The Making of a Marian Geography of Grace for Greek Catholics in the Polish Crownlands of the 17th–18th Centuries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Zaprawdę, w Polszcze nászey nie mász Miásta, rzadka Wieś z Kośćiołem, w którymby się Obraz PANNY Nayświętszey nie ználazł cudowny.
Truely, in our Poland there is no town, and hardly a village with a Church of its own, in which there could not be found a miraculous image of Our holiest Lady.
Evidentius argumentum probandi Unionem esse salutarem, et laudabilem non requiritur aliud, quam quotidiana miracula Beatae Virginis Zyroviciensis (…).
There is no need for a more evident argument that proves the Union to be salutary and laudable, than the daily miracles of the Blessed Virgin of Žyrovyci.
2. Marian Places of Grace in the Ruthenian Lands
Indulgences, Pilgrimages and Pilgrims
Capitaneatus et Districtus Civitatis regiae Slonim totus unitissimus, et si ubi, ibi habet S. Unio consolationem propter ecclesiam Zyrovicensem Beatissimae Virginis miraculosam, ubi sunt Monachi uniti.
The district and territory of the royal town of Slonim is totally Uniate, and if there is one place where the state of the holy Union is truly consoling, this is it, all on account of the church in Žyrovyči with its miraculous image of the Blessed Virgin, where there are Uniate monks.(translation quoted from Senyk 1984, p. 263)
3. Miracles and Physical Space
- V obiteli panjanskoj, pri cerkvi Pečarskoj,
- V chramě svoemъ živetъ lěpšъ vesi Rudjanskoj.
- In the nunnery, close to the Cathedral of the Cave,
- in a chapel of her own she [scil. the image] lives better than at the village of Rudnia.
(…) et intellexit hunc locum pro defensione et promotione unionis a Deo excitatum atque ablato unitis loco miracula cessatura.
(…) and he understood that this place had been chosen by God for the defense and promotion of the Union, and that if [the image] were to be taken away from that Uniate place, the miracles would stop.
The Materiality of the Sacred, Communication and Personhood
- Tvarь bo izměnjaetъ, slezy izlivaetъ,
- sklanjaetъ ušesa, priemletъ slovesa.
- Her face changes, she starts weeping,
- she lends her ear and takes in the words.
- Inši kto žъ tvoi čudovny obrazy
- zličiti može panien’ko bez zmazy,
- v kotorychъ esъ vel’mi južesъ sja vslavila
- i rozmaitychъ laskъ ljudъ nabavila.
- And who is capable of counting
- all the other miraculous images,
- in which you have acquired fame
- and proffered variegated graces to the people.
- Te oczy płaczą Matki naszej drogi
- Dla upomnienia nam i dla przestrogi.
- Those dear eyes of our Mother keep weeping,
- for us to remember and as a warning.
- Podźmy przed obraz Maryjej,
- Tej najśliczniejszej lilijej,
- Poklęknąwszy, rączki słożmy,
- Do jej się nożek ucieczmy.
- We come to stand in front of the image of Mary,
- that most beautiful lily,
- and, once we have kneeled down, we fold our hands,
- and we seek shelter below her feet.
I zwłaszcza że liud prostiy z nauki Kapłanow Kościoła Rzimskiego nauczeł się y uczy przed Obrázmi ták ritemi bałwany táko y málowánimi kłaniać y klękać y klęcząc swe modlitw przed nimi mowić szapke zeimować y insze nabożne pokłony czynić, swieczky przed nimi zápalene stawiać, Krzyżem padać, lieżeć {…}
And the common people were indeed instructed from the knowledge of the Roman Catholic chaplains and learned to bow and kneel down in front of the images, be it sculpted figures or paintings, and once they kneeled down, to say their prayers in front of them and to take off their hats and do other kinds of pious exercises, and to put burning candles in front of them, and to prostrate and stay lying in the form of the cross (…).
4. The Geography of Grace According to Ruthenian Devotional Songs in Praise of Images
- Mertvyja voskrešaešъ,
- Čelověkъ ot běsovъ uvolnjaešъ,
- i ot bědnychъ ljudej febry otganjaešъ,
- slěpychъ prosvěščaešъ.
- You raise the dead to life again,
- You deliver people from demons,
- you chase away fevers from the poor,
- you make the blind see again.
- Umarli wstaią na Twe załowanie,
- Dziękuią chromi za wyskakiwanie.
- The deceased stand up at your command,
- the lame thank you for [their] jumping up.
4.1. Geographical Hierarchies
- V čas Zbaražskoj vojny bjachu nespokojny
- Hrady vsja ot běsurmanov {…}
- Ktož vo zemnom troně i v Polskoj koroně
- Sčirym serdcem nepriznaet,
- iž děva čista
- mati boha ista
- vsěch ot vrahov zastupaet.
- In the times of the Zbarazh war [of 1675]
- the towns were unsettled because of the Muslims {…}
- Whoever on the worldly throne and in the Crown of Poland
- will not admit with an open heart
- that the chaste virgin
- the true Mother of God
- defended us all from those enemies.
- Ježeli zvažišъ pričinu,
- Čemъ Ju za matku jedinu,
- Na Volynju namъ Nebo dalo?
- If you wonder about the reason,
- why the Heavens gave her
- as the one and only Mother to Volhynia?
