Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
In recent decades, historians of prerevolutionary Russia have emphasized the diverse and complex nature of the group of educated Russians that has traditionally been referred to as the “intelligentsia.” In the existing historiography, there have been numerous investigations into various subgroups of the intelligentsia, including studies of noble intellectuals, students, women radicals, religious thinkers, ethnic elites, and members of political parties and of specific professions. The subgroup that contributed more to Russian professions and political movements than any other non-noble subgroup in both quantitative and qualitative terms is also the only prominent subgroup that has been neglected. The members of this neglected subgroup are Russian Orthodox clergymen's sons, referred to throughout this article by the Russian term popovichi?
A version of this article was presented at the Historians' Seminar of the Kathryn W. and Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard University in 1997. I thank the Davis Center, the Harriman Institute, the International Research and Exchanges Board, the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, the Social Science Research Council, and the U.S. Department of Education for supporting the research that made this article possible. I also thank Gregory Freeze, Robert Geraci, Igal Halfin, Jochen Hellbeck, Marc Raeff, Andreas Schonle, Vera Shevzov, Elise Wirtschafter, Richard Wortman, and the participants in the Historians' Seminar at the Davis Center for their suggestions and helpful advice.
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2. Although the colloquial term pop, from which popovich is derived, referred specifically to priests, I employ popovich to refer to the secularly employed sons of priests, deacons, and sacristans. This is in keeping with its broader meaning of “a person originating from the clerical zvanie [rank]” and with nineteenth-century colloquial usage. See Slovar' sovremennogo russkogo literaturnogo iazyka, 17 vols. (Moscow, 1950–1965), 10: 1295–96. Popovich was never employed as a juridical category. It is a more precise term than seminarians, since a minority of clergymen's sons did not receive a theological education and a small percentage of seminarians were not clergymen's sons. Although all clergymen's sons were technically popovichi as children, those who remained in the estate as adults were no longer referred to by this term after they became clergymen. While pop was often derogatory, the neutrality of popovich is attested to by the fact that popovichi used the term to refer to themselves. For several examples, see Blagosvetlov, G. E., Irinarkh Ivanovich Vvedenskii (St. Petersburg, 1857), 6 Google Scholar; “Iz shkol'nykh vospominanii byvshego seminarista,” Pribavlenie Vologodskikh eparkhial'nikh vedomostei, 1901, no. 18: 514; Giliarov-Platonov, N. P., Iz perezhitogo, 2 vols. (Moscow, 1886), 1: 297.Google Scholar
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6. For census figures, see Statisticheskii vremennik Rossiiskoi imperii (St. Petersburg, 1866), 40–43. For the percentage of popovichi in prereform professions, see L. A. Bulgakova, “Intelligentsia v Rossii vo vtoroi chetverti XIX veka: Sostav, pravovoe i material'noe polozhenie” (Kand. diss., Leningrad, 1983), 53, 103. For the postreform period, see Ivanov, A. E., Vysshaia shkola Rossii v kontse XlX-nachale XX veka (Moscow, 1991), 224 Google Scholar; Leikina-Svirskaia, V. R., Intelligentsiia v Rossii vo vtoroi polovine XIX veka (Moscow, 1971), 154 Google Scholar; Frieden, Nancy Mandelker, Russian Physicians in an Era of Reform and Revolution, 1856–1905 (Princeton, 1981), 337.Google Scholar
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18. A., Voronskii, Bursa (Moscow, 1966), 15, 20Google Scholar. For a statement by another Bolshevik popovich on his father's influence, see Ostrovitianov, K. V., Dumy o proshlom (Moscow, 1967), 7 Google Scholar. For statements by populists, see Mamin-Sibiriak, D. N., “Iz dalekogo proshlogo,” in Sobranie sochinenii, 10 vols. (Moscow, 1958), 10: 203–4Google Scholar; Pribylev, A. V., “Avtobiografiia,” in Entsiklopedicheskii slovar’ russkogo biograficheskogo instituta Granat (hereafter Granat), 58 vols. (Moscow, 1927), 40: 344.Google Scholar
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22. RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 43, II. 22–24ob. This law was initially introduced by Peter the Great. For a reiteration of the law in the late nineteenth century, see Prakticheskoe rukovodstvo dlia sviashchennosluzhitelei, 6th ed. (St. Petersburg, 1897), 92. No evidence has been discovered to confirm that a priest ever informed the police after learning of a parishioner's crime during confession.
