Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T11:46:39.011Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Autocéphalies. L'exercice de l'indépendance dans les Églises slaves orientales (IXe–XXIe siècle) Marie-Hélène Blanchet, Frédéric Gabriel and Laurent Tatarenko (eds) École française de Rome, Rome, 2021, 673 pp (paperback €45), ISBN: 978-2-7283-1453-9

Review products

Autocéphalies. L'exercice de l'indépendance dans les Églises slaves orientales (IXe–XXIe siècle) Marie-Hélène Blanchet, Frédéric Gabriel and Laurent Tatarenko (eds) École française de Rome, Rome, 2021, 673 pp (paperback €45), ISBN: 978-2-7283-1453-9

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 May 2024

Astrid Kaptijn*
Affiliation:
Université de Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2024

This book, dedicated to autocephalies (in the plural) in the Eastern Slavonic churches, has been prepared with the aim of studying historical cases of autocephalies over a long period and comparing the different ways in which they have been formalised. The aim is clearly to make this a non-partisan and non-denominational examination. The historical perspective, oriented towards the exercise of independence, makes room for contingent and singular elements. However, attention is also paid to the rhetoric used to justify independence and to the content of the vocabulary, which makes it an interesting book for theologians and canon lawyers as well. The historical perspective is also often enriched by more sociological reflections on language, ethnos and nation.

In his introduction, Frédéric Gabriel distinguishes, from the point of view of the practices of autocephaly, three periods with regard to the long period studied here. Although the term ‘autocephaly’ appears for the first time in a text dating from the sixth century, the studies presented in this book begin in the ninth and tenth centuries, which are considered to be the inaugural period of autocephaly in the Slavic world. The first period identified here is that of Byzantine rule, followed by Ottoman domination, before ending with the era of ethnic and national states in the 19th century. This periodisation and the criteria used immediately highlight the link with the geopolitical situation and with political independence, the political and ecclesiastical registers being often intertwined. On the one hand, some autocephalies were recognised when the political centre on which these Churches depended was weakening. This was the case with Constantinople and, at the same time, the strengthening of local civil and military powers in the Balkans; and while the independence of the Church was indeed achieved at the ecclesiastical level, it often remained linked to local political powers, particularly when it came to choosing the head of the Church.

In ecclesiastical terms, the notions of autocephaly and autonomy were only distinguished more rigorously in the 19th century, leading to a definition of autocephaly as strict independence. At the same time, autocephaly could not be thought of without the relationships between the churches, so legal and de facto independence at the administrative level went hand in hand with doctrinal and liturgical communion. The authority granting autocephalous status has also varied: sometimes it was the emperor, sometimes a patriarch, and in the 19th century the patriarch of Constantinople, if it was not the Church itself that proclaimed itself autocephalous.

The contributions to this book, written mainly in French (only three of the 22 chapters are written in English) by eminent researchers attached to the CNRS, the Collège de France or universities in other countries, first examine the problems of definition, before reviewing the historicisation of autocephalous practices according to the different periods, first from the ninth to the 16th century, then the modern era, followed by that known as the ‘age of nations’ and ending with the period since 1918. They focus, in particular, on the churches in Bulgaria, Serbia, Macedonia, Russia and Ukraine. Three contributions presenting contemporary visions bring the book to a close. Readers with a particular interest in the situation of the churches in Ukraine and their relations with Constantinople on the one hand and Moscow on the other, will find elements of analysis and reflection in the afterword written by Laurent Tatarenko. Each contribution is accompanied by a short bibliography. A fairly substantial cartographic dossier of around 40 pages, accompanied by brief explanations that situate the churches according to periods and countries, indexes of places and names of people, as well as summaries, are very helpful to consult this work.

The focus of the research, the scholarly nature of the contributions and the reputation of the authors make this a landmark work that deserves the attention of academics in a wide range of disciplines, including canonists.