- Przed wieki Niebios i Ziemi Królowa,
- U którey pomoc dla wszystkich gotowa,
- Którey iak w wielu mieyscach tak w Puhinie,
- Łaska z znacznemi dobrodzieystwy płynie.
- Pre-eternal Queen of the Heavens and Earth,
- who offers help to everybody,
- whose grace flows forth with considerable benefits in Puhinki,
- as in so many other places.
4.2. Lop-Sided Competition
4.3. Closing the Ranks: Frontier Icons at the Antemurale Christianitatis
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In this article the terms ‘icon’ and ‘image’ are used somewhat interchangeably at times. We are well aware that ‘icon’ is usually understood in the quite specific art historical sense of a painted sacred image of Byzantine origin and/or style, dinstinguishing it from sacred images in Western styles (in Poland mostly baroque) or even statuettes. As a matter of fact, the vast majority of miraculous images mentioned and discussed in this paper are indeed icons in the stricter sense of paintings in the Byzantine style, but some of them are not. In order to avoid confusion, we use ‘(miraculous) image’ as a default term, employing ‘icon’ only sparingly in those cases where the object referred to is indeed a true Byzantine style icon. Out of stylistic considerations, we also took the liberty to use ‘icon’ in the more general sense of ‘image’ in compounds such as ‘icon song’ or ‘frontier icon’. |
2 | For convenience’s sake we will call this fuzzily defined terrain the Ruthenian lands with reference to the historical, ethnic, cultural and linguistic heritage of its majority population. Most miraculous Marian images on Ruthenian soil made their first appearance in the 17th–18th c. with a clear peak in the 18th c. See the lists in Ščurat (1910, pp. 10, 14). The spread of miraculous images of the Mother of God forms, of course, part of the general rise of Marian devotion throughout Poland and the Ruthenian lands, which for the latter territories can also be gleaned from the increase of the relative share of parish churches bearing the name of the Mother of God (Jakovenko 2011–14, p. 808). See also Senyk (1984). As for the Lithuanian part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth with its predominantly Ruthenian population that likeweise had to accept the Church Union, similar forms of Marian devotion can be observed, though to a notably lesser extent. We will therefore not specifically look at that region and only include it where it adds to our understanding of Marian devotion in the Ruthenian lands in general. As a matter of fact, the Ruthenian part of the Polish Crownlands (especially Galicia and Volhynia), where the Uniate Chruch came to grow particularly strong, clearly emerge as the active epicenter for the adoption and diffusion of devotional practices that follow the Western, i.e., Roman Catholic models of their time, such as the foundation and active maintenance of Marian places of grace, the establishment of annual pilgrimages, composing and collecting of devotional songs, etc. An apparent reason for this may be that in the Polish Crownlands the presence of Roman Catholic culture was much more imminent and formed part of the lived experience of the entire population, Roman and Greek Catholics alike, so that the ground for cultural confessional bricolage was better prepared here than in Lithuania. |
3 | The key event of iconoclastic aggression in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth is evidently the 1430 Hussitic raid on Jasna Góra and the damaging and defilement of the icon of the Black Madonna. Moreover, the abortive Swedish siege of Częstochowa in 1655, which was ascribed to the intervention of the Black Madonna and led to the Mother of God being pronounced as the Queen of Poland, must have once again conjured up the iconoclastic threat (Niendorf 2010, p. 159). To these can be added minor acts of Protestant iconoclastic agression throughout Poland in the 16th century (Kruk 2011, pp. 152–54). On the whole, however, outspoken anti-Marian iconoclastic attitudes and actions were a rare exception among Polish protestants (Tazbir 1984, p. 226). For the pertinent topos of damaged and desecrated images in general cf. Kretzenbacher (1977). It must be added here that for Greek Catholics protestant iconoclasm was much less of an issue. Their territory being largely situated in the endangered frontier zone of the Ottoman empire, the role of desecrating aggressor was naturally taken over by Muslim military invaders (on which see below). On alternative explanatory accounts of the rise of Marian devotion in the 16th–17th century throughout Europe, see Jakovenko (2011–14, p. 807) and Rok (2005, p. 137). |
4 | Levyc’ka (2017–18, p. 279) identifies the 18th century bishop of L’viv, Iosif Šumljans’kyj (1700–1708) and the Uniate metropolitan bishop Atanasij Šeptyc’kyj (1729–1746) as the most active supporters of the spread of Marian worship among the Greek Catholic community through the establishment and propagation of ever new Marian places of grace. For a recent case of promoting confessional identity through pilgrimages and apparition sites among the Greek Catholics of Eastern Slovakia see Halemba (2008). |
5 | The political dimension of the rise of Marian devotion in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth has already been noticed and commented upon by Ščurat (1910, p. 4), but we do not agree with his interpretation of Marian devotion being employed to serve the Ukrainian national cause in an attempt to fend off Polish advances into Ukrainian religious domains. |