23. Pavlovich, “Venok na mogilu,” 522, 593. See also Orlov, Moia zhizn', 21–22.
24. Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv literatury i iskusstva (RGALI), f. 904, op. 1, d. 17 (I. E. Tsvetkov's autobiography), 1. 8. See also Bulgakov, Avtobiograficheskie zametki, 15–19.
25. RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 43, 1. 20, and d. 46 (another version of Elpat'evskii's autobiography), 11. 54–56. For other examples of fathers burdened by agricultural labor who never complained, see Pavlovich, “Venok na mogilu,” 591, 595; Sadov, “Iz vospominanii,” 3–6.
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27. RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 43, 1. 23ob.; Sadov, “Iz vospominanii. “
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38. Sychugov, Zapiski, 28. For other examples, see Orlov, “A. V. Orlov,” 4; N. N., “50-letie,” 712; Orlov, D. I., “Avtobiografiia,” in Voinov, L. I., ed., Ocherk XXV-letnei deiatel'nosti vrachei vypuska 1878 goda imp. Mediko-Khirurgicheskoi akademii (St. Petersburg, 1903), 136–37Google Scholar.
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48. For example, see Giliarov-Platonov, Iz perezhitogo, 2: 126; Otdel rukopisei Rossiiskoi natsional'noi biblioteki (OR RNB), f. 725, op. 1, d. 3 (G. K. Solomin's autobiography), 1. 27; Tikhonov, Dvadtsat’ piat’ let na kazennoi sluzhbe, 1: 14, 17; P. S., Kazanskii, “Vospominaniia seminarista,” Pravoslavnoe obozrenie, 1879, no. 9: 108 Google Scholar; Malein, Moi vospominaniia, 209.
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50. Muzei istorii religii (MIR), f. 13, op. 1, d. 1001 (I. M. Tregubov to M. I. Tregubova, 1887), 1. 10. For other examples, see Sankt-Peterburgskii filial Arkhiva rossiiskoi akademii nauk (PFA RAN), f. 849, op. 2, d. 30 (D. K. Zelenin's diary), 11. 301–3; RGIA, f. 797, op. 96, d. 162, 1. 26.
51. Giliarov-Platonov, Iz perezhitogo, 2: 126–32.
52. OR RNB, f. 725, op. 1, d. 3, 1. 70. For another example, see GA RF, f. 1721, op. 1, d. 135 (A. A. Teplov to Teplova, 190?), 1. 4.
53. DP RNB, f. 102, op. 1, d. 317 (Irodion Kholopov to A. I. Brilliantov, 22 April 1904), 1. 1.
54. GA RF, f. 102, op. 223, g. 1905, d. 1000, ch. 10, 1. 62ob.; A. G. Filonov [Borisoglebskii], “Iz zhizni starogo pedagoga,” Gimnaziia, 1890, no. 8/10: 650; Kazanskii, “Vospominaniia seminarista,” 108; Biriukov, Ural'skaia kopilka, 17.
55. Orlov, Moia zhizn', 22.
56. For several examples, see Mamin-Sibiriak, “Iz dalekogo,” 10: 254; Ostrovitianov, Dumy o proshlom, 20; N. I. Solov'ev, “Kak nas uchili,” Russkaia starina 100, no. 1 1 (1899): 381–88; N. G. Pomialovskii, “Ocherki bursy,” Polnoe sobranie sochinenii, 2 vols. (Moscow and Leningrad, 1935), 2: 195–98.
