The
text which follows is my Introduction to the Christou Collection which will be
sold at Heinrich Koehler, Wiesbaden,in June 2020 as Lots 507 - 643. To view
the Lots go to
https://www.heinrich-koehler.de/en/373rd-heinrich-k%C3%B6hler-auction?f%5B0%5D=field_catalogue_part%3A3802&f%5B1%5D=field_catalogue_part%3A3473&f%5B2%5D=field_item_type%3Asingle
https://www.heinrich-koehler.de/en/373rd-heinrich-k%C3%B6hler-auction?f%5B0%5D=field_catalogue_part%3A3802&f%5B1%5D=field_catalogue_part%3A3473&f%5B2%5D=field_item_type%3Asingle
There has been a
Russian Orthodox religious presence on Mont Athos for a thousand years, of
which the great monastery of St Panteleimon was and remains the centre. But in
the nineteenth century, especially from the 1840s onwards, successive Tsarist
governments supported financially and diplomatically the creation and expansion
of newer institutions, technically inferior to monasteries but in practice
coming to exceed in the size of their estates and the number of monks they
housed the old ruling monasteries. Three institutions stand out: the Skete [ monastic community] of the Prophet Elijah (Ilinski Sikt), a dependency of the Greek Orthodox monastery of
Pantokrator but housing first Ukrainian and then Russian monks; the Kellion [cell] of St John Chrysostomom (Ioanna Zlatousta), a dependency of the Serbian Orthodox monastery
of Hilandar; and the Skete of St Andrew
(Andreeveski Sikt and sometimes
called Serail), a dependency of the
Greek Orthodox monastery of Vatopedi.
Until 1912, Mont Athos
was part of the Ottoman Empire with a Turkish governor in residence and Ottoman
customs, immigration and postal agencies located in the port of Daphne and the
small administrative town of Karyes. In addition, and as elsewhere in the Levant,
the Russian company ROPiT maintained a shipping agency and a post office on
Athos with significant autonomy from Turkish control. For example, mail from
Russia could travel by ROPiT ship from Odessa direct to Athos and be distributed
to the Russian communities by Russian postal officials. But Russian mail could
also be transferred to the Ottoman system in Constantinople for onward
transmission, and some was.
Spiritual authority over the monasteries rested (and
still rests) with the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. When secular
authority over Athos passed to Greece in 1912, the spiritual arrangements
remained unchanged.
From 1912 on, the
Russian Orthodox communities suffered a succession of blows from which they did
not recover.
First, in 1913 the Imperial Russian government
responded to perceived heretical tendencies among the monastic communities by
sending in gunboats and troops and, after violet clashes, forcibly deporting
about eight hundred monks who were returned to Russia, tried, defrocked and
internally exiled. The number of monks was thereby reduced by somewhere between
a third and a half.
Second, the First World
War led to a reduction in contacts and financing from Russia.
Third, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 cut the remaining contacts almost to nil.
Third, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 cut the remaining contacts almost to nil.
The Russian communities
went into long term decline and by the 1960s the few remaining elderly monks
were completely unable to maintain the vast properties which they occupied. The
significant library of the Andreevski Skete was destroyed by fire in 1958; the
last monk there died in 1971 and the
Andreevski estate reverted to the Greek monastery of Vatopedi. Even though it
was re-occupied by Greek monks in the 1990s, modern photographs show the
skete’s original pharmacy, candle factory and photographic studio untouched
except by the mice and the weather.
As
recently as 2017, online photographs of the Kellion of St John show a ruined
building with administrative offices from which furniture has been removed but
where the paperwork has been left in heaps to rot on the floors.
At some point in the
1970s, in an attempt to raise funds, monks on Mont Athos packed up old and
unwanted administrative papers into suitcases and travelled to Thessaloniki and
elsewhere attempting to sell them to collectors and dealers. They had only
limited success and most of the old paperwork was left to rot (as shown by the
St John photographs already mentioned) or was used for fire lighting in
communities which still had no access to electricity.
Just one collector
appears to have taken a serious interest in what the monks were offering, the
late Stavros Christou, and it is his collection of Athos-related material which
is offered in this sale. The collection includes material from many other sources,
but at its core is what was offered to Mr Christou in the 1970s. It is
dominated by material from the period 1840s - 1913 which was the hey-day of Russian
monasticism on Mont Athos when ships arrived almost daily, mail came in
sackfuls, and goods needed by the monastic communities arrived not only from
Odessa but from suppliers across Russia.
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