6 | It is not clear whether our ethnographic approach to places of grace with its focus on interpretation and sense-making of geographical space at large would be covered by Lidov’s (2006) notion of hierotopy, which is about the organisation of sacred space, to be sure, but focusses rather on aspects of immediate sensual experience especially of the ritual space as well as the art of translating mystical into sensual experience, where our approach is rather about the creation of group cohesion and corporate identity employing hierotopic features to induce interpretations of geographical space in relation to community. |
7 | Examples are the miraculous Marian images at Pan’kivci (Brody region, L’viv county, Galicia), Benevo (Turkiv region, L’viv county, Galicia), Lysovci (Zališčyky region, Ternopil’ county, Podolia), Prjaživ (Žytomyr county), and Jatwiesk (Volkovysko area, Podlachia). |
8 | Lužnyc’kyj’s (1984) distinction between miraculous (čudotvorni) and blessed (blahodatni) images, which seems to follow common practice, is somewhat fuzzy, so that assigning one of both labels to any one image may in some cases verge on the arbitrary. Blessed images are usually recognized only locally, and they are rather known for offering solace to the supplicant and answering prayers in a less conspicuous manner. The difference is certainly one of degrees, but it may possibly be given a sharper outline by looking at it from a more technical vantage point. Miraculous images produce eyewitness evidence that qualifies for being checked and evaluated by an episcopal committee, whereas blessed images usually rely for their fairly modest fame on the inner subjective experience of individual supplicants that as a rule will not be able to produce any kind of convincing evidence of intercession. As a matter of fact, for an image to become eligible for papal coronation it had to be officially recognized as miraculous by an episcopal committee. The recognition procedure would require a public hearing of witnesses and included also the publication of miracle reports in printed form (Levyc’ka 2017–18, p. 273). |
9 | |
10 | On Boruny v. Senyk (1984, p. 265). |
11 | The Uniate Basilian order (Ordo Sancti Basilii Magni) was founded in 1631 with the clear objective to promote the Church Union among the as yet Orthodox faithful of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. In addressing their task the Basilian Order adopted the organizational forms and patterns as well as the educational programme and policy of the Jesuit order. Like the Jesuit order, the Basilian order laid within its domain of action the foundation for a school system consisting of a dense network of monasteries and associated seminaries. |
12 | For the Greek Catholic Basilian order utilizing this pathway to establish a stable geography of grace of their own meant to adopt Roman Catholic ecclesiological positions on forgiveness and indulgences (Wereda 2018, pp. 69–70). |
13 | Mostly on Marian feast days after the harvesting season, when the rural population was free to move. Cf. e.g., Žyrovyči, Zahoriv—September 8 (Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary), Cholm—September 15 (Our Lady of Sorrows). Cf. Wereda (2018, p. 75). |
14 | Apart from the coronated images, for which the establishment of approved pilgrimages of forgiveness was a prerequisite, these are: Povča, Novyj Sambir, Krasnyj Brod, Zarvanycja, Zahoriv, Puhinki, Bilostok, and possibly still others, which may be lacking from this list owing to the fragmentariness and incompleteness of much of the available historical information on Ruthenian places of grace. |
15 | For Polish examples see also Kruk (2011, p. 187), who also refers to an exceptional case of tears shed by an image being interpreted as tears of joy over the imminent victory of Władysław IV. |
16 | To be here understood in opposition to heterodox, i.e., to be understood as orthodox in the broad sense of any Christian confession that is conservatively oriented towards tradition and accordingly allows for the worship of images (Greek or Roman Catholic, or Russian Orthodox). The according Slavic term would be the broader pravověrnyj rather than the specifically confessional pravoslavnyj. As a matter of fact, despite their often embittered rejection of each other, proponents of Russian Orthodoxy as well as Greek and Roman Catholicism tend to form a unified cultural block in the face of any form of belief that does not embrace miracles worked through saintly images as part of its spirituality. The fear of Muslims seems to be largely inspired by a fear of the destruction of sacred images and the concomitant loss of the sense of living in a sanctified space. The same would hold in principle for Protestants, who are indeed in some Ruthenian devotional songs portrayed as a menace to the proper faith of no lesser evil than muslims. There is one notable case of a Marian devotional song which comments on the Ottoman inroads into Podolia in the 1670s, where Muslims (commonly adressed in songs as bisurmany, aharjany or pohani) are addressed by the term ‘heretic’ which is usually reserved for Protestants: Jeretičeskaja ruka vsěchъ nasъ ogortujetъ ‘the hand of the heretic has a firm grip on us’ (Stern 2000, pp. 44–45). An as yet more explicit identification of Muslims with Protestants, who are contrasted to all orthodox Christians (in the broad sense outlined above), is found in the following lines taken from a song in praise of the Mother of God of Tyvriv: Smiri glavy agarjanъ/Postydi sonmъ Ljuteranъ/Voznesi rogъ pravověrnychъ christianъ” [‘humble the heads of the sons of Hagar (i.e., Muslims)/Put shame on the assembly of Lutherans/Increase the power of all Christians in the right faith’] (BG 2016, no. 128). For the parallelisation of Muslim and Protestant iconoclasm specifically directed against Marian images throughout South Central Europe, cf. also Kretzenbacher (1977, pp. 94–105). |