57. Quoted in Zhirkevich, A. V., Ivan Ivanovich Orlovskii (Vilno, 1909), 27 (Ivan Orlovskii to Zhirkevich, March 1909).Google Scholar
58. Bogoslovskii, I. A., Iz materialov po istorii podpol'noi biblioteki i tainogo kruzhka Vladimirskoi Seminarii (Kostroma, 1921), 1 Google Scholar. For other examples, see Evgenii, Greznov, Iz shkol'nykh vospominanii byvshogo seminarista (Vologda, 1903), 201 Google Scholar; D. I., Tikhomirov, “Avtobiografiia,” Bibliograficheskii ukazatel’ materialov po istorii russkoi shkoly, 1901, no. 11: 217.Google Scholar
59. On material deprivation, see Shchapov, A. P., Sobranie sochinenii (Irkutsk, 1937), 73 Google Scholar; Polisadov, G. A., Doma i v shkole (Vladimir, 1915), 11 Google Scholar; Bogoslovskii, “Chernigovskaia seminariia 50 let nazad,” no. 5–6: 79, 83. On corporal punishment and sadism, see A. G. Filonov [Borisoglebskii], Moe detstvo (St. Petersburg, 1864), 47; RGB OR, f. 178, d. 7312, 11. 6ob.-8; Elpidifor Barsov's response in Vengerov, ed., Kritiko-biograficheskii slovar', 2: 163.
60. Sychugov, “Nechto,” 124; Kazanskii, “Vospominaniia seminarista,” 18–19; Gur'ev, Mikhail, “Vospominaniia o moem uchenii,” Russkaia starina 139, no. 8 (1909): 362 Google Scholar; D. I., Pisarev, “Pogibshie i pogibaiushchie,” Literaturnaia kritika v trekh tomakh (Leningrad, 1981), 3: 50–116.Google Scholar
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62. This observation about the piety of adult popovichi is gleaned from the diaries and correspondence of numerous popovichi. In these texts many popovichi expressed their faith in the power of prayer and confession, made frequent reference to God and to scripture, and mentioned their regular attendance at church services. For examples of popovichi who were not employed in the clerical domain (such as professors at theological academies or seminaries) who made such statements, see Institut russkoi literatury (IRLI), f. 286, op. 1, d. 121 (A. V. Smirnov to V. A. Smirnov, 25 March 1897), 1. 1; GAVO, f. 622, op. 1, d. 12 (A. V. Smirnov to V. A. Smirnov, 189?), I. 4; RGALI, f. 904, op. 1, d. 16 (Tsvetkov's diary), 11. 15, 17, 40; RGALI, f. 716, op. 1, d. 125 (V. M. Vasnetsov to A. M. Vasnetsov, n.d.), 1. 27–27ob.; RGALI, f. 765, op. 1, d. 188 (M. S. Znamenskii to A. S. Znamenskaia, 1864), 1. 1. Not all popovichi who maintained their faith remained affiliated with the official church. Besides the above-mentioned case of the Tolstoian Ivan Tregubov, see the case of a Bolshevik popovich who was drawn to the Molokane sect. GAVO, f. P46, op. 1, d. 193 (Tikhomirov's memoirs), II. 11–12. On the piety of popovichi populists, see the prison diaries of Mikhail Novorusskii, in which he described his observance of Orthodox religious holidays and his desire to participate in the rite of confession (GA RF, f. 1733, op. 1, d. 2, II. 40, 44–45). For another example, see GA RF, f. 1721, op. 1, d. 135, 1. 21.
63. Biriukov, Ural'skaia kopilka, 15.
64. For example, see RGIA, f. 802, op. 9, d. 66 (bishop's report concerning Ekaterinoslav seminary, 1886), 1. 139; GA RF, f. 102, op. 223, g. 1905, d. 1000, ch. 10, 11. 16, 23; GAVO, f. 1294, op. 1, d. 9 (anonymous seminarian's diary), II. 16, 19; Kriukovskii, “Okolo Bursy,” Russkaia starina 146, no. 4 (1911): 446.
65. E. A. Preobrazhenskii, “Avtobiografiia,” in Granat, 41: 120. For other examples, see Al'bov, M. N., “Mikhail Nilovich Al'bov,” in Fidler, , ed., Pervye literaturnye shagi, 177 Google Scholar; M. M., Chernavskii, “Avtobiografiia,” in Granat, 40: 563 Google Scholar; Shashkov, “Avtobiografiia,” 12. For an example of a noble who heralded his parents’ atheism, see M. P. Sazhin in Granat, 40: 423. For an example of a non-popovich who claimed he became an atheist as a child due to parental abuse, see GAVO, f. P46, op. 1, d. 255 (P. I. Lebedev-Polianskii's autobiography), 1. 17.
