L'icône de la Mère de Dieu "VERBE TU T'ES FAIT CHAIR" ("SLOVO PLOT BYST") ou "D'ALABAZINE" ("ALBAZINSKAÏA") (1666). (Albazine
est une ville de l'Extrême-Orient russe, sur l'Amour, dont les
habitants sont à l'origine de la présence orthodoxe en Chine.)
The
Albazin Icon of the Mother of God "the Word made Flesh" is of great
religious significance in the Amur River region. It received its name
from the Russian fortress of Albazin (now the village of Albazino) along
the Amur river, founded in the year 1650 by the famous Russian frontier
ataman Hierotheus Khabarov on the site of a settlement of the Daurian
prince Albaza.
The hue and cry over the Amur Albazinsk fortress
became an object of enmity for the Chinese emperor and his generals, who
then already dreamed of expanding their influence over all of Russian
Siberia.
On the eve of the Feast of the Annunciation, on March
24, 1652, the first military clash of the Russians with the Chinese
occurred at the Amur. Through the prayers of the Most Holy Theotokos the
pagans were scattered and
fled to their own territory. This victory seemed like a portent for the
Russians. But the struggle had only just begun. Many sons of Holy Russia
died in the struggle for the Amur, and for the triumph of Orthodoxy in
the Far East.
In June of 1658 an Albazin military detachment,
270 Cossacks under the leadership of Onuphrius Stepanov, fell into an
ambush and in a heroic fight they were completely annihilated by the
Chinese.
The enemy burned Albazin, overran Russian lands, and
carried off the local population into China. They wanted to turn the
fertile cultivated area back into wilderness.
During these
difficult years the Most Holy Theotokos showed signs of Her mercy to the
land of Amur. In 1665, when Russians returned and rebuilt Albazin,
together with a priest there came to the Amur the Elder Hermogenes from
the Kirensk Holy Trinity monastery. He carried with him a wonderworking
icon of the Mother of God "the Word
made Flesh", called the Albazinsk Icon since that time. In 1671 the holy
Elder built a small monastery on the boundary mark of the Brusyan Stone
(one and a half kilometers from Albazin near the Amur), where the holy
icon was later kept.
Albazin was built up. At two churches in
the city, the Ascension of the Lord and St Nicholas the Wonderworker,
Albazin priests offered the Bloodless Sacrifice. Not far from the city
(along the Amur) another monastery was built, the Spassky. The fertile
soil produced bread for Eastern Siberia. The local populace adapted
itself to Russian Orthodox culture, peacefully entering into the
multi-national Russian state, and found Russian protection from the
plundering raids of Chinese feudal war-lords.
At Moscow they did
not forget the needs of the far-away Amur frontier. They strengthened
military defenses and improved regional government. In 1682 the Albazin
Military-Provincial Government was formed.
They concerned themselves about the spiritual nourishment of the Amur
region peoples. A local Council of the Russian Church in 1681 adopted a
resolution to send "archimandrites, igumens, or priests, both learned
and good, to enlighten unbelievers with the law of Christ." The Daurian
and Tungusian peoples as a whole accepted Holy Baptism. Of great
significance was the conversion of the Daurian prince Hantimur (renamed
Peter) and his eldest son Katana (renamed Paul) to Orthodoxy.
The
servants of the Chinese emperor planned for a new attack. After several
unsuccessful forays, on July 10, 1685, they marched against Albazin
with an army of 15,000 and encircled the fortress. In it were 450
Russian soldiers and three cannon. The first assault was repulsed. The
Chinese then from all sides piled up firewood and kindling against the
wooden walls of the fortress and set it on fire. Further resistance
proved impossible. With its military standards and
holy things, among which was the wonderworking Albazin Icon, the
soldiers abandoned the fortress.
The Mother of God did not
withhold Her intercession from Her chosen city. Scouts soon reported
that the Chinese suddenly began to withdraw from Albazin, ignoring the
Chinese emperor's command to destroy the crops in the Russian fields.
The miraculous intervention of the Heavenly Protectress not only drove
the enemy from Russian territories, but also preserved the grain which
sustained the city for the winter months. On August 20, 1685 Russians
were in Albazin again.
