements of the Ukrainian national identity in Galicia was the attachment to the Greek-Catholic Church. From the time of the Spring of the Nations the Uniate priests became the main animators of the Ukrainian ‘national awakening’. They were involved in this activity also when performing their pastoral duties, or even liturgical ones. One cannot then wonder that looking for the Ukranian national style in architecture was done almost exclusively within Orthodox church building, and the choice of forms used in Greek-Catholic churches was a peculiar reflection of the discussion by the Church elites, in which the debate on the character of the Greek rite was interwoven with attempts at defining the vision of the Ukrainian nation and its place in Europe. In the sixties of the 19th century the pro-Moscow fraction had a strong influence among priests; it tried to prove close ethnical ties between the Ukrainians and Russians and wanted to ‘purify’ the Uniate rite from elements borrowed from Roman-Catholic liturgy owing to – as they said – ‘a Jesuit plot’. However, one of the most ardent Moscow-phils, Rev. Jan Naumowicz, admired the activity of the Russian Ivan Martynov, a member of the Society of Jesus and consultor of the congregation Propaganda Fide for eastern rites. Rev. Martynov wanted to reform the Uniate Church in such a way that it would serve first of all the idea of converting Russia to Catholicism. The idea of building an orthodox church in Lvov in the ‘purely Byzantine’ style, where Jesuits were to say the Holy Mass in the Greek rite, was an interesting element of the programme, especially praised by Rev. Naumowicz. It is almost certain that the structure was to be kept in the forms of the official Russian Orthodox church style worked out in the forties of the 19th century by Konstantin Thon. Opponents of the pro-Moscow fraction considered the clergymen belonging to it clandestine advocates of the Orthodox Church. Hence the neo-Byzantine stylistic solutions suggested by the Russian and propagated by the fervent adherent to a kind of Russification of the Uniate Church could be seen by them as ‘schismatic’. The neo-Byzantine forms given to the dome of the Przemyśl Greek-Catholic cathedral in 1866 met a lot of criticism and resulted in pulling it down soon. The basic tendency in Greek-Catholic church architecture in Galicia was looking for models for Orthodox and Uniate churches ‘in the many centuries old tradition of the Ukrainian architecture’. From it first the model of tripartite, three-domed church was derived, and a little later – the cross-shaped church with one dome. From the eighties of the 19th century the architect Vasil Nahirnyi started decorating the churches in the neo-Byzantine costume, however, looking for models in the cosmopolitic neo-Byzantinism of Theophil Hansen and avoiding all connections with the ‘schismatic’ style of Russian Orthodox churches. Nahirnyi’s neo-Byzantinism was accepted by Ukrainians as their national Uniate church style, which was probably connected with the provisions of the Lvov Synod (1891) that officially granted the Greek-Catholic rite the character of the Ukrainian national denomination. The Lvov initiative of Father Martynov proved to be only an interesting episode in the history of Greek- Catholic church architecture in Galicia.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2002, 50, 4 Special Issue; 575-587
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Drewniane cerkwie w Świerszczowie na tle architektury greckokatolickiej od XVIII do 2. połowy XIX wieku w dawnym powiecie chełmskim
Wooden Orthodox Churches in Świerszczów against the Background of Greek Catholic Architecture from the 18th to the 2nd Half of the 19th Century in the Former Chełm District
Autorzy:
Cieślik-Sygowska, Iwona
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1964732.pdf
Data publikacji:
1990
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
In the village of Świerszczów in the former Chełm district (at present Chełm voievodship) the following wooden Orthodox churches functioned there: not preserved, conventionally defined as Orthodox church I (mentioned for the first time in 1510 − Orthodox, from 1596 on as Greek Catholic, demolished after 1797) and Orthodox church II − preserved (erected in 1801, initially as Uniate church, from 1875 as Orthodox and from 1921 as Roman-Catholic). Orthodox I was triple with a belfry above the porch. In the region under investigation this kind of view and mass were commonly employed in the wooden Orthodox architecture until ca. the 1750s. From the half of the 18th cent. they started to construct triple Orthodox churches with a detached belfry; this type of church was most often used till ca. 1915. Orthodox church II in Świerszczów was built in one-dimensional plan. In the same plan, earlier in 1728, the Orthodox church in Czerniejów was built. The one-dimensional arrangement did not occur in the traditional Orthodox architecture (except in buildings of a lower rank, eg chapels), similarly to two--dimensional plan. They were, however, characteristic of Latin architecture. In the 2nd half of the 18th century a few two-dimensional Orthodox churches were built (in Pniówno, Depultycze, Czułczyce II and Swierze III, Rydza). The latter three could have one-dimensional plan. Generally, from the 1750s to the 1850s 36 wooden Orthodox churches were built in the former Chełm district, of which 7 in other than three-dimensional plans. We notice some essential changes in the arrangement and furnishings of the churches interior in relation to traditional Eastern realization. It was Zamość Council (1720) which played a key role here, because it permitted to unveil the main altar. The result of which was a new arrangement of the east part of the church. The analysis of the sources proves that in the region under investigation they did not dare to unveil the altar part completely: Instead of iconostas they employed a wooden partition reaching half of the bulding’s height (Czerniejów) or filling the wheol space (Świerszczów II). The main altar was placed in front of the partition (or built in it) and on both sides there were side altars; there was no altar behind the partition. There were icons hanging no the altars whose arrangement was identical with the arrangement of the lowest row of iconostas (complete, arranged in five rows). In such „iconostas” there were no czar’s or deacon’s gates. In the nave there were, alien to Eastern tradition, pulpit, confessional and benches. Even a rough analysis of the interior of the churches from Włodzimierz diocesis shows that Latin influences there were considerably weaker than in the part of Chełm diocesis under investigation, especially as far as the realization of the east part is concerned. And so: iconostas with the czar’s and deacon’s gates had only three rows; there was an altar behind it, the arrangement of the main altar did not differ. One may draw a conclusion that the farther eastward the stronger Latin influence was. In the former Chełm district Latin influences were particularly strong in the 2nd half of the 18th century. We can observe this proces up to the 1840s, when the czar’s authorities took the first steps in order to abolish the Greek Catholic rite. The brick architecture was more receptive to new patterns, because Latin influences were apparent not only in the interior but also in views, contrary to wooden architecture which used traditional plans and changes in the interior. One has to emphasize that prominent buildings were erected mainly at the suggestion of bishops who were proponents of the union. These buldings-Orthodox churches (eg in Chełm) thoroughly dominated Latin forms (not only as far as interiors go but also views of the Latin cross, ellipses, etc.). Actually, they resemble baroque and rococo churches.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 1990, 38, 4; 31-58
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2

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