66. Sychugov, Zapiski, 17 (Sychugov to V. F. Tomas, 14 December 1899). For examples of radical popovichi who resumed being practicing Orthodox believers, see MIR, f. 13, op. 1, d. 798 (N. M. Tregubov to I. M. Tregubov, 1917), 11. 14ob., 24, 27, 80; DP RNB, f. 194, op. 1, d. 1295 (M. N. Glubokovskii's obituary), 1. 2; Bulgakov, Avtobiograficheskie zametki, 25–35.
67. Sergei Solov'ev, Izbrannye trudy: Zapiski (Moscow, 1983), 233–34. For several other examples, see Golubinskii, , “Iz vospominaniia,” in U troitsy v akademii (Moscow, 1914), 709 Google Scholar; Kazanskii, “Vospominaniia seminarista,” 133; GAVO, f. 704, op. 1, d. 192 (S. N. Lebedev's confession), II. 95ob.-96.
68. For example, see Pomialovskii, “Ocherki bursy,” 2: 131; Vrutsevich, “Dukhovnoe uchilishche,” 696–97; GA RF, f. 102, op. 223, g. 1905, d. 1000, ch. 10, 1. 16ob.; GAVO, f. 1294, op. 1, d. 9, passim.
69. N. Smirnov, “Ateizm (Iz perezhitogo),” in Dukhovnaia shkola: Sbornik (n.d.), 137.
70. A. F. Kistiakovskii, “Avtobiograficheskii otryvok,” Kievskaia starina 48, no. 1 (1895): 6.
71. RGALI, f. 1027, op. 1, d. 3 (G. E. Blagosvetlov's petition), 1. 36ob. See also, Popov, M. R., Zapiski zemlevol'tsa (Moscow, 1933), 54–55Google Scholar.
72. Pavlovskii, A. D., “Avtobiografiia,” in Sbornik biografii vrachei vypuska 1881 goda imp. Mediko-khirurgicheskoi akademii (St. Petersburg, 1906), 157 Google Scholar. For other examples, see A. V. Peshekhonov, “Avtobiografiia,” in Maksimov, ed., Sotrudniki “Russkikh vedomostei,” 143; Pavlov, , “Avtobiografiia,” Polnoe sobranie sochinenii, 6 vols. (Moscow and Leningrad, 1952), 6: 441 Google Scholar; RGIA, f. 802, op. 16, d. 164, 1. 18; RGIA, f. 802, op. 10, g. 1905, d. 67, 11. 27–51 (seminarians’ petitions).
73. RGIA, f. 802, op. 9, d. 11, 1. 73ob.
74. RGALI, f. 904, op. 1, d. 16, 1. 15. On specific references to clerical calling, see GA RF, f. 102, op. 223, g. 1905, d. 1000, ch. 10, 1. 44–44ob.; Materialy dlia biografii N. A. Dobroliubova, Sobrannye v 1861–1862 gg. (Moscow, 1890), 1: 14 (N. A. Dobroliubov to Dobroliubovs, 9 June 1853); Bogoslovskii, “Chernigovskaia seminariia 50 let nazad,” no. 7: 78.
75. On parental approval and clerical attitudes toward vocational calling, see RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 43, 1. 27; DP RNB, f. 692, op. 1, d. 52 (A. P. Serebrennikov's inscription on his father's diary), 1. 2; Lazurskii, V. F., Professor A. F. Lazurskii (Odessa, 1917), 1–2Google Scholar; Greznov, h shkol'nykh vospominanii, 239–40. On a shift in parents’ attitudes, see Tsezorevskii, “Shestidesiatye gody,” 260; RGB OR, f. 250, k. 2, d. 1 (N. P. Rozanov's autobiography), 1. 17. For their correspondence to their parents on this issue, see Mamin-Sibiriak, Sobranie sochinenii, 10: 332 (D. N. Mamin-Sibiriak to N. M. Mamin, 1870); Materialy dlia biografii N. A. Dobroliubova, 1: 9 (N. A. Dobroliubov to Dobroliubovs, 29 August 1853).
76. Preobrazhenskii, “Avtobiografiia,” 121; Pribylev, “Avtobiografiia,” 345; Ostrovitianov, Dumy o proshlom, 16, 171; GA RF, f. 1733, op. 1, d. 2, 11. 16–17.
