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Regarding the Good Order of the Monastery: The Tipik So/ovetskago and the Integration of the Spiritual with the Temporal in the Early Seventeenth Century Jennifer B. Spock General Introduction The desire to live a right life in order to attain salvation is best known in the medieval Christian tradition, both East and West, in the form of its monastic life. Ideally, a hermit alone in the wilderness or a monk engaged in the activity of a cloister led an ascetic, contemplative life of prayer, fasting, labor, and observance. It has been argued that in Russia the influence of the monastics began to wane in the 16th century, increasing the importance of the parish clergy and resulting in an Orthodoxy that looked less toward monastic spiritual fathers for moral guidance and more toward homiletic texts1 Yet monasticism remained a strong thread in the pre-Petrine Russian religious experience . Monastic leaders played a significant role in the conversion of the eastern Slavs and in the maintenance of Orthodox society and Orthodox praxis in pre-Petrine Russia. Well into the 17th century elite and non-elite alike continued to send gifts and cash to monastic houses so that the monks would pray for the souls of the dead. Monks were perceived as leading an "angelic" life which rendered their prayers more pleasing to God and thus more efficacious. Research for this article was supported in part by a grant from the International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX), with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the United States Information Agency, and the U. S. Department of State. Also contributing was a grant from the Joint Committee on the Soviet Union and its Successor States of the Social Science Research Council and the American Council of Learned Societies with funds provided by the State Department under the Russian, Eurasian, and East European Training Program (Title VIII). None of these organizations is responsible for the views expressed. Other funding was provided by: the Henry Rice Scllolarship, Cen ter for International and Area Studies, Yale University ; John F. Enders Research Assistance Grant, Yale University; Hilandar Research Library and the Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies, The Ohio State University ; University Research Committee Grant, Eastern Kentucky University. 1 Paul Bushkovitch, Religion and Society in Russia: The Sixteenth al1d Seventeenth Centuries (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992). Rude & Barbarous Kingdom Revisited: Essays in Russian History and Culture in Honor of Robert 0. Crummey. Chester 5. L. Dunning, Russell E. Martin, and Daniel Rowland, eds. Bloomington, IN: siavica Publi shers, 2008, 251- 67. 252 JENN IFER B. SPOCK One of the largest of Russia's religious houses was the Monastery of the Transfiguration of the Savior and the Dormition of the Mother of God, commonly known as the Solovki Monastery. Solovki was founded around 1430 on an island of the same name in the middle of the White Sea, and had become a substantial house by the 1560s, including no less than 200 monks and 300 servants2 Solovki was somewhat unusual as an example of cloistered living, for its monks were less confined than in many other monasteries. The brothers were both wealthy and impoverished men from the settlements, villages, and towns of the north, along with some men from Moscow and other central towns. Hailing from the northern forests and villages of the White Sea region, most of the monks came to tonsure after a life lived in the wilderness-a life of trading, trapping, fishing, salt-production, or artisanal activity3 These men turned their occupations to the service of the monastery even as they took on the mantle, and so as monks they often continued to move freely about northern Russia engaged in trapping, fishing, salt-production, or trade. In their turn, northern trappers, traders, and peasants engaged in business daily entered Solovki's portals in addition to pilgrims who came to venerate Solovki's patron saints, Zosima and Savatii. Although interaction with the laity was not unusual for a monastic community, Solovki monks engaged in business with regions hundreds of miles from the cloister, from the eastern lands beyond the White Sea to as far south as Moscow. The Solovki community aspired, nonetheless, to integrate the ideal forms of the monastic life into its daily routines. Like many other Russian monasteries it was neither completely cenobitic (communal), nor purely idiorrhythmic (a form of monasticism in which hermits lived in separate cells but came together for worship). Instead, it merged the communal life of a...

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