Difference between revisions of "Ober-Procurator"

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*Prince Peter S. Meshersky  (1817 – 1833).  
 
*Prince Peter S. Meshersky  (1817 – 1833).  
 
*Steven Dmitrievich Nechayev (1833 – [[June 25]], 1836).
 
*Steven Dmitrievich Nechayev (1833 – [[June 25]], 1836).
*Count  Nicholas Alexandrovich Protasov  (1836 – [[January 16]],1855).
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*Count  [[Nicholas Alexandrovich Protasov]] (1836 – [[January 16]],1855).
 
*A. I. Karasevsky [[December 25]], 1855 – [[September 20]], 1856).
 
*A. I. Karasevsky [[December 25]], 1855 – [[September 20]], 1856).
 
*Count Alexander Petrovich Tolstoy  (September 20, 1856 – [[February 28]], 1862).
 
*Count Alexander Petrovich Tolstoy  (September 20, 1856 – [[February 28]], 1862).

Revision as of 14:50, September 26, 2009

Ober-Procurator, Russian: обер-прокурор, ober-prokuror, also Chief Procurator, was the title of the lay supervisor of the Apostolic Governing Synod, who effectively was the lay head of the Russian Orthodox Church and a member of the Tsar's cabinet. The Synod was established as the highest hierarchical authority under Tsar Peter I's reorganization of the Church of Russia, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, that abolished the position of patriarch as the senior hierarch. The reorganization, in 1721, was Peter's means of his controlling the Church.

The position of Ober-Procurator was established in 1722 to supervise the activities of the Office of the Synod. An independent office of the Chief Procurator, with increased powers, was established in 1836.

The office of Ober-Procurator ceased to exist upon the abolition of the Department of Orthodox Denomination by the Provisional Government on August 5, 1917 of which the office of the Ober-Procurator and the Apostolic Governing Synod were part. The restoration of the position of Patriarch of Russia occurred during the Local Regional Russian Council of 1917-1918, with the election of Patriarch Tikhon on November 5, 1917.

Ober-Procurators

See also


Source