May 1964: A Radical Change in the History of the Russian Church Abroad


The 1964 Council of the Bishops of the Russian Church Abroad (ROCOR) marked a new milestone in its history: on May 27, 1964 Metropolitan Anastasii (Gribanovskii) retired. Bishop Anastasii’s episcopal consecration took place in Moscow in 1906. In 1913 he was appointed to devise rites for the glorification of St....

Nicholas Chapman podcast on early 18th century Orthodox catechism in English


As you may (or may not) know, regular OrthodoxHistory.org author Nicholas Chapman -- the man who has single-handedly rewritten our understanding of early Orthodoxy in America -- hosts a podcast on Ancient Faith Radio, called Speaking of Books. For his most recent episode, Nicholas reviewed an intriguing volume: The Russian...

A 5th century Greek church in Connecticut? Nope.


Recently, an article has been circulating among some Orthodox folks on the Internet on a purported Greek Orthodox church in Connecticut, dating to the 5th century. If the article is accurate, it's an absolute bombshell -- it claims that Orthodox monks from North Africa fled persecution in the late 400s...

The Death of Aftimios Ofiesh


I had meant to write something about this yesterday, since July 24 marks the anniversary of the death of Aftimios Ofiesh, the sometime Archbishop of Brooklyn, who departed this earthly life in 1966. Aftimios was briefly the leader of the American Orthodox Catholic Church (1927-33), the first attempt to create...

This week in American Orthodox history (July 16-22)


After a bit of a hiatus thanks to work and a new baby, we're back with another edition of "This week in American Orthodox history." No accompanying podcast yet, though -- one thing at a time. July 20, 1741: According to some accounts, the first Orthodox liturgy in the Western...

The Life of Archbishop Michael Konstantinides


Editor's note: Today, July 13, marks the 54th anniversary of Archbishop Michael Konstantinides, primate of the Greek Archdiocese. Archbishop Michael has been largely (and unfairly) forgotten, for a simple reason: his eight-year tenure was sandwiched in between the larger-than-life Archbishops Athenagoras and Iakovos. But Archbishop Michael was a genuinely outstanding...

Orthodox artifacts on eBay


First of all, let me apologize for being away from this site -- and from the podcast -- for so long. My wife gave birth to our third child a few weeks ago, and I've been buried in gainful employment, so my historical work has been forced onto the back...

Programming Note


Just a quick note of apology for the lack of new material both here and on the podcast. My third child was born last week, so as you might expect, life has been rather crazy of late. I'll try to have things back to normal here at OrthodoxHistory.org very soon....

Fr. Sebastian Dabovich & the mystery of St. Tikhon’s miter


In 2009, I wrote an article on the miter (crown) which Archbishop Tikhon Bellavin gave to Fr. Sebastian Dabovich at the Dabovich's elevation to archimandrite in 1905, and which Dabovich later auctioned off to raise money for the Serbian war effort in 1912. Today is the anniversary of Dabovich's birth,...

This week in American Orthodox history (June 18-24)


June 21, 1863: Jovan Dabovich was born in San Francisco to Serbian immigrants. He would be baptized by an Orthodox priest aboard a visiting Russian ship, and he later became Fr. Sebastian, one of the most prominent Orthodox clergymen in America. June 18, 1878: Fr. Paul Kedrolivansky, dean of the...