(Redirected from Antoniev Siysky Monastery)
Antoniev Siysky Monastery is located on a cape of the Great Mikhailovo Lake.
'Antonievo-Siysky Monastery' (''Антониев-Сийский монастырь'' in
Russian) was founded by Saint Anthony of Siya deep in the woods, 90 km to the south of
Kholmogory, in
1520.
Following the saint's death, the monastery grew on the salt trade with
Western Europe and developed into one of the foremost centres of
Christianity in the
Russian North.
Ivan the Terrible and his son
Feodor granted it important privileges and much land. By
1579, the monastery owned 50
versts of ploughlands stretching towards
Kargopol.

Illustration from the Siysky Gospel (1339).
In
1599,
Boris Godunov exiled his political opponent
Feodor Romanov to this remote monastery. While many of his relatives were starved to death in other cloisters, Feodor took monastic vows and rised to the dignity of
hegumen. Later he became the
Patriarch of Moscow, and his son
Mikhail established the
Romanov dynasty of Russian tsars.
In the
17th century, the monastery continued to prosper. The large Trinity cathedral was constructed over the years 1587-1608. The
tent-like church and refectory were completed by
1644, and the belfry was added in
1652. The monastic library was one of the richest in
Russia and included such books as the Siysky Gospel from
1339 and the 16th-century album of 500 Western religious
etchings adapted to Eastern Orthodox canonical requirements. Its treasury was famed for its collection of medieval jewelry. In
1764, the monastery owned more than 3,300 male peasants.
In
1923, the monastery was disbanded. Both library and treasury were taken to
Moscow or
Arkhangelsk. The medieval buildings were used as a
sanatorium and a
kolkhoz. The monks were readmitted to the cloister in
1992 and immediately started emergency repair works.
External link
★
Monastery webpage