77. Fr. Khalkolivanov, Ioann, Pravoslavnoe nravstvennoe bogoslovie (Samara, 1872), 151–52Google Scholar; Bogoslovskii, N. G., Vzgliad s prakticheskoi storony na zhizn' sviashchennikov: Pis'ma otsa k synu (St. Petersburg, 1860)Google Scholar, 4; DP RNB, f. 253, op. 1, d. 307 (A. A. Dmitrievskii to V. A. Dmitrievskii, 3 June 1916), 1. 7. For other examples of popovichi referring to their sense of calling, see L. O., “Iz vospominanii Kazanskogo studenta,” in Pervyi shag (Kazan', 1876), 364; A. V., Barsov, “Avtobiografiia,” in Bibliograftcheskii ukazatel’ materialov po istorii russkoi shkoly, 1900, no. 10: 171.Google Scholar
78. RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 46, 1. 14. On the transfer of the service ethic among nobles, see Raeff, Origins, 168–69.
79. Lazurskii, Professor A. F. Lazurskii, 1; Tikhomirov, “Avtobiografiia,” 217; Sychugov, “Nechto,” 135. Between 1793 and 1900, 40 percent of the secularly employed graduates of Vladimir seminary became teachers; 13 percent became doctors. See IVDS, 3: 1–336.
80. RGB OR, f. 23, k. 1, d. 1 (S. A. Belokurov's curriculum vitae), 1. 2. For other examples, see Popov, Zapiski, 53; Tikhonov, Dvadtsat’ piat’ let na kazennoi sluzhbe, 1: 3; PFA RAN, f. 849, op. 3, d. 454 (N.? to D. K. Zelenin, 24 September 1906), 1. 1.
81. Bulgakov, Avtobiograficheskie zametki, 14–15; RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 46, 1. 53ob. For other examples, see PFA RAN, f. 849, op. 2, d. 1 (Zelenin's autobiography), 1. 24; RGB OR, f. 177, d. 50.66, 1. 1; Krasnoperov, “Moi detskie gody i shkola,” 197.
82. Solov'ev, Zapiski, 274. For other examples, see Giliarov-Platonov, Iz perezhitogo, 1: 151; N. N., “50-letie,” 705.
83. On use of the term cultural intermediaries, see Michel Vovelle, Ideologies and Mentalities, trans. Eamon O'Flaherty (Chicago, 1990), 114–25.
84. For example, see Giliarov-Platonov, Iz perezhitogo, 1: 203, 2: 125; Nadezhdin, “Avtobiografiia,” 55; L. O., “Iz vospominanii,” 364. A popovich who became a bureaucrat explained that he did not enter his profession by choice. Bogoslovskii, “Chernigovskaia seminariia 50 let nazad,” no. 7: 78–79. For a popovich's description of his parents’ objection to their son entering the military bureaucracy, see DP RNB, f. 253, op. 1, d. 1 (A. A. Dmitrievskii's autobiography), 1. 4.
85. Secularly employed graduates of Vladimir seminary entered bureaucratic professions in numbers larger than 10 percent only in the years 1841–1864 and 1883–1888; see IVDS, 3: 1–336. For figures on enrollment in specific faculties, see G. I. Shchetinina, “Alfavitnye spiski studentov kak istoricheskii istochnik: Sostav universitetskogo studenchestva v kontse XlX-nachale XX veka,” Istoriia SSSR 5 (1979): 118; Tomskii universitet: Kratkii istoricheskii ocherh (Tomsk, 1917), 148–52.
86. RGB OR, f. 356, k. 3, d. 46, 1. Mob. For a nearly identical example, see E. M. Ovchinnikov, “Avtobiografiia,” in Sbornik biografii vrachei, 143.
87. Max, Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, trans. Parsons, Talcott (New York, 1958), 80.Google Scholar
88. My definition of self-fashioning is drawn from Stephen, Greenblatt, Renaissance Self-Fashioning: More to Shakespeare (Chicago, 1980)Google Scholar. For a discussion of the dual process of discovery of self and community, see Caroline Walker hynum, Jesus as Mother: Studies in the Spirituality of the High Middle Ages (Berkeley, 1982), 106–9.Google Scholar
89. For an example of a scholar who posits this view, see Michael, Walzer, The Revolution of the Saints: A Study in the Origins of Radical Politics (New York, 1976)Google Scholar.