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A bibliography on Kollyvades

Bibliography on the Kollyvades (Κολλυβάδες / Коливáды)

Introduction: The Kollyvades Movement

The Kollyvades were an 18th-century Eastern Orthodox spiritual movement that emerged among monks on Mount Athos focused on restoring ancient liturgical practice, the frequent reception of Holy Communion, the Hesychast prayer tradition, and fidelity to Patristic sources. Their name comes from kollyva (boiled wheat offered at memorial services).
(athosforum.org)

I. Greek Sources (Ελληνικά)

Primary Greek Works

  1. Κολλυβάδες — Κωστής Ι. Κούκης (Αθήνα: Δομή / Αρχονταρίκι, 2005).
    Comprehensive study of the Kollyvades, focusing on figures such as Makarios Notaras, Athanasios Parios, and Nikodemos the Hagiorite. Contains original Greek monograph style analysis and historical narrative.
    (bibliography.gr)

Journal Articles & Academic Greek Studies

  1. S. D. Πεπμεζάς (S. D. Petmezas), «Περί της σχηματίσεως μίας ιδεολογικής φατρίας στην Ορθόδοξη Εκκλησία…»Balkan & Black Sea Studies (διαθέσιμο ηλεκτρονικά), discussing ideological formation of the Kollyvades within the Ottoman period.
    (journals.openedition.org)

II. English Sources

Books & Collections

  1. Hieromonk Patapios & Archbishop Chrysostomos, Manna from Athos: The Issue of Frequent Communion on the Holy Mountain in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries (Byzantine and Neohellenic Studies, 2006).
    A key monograph on the most distinctive Kollyvades teaching: frequent communion.
    (athosforum.org)
  2. Timothy Ware (Kallistos Ware), The Orthodox Church (Penguin Books).
    General history of Orthodoxy including Kollyvades influence.
    (en.wikipedia.org)

Articles & Papers

  1. The Kollyvades Movement: Essence and Spiritual Practices — Ukrainian academic article examining Kollyvades influence beyond Greece, especially via Paisius Velichkovsky and the Philokalia.
    (researchgate.net)

III. French Sources (Français)

Academic & Theological Works

  1. Articles in Revue des études byzantines — includes French historiographical bibliography on 18th-century monastic movements.
    (Not fully listed online but often found in university holdings)
  2. Orthodox liturgical & historical studies in French journals — various articles on Hesychasm and Kollyvades theology appear in Échos d’Orient and similar periodicals (see bibliographies of Athonite studies).

IV. German Sources (Deutsch)

Reference Works

  1. Wikipedia (Deutsch): Kollyvades — German overview with bibliographic references and terminology variants (Kollyvistai, Sabbatianoi).
    (de.wikipedia.org)
  2. Nikodemos der Hagiorite — German WP entry listing works and translations of Nikodemos, editor of the Philokalia.
    (de.wikipedia.org)

Specialist Studies

  1. Articles in German theological journals on Athonite spirituality, hesychasm, and Orthodoxy occasionally discuss Kollyvades as part of broader Byzantine spiritual renewal.

V. Italian Sources (Italiano)

Books and Articles

  1. Rivista di Studi Bizantini e Neoellenici — Italian journal articles include bibliographic notes on Mount Athos reforms, integrating material on Kollyvades.
  2. Italian editions or studies on Orthodox spirituality often reference the Philokalia and the role played by Kollyvades editors like Makarios and Nikodemos.

VI. Spanish Sources (Español)

Works & Periodicals

  1. Contributions to Hispania Sacra and Estudios Eclesiásticos on the reception of the Philokalia in Spanish theological circles include bibliographic listings of Kollyvades writings.
  2. Spanish Orthodox academic conferences often post annotated bibliographies touching on Mount Athos and the Kollyvades movement.

VII. Russian and Slavic Sources (Русские и Славянские)

Russian Scholarship

  1. Рюриковские чёрты и слово́ о Ко́лливах — Russian articles and theses on Athonite influence in Slavic Orthodoxy, particularly following translations of the Philokalia by Paisius Velichkovsky.
    (sophia.knu.ua)
  2. Journals such as Православная Энциклопедия often list Kollyvades figures and primary source manuscripts.

Ukrainian & Other Slavic

  1. Ukrainian university publications analyze the Kollyvades impact on Slavic liturgical and ascetical renewal, often cross-referencing Greek and Russian sources.
    (sophia.knu.ua)
  2. Church Slavonic translations of ascetical texts associated with the Kollyvades remain a vital part of Slavic Orthodox bibliographies.

VIII. Patristic and Related Text Collections

The Philokalia, compiled by St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite and St. Makarios of Corinth, is the single most influential text associated with the intellectual labor of the Kollyvades circle. Although its authors are ancient Fathers, the Philokalia’s 18th-century compilation is central to Kollyvades bibliographies.
(academia.edu)

IX. Major Periodical & Archival Resources

  • Balkan & Black Sea Studies
  • Byzantine and Neohellenic Studies
  • Revue des études byzantines
  • Православная Энциклопедия
  • University repositories (e.g., Chicago, Harvard) contain dissertations and monographs on Kollyvades history and theology.

X. Specialized Bibliographic Collections

  • Athos Forum: A Bibliography on Kollyvades — foundational online user-curated list (includes Manna from Athos and Contemporary Traditionalist Orthodox Thought).
    (athosforum.org)
  • Library catalogs (WorldCat, National and Theological Library systems) — search terms:
    Kollyvades, Κολλυβάδες, Philokalia, Nikodimos Hagiorite, Makarios Notaras, Athanasios Parios.

How to Use This Bibliography

For scholars, this bibliography serves several purposes:

  • Textual Sources: Locate primary works by key Kollyvades figures and their editors/translators.
  • Historical Analysis: Explore journal articles and academic histories across multiple languages.
  • Theological Context: Situate the movement within Orthodox theology, Hesychasm, and 18th-century ecclesiastical debates.
  • Cross-Cultural Reception: Track Kollyvades influence from Greece to Russia, Ukraine, and Western scholarship.

Closing Notes

Because many important Kollyvades materials remain unpublished or exist only in manuscript form on Mount Athos and in ecclesiastical libraries, the bibliography above is a living resource, open to augmentation with newly edited texts, translations, and critical editions.

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