17 | The following is a list of weeping images of the Ruthenian lands in the chronological order of their first miraculous manifestation: Ilins’ko-Černyhivs’ka ikona 1662, Terebovlja 1663, Klokočiv 1670, Pidhirci 1692, Povča 1696, Verchrata (Krechiv) 17th c., Vicyn end of the 17th c., Horodok beginning of the 18th c., Nastašiv after 1701, Balykyni 1711, Sambir 1727, Bucniv after 1729, Rohizno 1734, Vyšnivčyk 1742, Ternopil’ 1st half of the 18th c., Tartakiv 1765, Dalešiv 1781. The rise of reports about weeping images should, however, not exclusively be accounted for in terms of the heterodox iconoclast threat. The particular emphasis on strong emotions of compassion possibly reflects the general folk baroque Catholic trend to foreground the human aspects of the relation of the Mother of God to her son, which found its most outspoken expression in the depiction of the Mother of God as fainting from pain and woe under the Cross, a topic which is also repeatedly found in Ruthenian Marian songs on the passion of Christ, as in the following lines taken from the song Vse stvorenie po umeršem paně: Mati Christova pod krestom stojala/Z žalju tjažkago srodze omlěvala [‘The Mother of Christ stood under the Cross, she fainted severely from her heavy woe’] (Stern 2000, pp. 155–56, 533). The particular emphasis on emotions of compassion is ultimately grounded in Franciscan mysticism and its conceptualisation of the Mother of God as mater dolorosa being pierced by the sword of pain (gladius doloris). Later on, similar notions were elaborated upon by the prominent theologist of Russian orthodoxy, Gregory Camblak in his Homily on the Dormition of the Mother of God (Trajdos 1984, p. 134). Among the Greek Catholic community the cult of the Mater dolorosa spread, however, via Western pietà iconography from the mid 17th century onwards (Senyk 1984, p. 273). |
18 | See Kruk (2011, p. 174) on Žyrovyči and parallel cases in Poland. |
19 | For the origins and other examples of this topos see Kruk (2011, p. 173). |
20 | Vasil’ Surožskij stresses in his treatise O jedinoj istinnoj prawoslawnoj věrě (Ostrog 1588), accordingly, that the miraculous powers of icons derive from their being created through the assistance of God (RIB 7 1882, col. 929–30). |
21 | It goes without saying that reports and legends about miraculous images reflect the perspective and interests of its authors. Thus, wherever the author of a legend is likely to be a Basilian, as in the case of Pidhirci, movement to a Basilian sanctuary is unlikely to be reported as having caused averse reactions by the image being moved. |
22 | This report, in fact, reflects a very common topos of long-standing, which in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was strongly reinforced by a similar legend about the Black Madonna of Częstochowa (Kruk 2011, pp. 180–83). |
23 | Only exceptionally and under very specific circumstances will miraculous images swap loyalties, as in the case of the Mother of God of Smolensk, which is reported by a Polish chronicler to have turned on their own Orthodox wards when being attacked by the troops of the son of the Polish king Władysław IV (Kruk 2011, p. 166). Similarly, an indeterminate number of smaller ‘Muscovite’ icons seem to have been brought to Poland by the same invading troops during the times of trouble without losing their miraculous powers (Kruk 2011, p. 62). Thus, even the strict local loyalty of images seems to have its limits where issues of the right confession are concerned, as when an Orthodox surrounding can be exchanged for a Catholic one. Here, again, the confessional background of the report is crucial. |
24 | A key contemporary text which elaborates from an Orthodox perspective on the relationship between icons and the sacred, is Surožskij’s O edinoj istinnoj pravoslavnoj věrě (1588)—especially the closing chapter on images and icons (O obrazochъ i ikonachъ). Surožskij admits on the one hand that icons and other holy objects are created by men out of dead matter, but that God chooses to dwell in them and engages through them with this world. Thus, the icon is for Surožskij at the same time representational of the sacred as well as imbued by the sacred. It holds the middle ground between conceptual sign (col. 921 and col. 929–30) and material medium cum chosen place for God to be in this world (col. 921, 923–24, 926–27). According to Orthodox notions, miracles are not worked immediately through icons, but through the grace of God who thus reacts to icons being applied to for help (Levyc’ka 2017–18, p. 271). Where according to this officious Orthodox conceptualization icons are not to be identified with the sacred and cannot therefore acquire personal features, under the influence of Catholicism this boundary becomes increasingly porous through phenomena such as weeping and bleeding images, which strongly suggest a true animacy and personhood for images (Niedźwiedź 2005, p. 95; Kruk 2011, pp. 184–85). See also Kretzenbacher (1977, pp. 7–8) who refers to this as empsychosis and ensomatosis. It is through weeping that communication between the faithful and the sacred turns from a one way road of mere supplication into a mutual, though not truely dialogic exchange of personal perspectives and intentions by means of interpretable communicative behaviour. When in her attempt to deny this material aspect of Marian worship Oleksandra Hnatjuk concludes that in the praise of icons “нівелюєтсься не лише світський час, але й прoстір” (Hnatjuk 1994, p. 118) she falls victim to a disembodied idealism that is not borne out by the facts, as was already remarked by Medvedyk (1999, p. 76). |
