Female Monasticism in an Age of Challenge: The Convent of the Intercession in Suzdal (1700–1800)
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
This study examines how the eighteenth-century assault on monastery property and privilege
through secularization attempts affected female monasticism, using as a case study the Convent of the
Intercession (or the Protection) of the Mother of God in Suzdal, one of the largest and wealthiest of
female cloisters. To some degree, the Intercession convent resembled any large monastery, and hence
conclusions about this particular convent may indicate larger patterns in other first-tier monastic
institutions. Two avenues are explored: first, how the attempts to sequester church property by
Peter the Great and subsequently Catherine II affected the economic position of female monasteries
in general and the Convent of the Intercession in particular, and second, how attempts to prevent
tonsures influenced both the number of monastics and their social estate. At the Intercession Convent,
rationalizing measures under Peter and full-scale secularization under Catherine that sequestered large
tracts of land and thousands of peasants resulted in steady decline in monastic assets and revenues.
The expropriation of monastic wealth institutionally and economically preceded the final and formal
sequestration by Catherine II in 1764. The decline in wealth also had consequences for the number
of monastics and their social estate. Coupled with restrictions on tonsure and ultimately the closure
of many monasteries, the number of monastics in the empire and at the Intercession Convent fell by
about three-quarters over the course of the eighteenth century, causing widespread displacement. As
a result of this contraction and a number of social forces, the estate profile of the convent changed
as well; in the early eighteenth century large numbers of noblewomen lived at the convent, but by
the end of the eighteenth century their number was negligible—they had been replaced by peasants
and members of the clerical estate. Unwittingly, Peter’s attempts to reduce the number of monastics,
in tandem with his selectivity in placement, meant that the nobility were essentially driven out of
convent life, allowing for a greater influx of non-nobles. With the secularization of church lands in
1764, Catherine finished what Peter had not been able to do. Although the seizures brought hardship
to many monasteries and destroyed complex and long-standing communities, they likely made
convents less attractive to elites, which helped accelerate two important processes: the feminization of
monasticism, and its democratization, which in turn helped strengthen the bond between the Church
and the people, in particular, women. The flowering of monasticism, ironically, owes much to these
secularizing rulers. Refs 71.
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Miller M. Female Monasticism in an Age of Challenge: The Convent of the Intercession in Suzdal (1700–1800). Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2016, issue 4, pp. 87–103.