ACADEMIC JOURNAL
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ISSN 2542-1077 (Print) ISSN 1994-5973 (Online) |
Russian literature and literature of the peoples of the Russian Federation |
Volkova T. F. | Pitirim Sorokin Syktyvkar State University |
Kryukova A. A. | Pitirim Sorokin Syktyvkar State University |
Keywords: eschatological writings Pechora manuscript collections Old Believers’ literature Pechora copies |
Summary: The article presents an overview of the eschatological writings that existed among the Pechora Old
Believers, and presents the main results of the study of these works by Syktyvkar philologists. Pechora peasants actively read and copied medieval eschatological writings: a large number of their copies has been preserved. This layer of handwritten texts has not been studied much yet, but they are an important part of the manuscript-book tradition that was formed at the Lower Pechora in the XVIII and XIX centuries. The authors of the article pursued the task of
determining the peculiarities of the existence of eschatological writings in the Old Believers’ environment. These
writings can be divided into works of “big” and “small” eschatology, but there are monuments that combine elements
of both directions of the eschatological teaching, for example, “The Life of Basil the New”. Local interpretations and
compilations on the topic of the end of the world and the posthumous fate of the soul have become widespread in the
Old Believers’ environment. The authors of the article and other Syktyvkar philologists studied the Pechora copies of
“The Life of Basil the New”, “The Visions of the Apostle Paul”, “Agapius’s Walk to Paradise”, “Tales about the Twelve
Dreams of Shahaisha”, conducted their informative, compositional, and textual analysis, identified the features of the
Pechora copies, established which editions they originated from, identified similarities and differences between the Pechora copies. Special attention was paid to editorial revisions of the studied works made by Ivan Myandin, a famous Pechora scribe of the XIX century, revealing the main techniques of the scribe’s work on eschatological texts and the degree of their revision. |
Displays: 211; |