25 | See also Niendorf (2010, pp. 158–59). |
26 | Copies of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa that had been rubbed against the original were held in highest esteem, and some of them became famous destinations for pilgrimages themselves, such as the icon of Mydlów (1748) and Solec (1763) (Kruk 2011, p. 161). See also Rožko (2002, p. 86) for the miraculous icon of Počajiv, copies of which, that were made miraculous in the way described, were disseminated over Ukraine and Russia. |
27 | Evidence for the Ruthenian lands is hard to come by Chociszewski (1882, pp. 263–64) mentions an anecdote of Juliusz Słowacki’s being sent by his mother a print repoduction of the Mother of God of Berdyčiv, which served him as support in many hopeless situations. Print reproductions (wood cuts and copper etchings) were made of the miraculous images at Pidkamin’, Sokal’, Berdyčiv, Počajiv, Hošiv and Zarvanycja (Levyc’ka 2017–18, p. 279; Wereda 2018, p. 76). It is, however, not known whether these reproductions were being sanctified by rubbing them against their originals. It can, however, be surmised that this practice which was quite commonly applied to small print reproductions of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa (Kruk 2011, p. 161) was also known and accordingly employed among the Greek Catholics of Ruthenia. It seems, however, that a more common practice at Częstochowa consisted in rubbing kerchiefs and rozaries against the image (Tazbir 1984, p. 227). See also Kürzeder (2005, pp. 52–54) for a detailed discussion of similar practices in the Southern German-speaking lands. |
28 | This point is neatly illustrated in Saltykov-Ščedrins novel Gospoda Golovlevy, where the major protagonist Arina Petrovna, head of the Golovlev family who is obsessively bent on the acquisition of material riches, orders a service of supplication (moleben) to the famous miraculous icon at the Iviron monastery on Mount Athos to help her purchase by auction a village of 1000 souls (Saltykov-Ščedrin 1979, p. 39). The Iverskaja bogomati was indeed one of the most popular icons among all the Eastern Slavs and had many replicas at various places throughout the Ruthenian lands (Lužnyc’kyj 1984, p. 167). Citing this biting satire is not meant to suggest that Arina Petrovna’s might reflect a common attitude. It serves only to highlight the inherent tendencies in supplication and its desanctifying potentials. By the by, her application to a far away icon of world wide fame instead of to a local icon nearby tells a lot about the competitive hierarchy that holds between places of grace which translates into the branding of efficacy and the emergence of a system of exchange values on the market of miracles. |
29 | As in the case of the resurrection of a child on 15 August 1710 (Przesławna gora [1787] 1801). |
30 | Several of the reports on the early healing miracles at Pidkamin’ describe this procedure with the prefabricated formula “ofiarował się do Obrázu Naświętszey Pánny mieyscá Podkamienieckiego” [‘he offered to the Image of the most holy Lady at Pidkamin’’]. When the healing was granted and health fully recovered, the supplicant would set out to Pidkamin’ in person (“y nieco po chrobie wypocząwszy reddendi voti causa był w Podkamieniu”, Okolski 1648, fol. 27v). |
31 | A desire for the physical representation of miraculous powers and their visible manifestation can also be gleaned from the common practice of adorning miraculous images with gold or silver frames, studding them with precious stones, and the like, as well as hanging votive tablets around them. These practices were common all over Catholic Europe and the Roman and Greek Catholics of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth did definitely not lag behind this common trend. For Roman Catholic Poland see Kruk (2011, pp. 214–17, 245–58). Among the Greek Catholic places of grace Počajiv and Pidhirci stand out for their wealth and abundance of the votive tablets they were adorned with. This basically Catholic practice became also quite popular among the remaining Orthodox communities (Senyk 1984, pp. 263–64). It goes without saying that the number of votive tablets accumulated served also as visible evidence of the efficacy of the image in question and would raise its esteem and value among pilgrims. |
32 | On coronations of miraculous icons as a key hierotopic element of Greek Catholic efforts to stage the sacred foundations of state and society, see Levyc’ka (2017–18) and Wereda (2018). The coronation of miraculous images came to be a common practice under Pope Urban III from 1630 onwards. It was in the beginning restricted to Italy, especially Rome, and spread abroad with the coronation of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa on 8 September 1717. Only those miraculous images that could be shown to be ancient, which preferentially implied a Greek (Byzantine) origin, were eligible for coronation. Cf. Kruk (2011, pp. 241–45) and Levyc’ka (2017–18, pp. 272–73). Among the images that constitute the Greek Catholic geography of grace, the following were coronated in the 18th century: Žyrovyči (Basilian, 1726/1730), Pidkamin’ (Dominican, 15 VIII 1727), Bucniv (Basilian, 1738), L’viv (Dominican, 1751), Berdyčiv (Carmelite, 16 VII 1753), Cholm (Basilian, 1765), Počajiv (Basilian, 8 IX 1773). The inclusion of the Roman Catholic sites Pidkamin’ and Berdyčiv into the Greek Catholic geography of grace can be additionally gleaned from the fact that the coronation celebrations at both sites were designed as ecumenical (including Roman, Greek and Armenian Catholics) (Levyc’ka 2017–18, p. 277). |
33 | We are not suggesting here, though, that the 1656 Lwów Oath (śluby Jana Kazimierza), when the Polish king Jan Kazimierz declared the Mother of God Queen of Poland, served as a direct source of inspiration for the coronation procedures of the 18th century, making it thus a prerequisite for this later practice. Although the metaphorical link is quite obvious, a direct causal link between the Oath and later coronations would still have to be made evident by further research into the matter. There is, by the way, little direct evidence that the idea of the Mother of God as the Queen of Poland was actually extended to the Lithuanian part of the Commonwealth. See Niendorf (2010, p. 158), who cites at least one contemporary source in support of this assumption. |
34 | An impressive example of this kind of commemorative volume is Trześniewski (1767). |
35 | The ambitions of Počajiv were not restricted to the immediate regional level, but aspired to catch up with the famous Kievan Cave monastery, with which it came to share the honorary title of lavra (Trajdos 1984, p. 134). |
36 | See Nastalska-Wiśnicka (2015) for an overview of text genres associated with Marian sanctuaries in 16th–18th century Poland. |
37 | |
38 | Especially the famous song in praise of the Mother of God at Pidkamin’ Prečistaja děvo, mati ruskago kraju has been repeatedly used as a model for songs in praise of images at other places (Počajiv, Tyvriv, Chotyn). Likewise the songs in praise of the miraculous image of Vicyn Děvo mati preblagaja, tys’ carice nebesnaja (>Počajiv, Kiev, Povča) and the miraculous image of Sambir Divna tvoja tajna, čistaja, javisja (>Bar, Povča) were appropriated and remodeled for the sake of other places of grace. |
39 | In fact, the majority of icon songs in the Bogoglasnik of Počajiv (BG 2016, nos. 110–11, 114–25) are identified as being authored by Basilian monks (твoрение инoка чину С. Василїа В. or Dzieło zakonnika Bazyliana). In some cases explicit reference to the Basilian order within the song points to a Basilian authorship (e.g., in the 5th stanza of the song in praise of the icon of Jatwiesk, cf. Stern 2000, p. 648). The Polish song Drogi klejnocie naroda ruskiego in praise of the Mother of God of Vicyn was also authored by a Basilian (Al’mes 2018, p. 272). |
40 | Incipit ‘Poběditel’naja vsěm kievskaja strana’, attested in ms. ASP 233 and the Kam’jans’kyj BG of 1734 (cf. Medvedyk 1999, pp. 72–73). |
41 | |
42 | Transcarpathia: (1) Klokočev—(2) Krasnyj Brod—(3) Povča. Ciscarpathia: Kuty (4). Galicia: (5) Hošiv—(6) Kam’janka-Strumylova—(7) Pan’kivci—(8) Pidhirci—(9) Pidkamin’—(10) (Novyj) Sambir—(11) Ulaškivci—(12) Zarvanycja—(13) Benevo—(14) Tartakiv. Volhynia: (15) Krystynopil’—(16) Piddubci—(17) Počajiv—(18) Zymne—(19) Radechiv. Podolia: (20) Bucniv—(21) Jarka—(22) Kam’janec’-Podil’s’kyj—(23) Nastašiv—(24) Ternopil’—(25) Tyvriv—(26) Lysovci. Žytomyr: (27) Berdyčiv—(28) Prjaživ—(29) Tryhory. Černihiv: (30) Lin’kiv—(31) Tupyčiv. Bukovina: (32) Chotyn—(33) Terebovlja. Podlachia: (34) Dalešiv—(35) Jatwiesk—(36) Žyrovyči. Mohyliv: (37) Bar. Peremyšlja: (38) Peremyšlja—(39) Vicyn. |
43 | On the face of it, the language choice would be suggestive of an ongoing language shift from Ruthenian to Polish among the local population. However, none of the places in question is likely to have undergone a majority shift to Polish. Galicia: (1) Bilostok—(2) Bil’šivci. Volhynia: (3) Puhinki—(4) Zahoriv. Podolia: (5) Krem’janec’—(6) Zahajci. Polissia: (7) Jurewicze. Language choice might perhaps rather reflect the linguistic preferences within the ranks of the Basilian order, which has long been known for increasing Polonizing tendencies. There are several places (Počajiv, Pidkamin’ and Zarvanycja) for which songs in both languages have been composed. Given the supraregional fame of these places of grace, bilingual usage can best be explained as an effort to cater for the needs of pilgrims from all over the Commonwealth. We are quite confident that our count comes quite close to the actual number of images for which songs have ever been composed, but an extended search that would include a larger number of the countless manuscript collections of Ruthenian devotional songs might reveal yet a few more items of less widely circulated songs in praise of other miraculous images. |
44 | For Počajiv an impressive number of 11 different songs could be identified: (1) Witay cudowna matko w Poczaiowie, (2) K tebě, božija mati, priběgaem, Obremenenni grěchami vzyvaem, (3) Mnogimi usty glasi ispusti, (4) Veselo spěvajte, vsi čelom udarjajte pred Matkoju Christovoju (cesarevoju), (5) Vselennyja vsja strany, zemljane, (6) Děvo mati preblagaja, Tys’ carice nebesnaja, (7) Prečistaja děvo mati v Volynskom kraju, (8) Nyně proslavitsja Počaevska skala, (9) Zlatozarnye zori počavskie, (10) Izyjděte dvory so sobory, (11) Pasli pastyri ovci na gorě. |
45 | Basilian places of grace honoured in songs are: Bar (former Dominican monastery), Bilostok, Bucniv, Dalešiv, Hošiv, Jatwiesk, Krasnyj Brod, Krem’janec’, Krystynopil’, Piddubci, Pidhirci, Počajiv, Puhinki, Pušni, Tryhory, Ulaškivci, Vicyn, Zahajci, Zahoriv, Zarvanycja, Zymne—Dominican places: Pidkamin’, Tyvriv—Carmelite places: Berdyčiv—Jesuit places: Nastašiv. |
46 | In a similar vein, Ščurat (1908a, p. 48) argues that the icon songs in praise of diverse Basilian Marian places of grace were commissioned for the edition of the Bogoglasnik. See also Medvedyk (2006, pp. 26–27). |
47 | This seems to be true of the song in praise of the Mother of God at the Dominican monastery at L’viv Izyjděte dščery ierusalimskija (ms. Maslov 54, Hnatjuk 2000, pp. 197–98), which mentions the coronation as an ongoing event happening simultaneously to the singing of the song (dnes’ ukoronovana). Cf. also the small brochure for the coronation of the icon of Počajiv 1773 (Medvedyk 2000a), which contains a number of songs in praise of the icon that are attested in this very brochure for the first time and may therefore be assumed to have been specifically composed for the compilation of the brochure, i.e., for the coronation feast itself. |
48 | |
49 | The earliest booklet of this kind appeared in 1734 in honour of the icon of Rohizno, which in that very same year had manifested her miraculous powers (Medvedyk 1999, p. 76; Medvedyk 2001, p. 92). The most prominent of this kind of occasional print brochures is certainly the Gora počajevskaja stopoju i obrazom čudotvornym Presvjatoj Děvy Bogorodicy počtenna published in 1742, and then again in 1755, 1772 and 1793. Around 1772–73 appeared a small print edition of songs and prayers on the occasion of the coronation of that same icon (for an edition see Medvedyk 2000a). A polish language volume in praise of the same icon, that contained one Ruthenian icon song, was published in 1765, and again in 1778 (Kasparowicz 1765). A small print edition of songs in praise of the miraculous icon at the Dominican monastery at L’viv was published on the occasion of the icon’s coronation in 1751 (Pieśni o Nayświętszey Maryi Pannie w Cudotwornym Obrazie Lwowskim; cf. Medvedyk 2006, pp. 120–21). The commemorative volume Obrona Polskiey korony ot granic Ukrainskich (1760) in praise of the miraculous image of Berdyčiv contains one Ruthenian icon song, which, however, with one exception never found its way into manuscript song collections (Medvedyk 2006, pp. 131–32). This volume was later on significantly enlarged by Trześniewski (1767). |
50 | For instance, the selection of Maslov 45 (cf. Medvedyk 2000b) offers a representative choice of all major Ruthenian regions: Pidkamin’ (Galicia), Počajiv (Volhynia), Vicyn (Peremyšlja), Lin’kiv (Černihivščyna), Bzov and Rudnja (Kyjivščyna). In contrast to this, the Ivanovce song manuscript (cf. Javorskij 1934, pp. 111–27) has a more narrowly defined regional profile, with a clear focus on Galicia: Pidkamin’, Sambir, Zarvanycja, Kam’janka-Strumylova (all Galicia), Počajiv (Volhynia), Bar (Podolia), Povča (Transcarpathia). |
51 | An analysis of 86 manuscript collections of Ruthenian devotional songs from the 18th–19th c. yielded the following list for Marian sites being included in more than 5 manuscripts: Pidkamin’ (44 mss.), Počajiv (33), Sambir (29), Bar (24), Kam’janka-Strumylova (20), Zarvanycja (13), Povča (10), Vicyn (9), Lin’kiv (8). |
52 | Žyrovyči in 1727 and Cholm in 1765. |
53 | |
54 | A fine example of this is the song in praise of the Mother of God at Počajiv Veselo spěvajte, čelom udarjajte (BG 2016, no. 112) that offers a doxological narrative in verse of the Ottoman siege of the larger region in 1675. In the lines Vъ časъ Zbaražskoj vojny bjachu nespokojny/Grady vsja ot běsurmanovъ the idea of the Ottoman frontier as a chain of towns forming the Antemurale Christianitatis is neatly evoked. |
55 | The song in praise of the Mother of God at Počajiv Nyně proslavi sja Počajevska skala (BG 2016, no. 116) capitalizes on the healing powers of the image by reporting on the regional epidemic (mor) of 1770. It lists stanza by stanza the places that were afflicted and granted deliverance from the plague by the icon of Počajiv. By listing these places the author seems to rely on a common cognizance shared by his addressees of which localities are most intimately linked to Počajiv as its spiritual point of reference and thus constitute a geography of grace, which the author construes as a space of shared embodied experience, in contrast to the largely disembodied administrative and political conceptions of space that predominate in other icon songs. |
56 | Tyvriv (BG 2016, no. 128: Soglasno krikněte, christiane sja sniděte, so liky, timpany, ot vseja strany ‘Call out in harmony, join in, Christians from all countries, with the choirs and the tympana’), Novyj Sambir (Ščurat 1908b, p. 183: Dneś wo wsia strany uże razsianny/Ko tebi Maty! od siudu wołaiem ‘Today all countries which are spread over the world call to you from all directions’). |
57 | This Počajevan partisanship is countered by two songs having been authored by one Andrzej Jakubiński in october 1770, who gives credit to the miraculous image of Sambir for having ultimately saved the region from the same epidemic (Ščurat 1908b, pp. 181–85). |
58 | The rule of silence, which we saw being applied internally to competing places of grace of one’s own confessional domain, was with even greater naturalness applied to the great competitor in the field, the Orthodox church which in the places, where it still remained, could often boast miraculous images of centuries-old tradition. Greek Catholic songs would attempt to obliterate these from the consciousness of the Greek Catholic pilgrims. In the case of Zymne the Basilian monks actively promoted the cult of their recently introduced miraculous image by means of an icon song (BG 2016, no. 125) in order to outshine its much older and more dignified counterpart at the nearby Orthodox monastery (Lužnyc’kyj 1984, p. 167). By perfidiously ignoring the existence of the latter it seems as if the Basilian monks hoped for their own new miraculous image to profit from the fame of the latter through the confusion of both by the unsuspecting pilgrim. |
59 | See Trajdos’ (1984, p. 131) assessment of Marian worship among the Orthodox faithful ever since the Polish–Lithuanian Union of 1386 and the subsequent catholization of almost the entire political class of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Where up to this point the Ruthenian lands partook in the expanding common East-Slavic cult of palladium icons as symbols of the union of the sacred and the political power, which typically were located at the centers of political power (Kiev, Černihiv, Smolensk, Wolodymir Volyns’kyj, Luc’k, etc.), the loss of the political power of Orthodoxy brought the establishment of new Marian places of grace to a sudden halt. The appearance of the Greek Catholic Basilians with their strong emphasis on Marian devotion in the 17th and 18th century could thus capitalize on the general decline of Orthodox culture by filling in the gap left by centuries of lethargy to set up an entirely remodeled geography of grace for their flock, which focussed more on the as yet Ruthenian speaking countryside than on the heavily polonized and catholicized towns and cities. |
60 | If we apply the imagery of the religious marketplace, as did Mahieu and Naumescu (2008, pp. 14–16) with respect to the present situation of the Uniate Church, to the 17th–18th centuries, there was in fact not much of a market place offering free choices to the individual believer. Yet, the steps taken by the Uniates in promoting Marian devotion clearly bespeak a strategy applicable in a situation of open competition. Uniate competitive behabviour does, in fact, not directly address a competitor, but is directed at the believers’ competing loyalties that oscillate between whole-heartedly accepting the legally imposed Church Union and sticking to the tradition of defeated Orthodoxy. |
61 | Jakovenko (2011–14, p. 809) aptly calls this ‘territorial correctness’. |
62 | See among others the often repeated remark in Barącz (1891) that the image being described is being visited by all confessions alike. See also Jakovenko (2011–14, pp. 818–19). |
63 | Writing over the traditional Orthodox map of grace smacks of cultural domination, and, as a matter of fact, Uniates, in particular Basilian monks in their efforts to follow the Jesuit model of confessional cultural re-education significantly contributed to an active policy of Western, i.e., Catholic reorganization and domination of the Orthodox cultural sphere. Yet, Uniate action lacked the open assertiveness of their Roman Catholic models so much so that the notion of dominance does not impose itself rightaway on the observer. It seems that, shunning any form of open confrontation on the discourse level of e.g., confessional polemics, Uniates were forced to resort to positive action, in which they took great care not to incur the accusation of encroachment (v. above on the Uniate policy of ‘territorial correctness’). This restrained self-assertion may be taken as a symptomatic feature of the Uniates’ role as a “bridge between two cultural spheres“ (Mahieu and Naumescu 2008, p. 2). |
64 | This again is a variation of the topos of the Blacherniotissa. The Marian visions reported for Počajiv (1675) and Terebovlja (1673) reflect in a more direct manner its Constantinopolitan prototype. |
65 | According to the folk ideological notion of ensomatosis (Kretzenbacher 1977, p. 7), wounds inflicted to miraculous images are true physical wounds, which ought to be bleeding, accordingly. |
66 | The ultimate model for this specific topos of the injured image which resists attempts at repair, is the Black Madonna of Częstochowa. The interpretation as stigmata that testify to the act of redemption through sacrifice and suffering can be gleaned from Rotter (1756): “To dziw u wszystkich sprawuje Przecudowna Matka, że ran zostawionych na Twojej twarzy, żaden sposób ludzki zgładzić nie może. Darmo do tego końca i największej doskonałości malarze w farbach moczą. Ale domyślam się, dlatego chcesz je mieć niezgładzone {…}, abyś dała znak jawny niewygasłej ku nam miłości Twojej, dla której tak ciężkie przepuściłaś sobie rany” (‘This miracle professed the miraculous Mother in the presence of all, that the wounds inflicted on Your face, cannot be removed by any human art. To this end even the most artful painters apply their colours in vain. But I surmise that it is for this reason that you refuse to have your wounds removed {…} that you might give a visible sign of your inextinguishable love to us, for which you suffered to have these heavy wounds inflicted upon you.’). See also Kretzenbacher (1977, pp. 50–52). |
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Stern, D. The Making of a Marian Geography of Grace for Greek Catholics in the Polish Crownlands of the 17th–18th Centuries. Religions 2021, 12, 446. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060446
Stern D. The Making of a Marian Geography of Grace for Greek Catholics in the Polish Crownlands of the 17th–18th Centuries. Religions. 2021; 12(6):446. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060446
Chicago/Turabian StyleStern, Dieter. 2021. "The Making of a Marian Geography of Grace for Greek Catholics in the Polish Crownlands of the 17th–18th Centuries" Religions 12, no. 6: 446. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060446
APA StyleStern, D. (2021). The Making of a Marian Geography of Grace for Greek Catholics in the Polish Crownlands of the 17th–18th Centuries. Religions, 12(6), 446. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060446