A year went by, and the fortress was
again besieged by Chinese. There began a five-month defense of Albazin,
which occupies a most honored place in Russian military history. Three
times, in July, in September, and in October, the forces of the Chinese
emperor made an assault on the wooden fortifications. A hail of fiery
arrows and red-hot cannon balls fell on the town.
Neither the city nor its defenders could be seen in the smoke and fire.
And all three times, the Mother of God defended the inhabitants of
Albazin from their fierce enemy.
Until December 1686, when the Chinese lifted the siege of Albazin, of the city's 826 defenders only 150 men remained alive.
These
forces were inadequate to continue the war against the Chinese emperor.
In August 1690 the last of the Cossacks departed from Albazin under the
leadership of Basil Smirenikov. Neither the fortress, nor its holy
things, fell into the hands of the enemy. The fortifications were razed
and leveled by the Cossacks, and the Albazin Icon of the Mother of God
was taken to Sretensk, a city on the river Shilka, which flows into the
Amur.
But even after the destruction of Albazin, God destined
its inhabitants to do another service for the good of the Church. By
divine Providence the end of the military campaign contributed to the
increase of the influence of the grace of Orthodoxy among the peoples of
the Far East. During the years of war, a company of about a hundred
Russian cossacks and peasants from Albazin and its environs were taken
captive and sent to Peking.
The Chinese emperor even gave orders
to give one of the Buddhist temples in the Chinese capital for an
Orthodox church dedicated to Sophia, the Wisdom of God. In 1695
Metropolitan Ignatius of Tobolsk sent an antimension, chrism, service
books, and church vessels to the Sophia church. In a letter to the
captive priest Maximus, "the Preacher of the Holy Gospel to the Chinese
Empire," Metropolitan Ignatius wrote: "Be not troubled, nor troubled in
soul for yourself and the captives with you, for who is able to oppose
the will of God? Your captivity is not without purpose for the Chinese
people, so that you may reveal to them the light of Christ's Orthodox
Faith."
The preaching of the Gospel in
the Chinese Empire soon bore fruit and resulted in the first baptisms of
Chinese. The Russian Church zealously looked after the new flock. In
1715 the Metropolitan of Tobolsk, St Philotheus "the Apostle to Siberia"
(+ May 31, 1727), wrote a letter to the Peking clergy and the faithful
living under the Peking Spiritual Mission, who continued with the
Christian work of enlightening pagans.
The years went by, and
the new epoch brought the Russian deliverance of the Amur. On August 1,
1850, the Procession of the Precious Wood of the Life-Giving Cross,
Captain G. I. Nevelsky raised up the Russian Andreev flag at the mouth
of the Amur River and founded the city of Nikolaevsk-on-Amur. Through
the efforts of the Governor-General of Eastern Siberia, N. N.
Muraviev-Amursky (+ 1881), and St Innocent, Archbishop of Kamchatka
(March 31), and through the spiritual nourishment which obtained in the
Amur and coastal regions, in several years the left bank
of the Amur was built up with Russian cities, villages and Cossack
settlements.
Each year brought important advances in the
development of the liberated territory, its Christian enlightenment and
welfare. In the year 1857 on the bank of the Amur fifteen way-stations
and settlements were established (the Albazin on the site of the old
fortress and the Innokentiev, named in honor of St Innocent). In a
single year, 1858, there were more than thirty settlements, among which
were three cities: Khabarovsk, Blagoveschensk and Sophiisk.
On
May 9, 1858, on the Feast of St Nicholas, N. N. Muraviev-Amursky and
Archbishop Innocent of Kamchatka arrived in the Cossack post at
Ust'-Zeisk. St Innocent was there to dedicate a temple in honor of the
Annunciation of the Mother of God (Blagoveschenie, in Slavonic), the
first building in the new city. Because of the name of the temple, the
city was also called Blagoveschensk, in memory of the first
victory over the Chinese on the Feast of the Annunciation in 1652, and
in memory of the Annunciation church at Irkutsk, in which St Innocent
began his own priestly service. It was also a sign that "from that place
proceeded the blessed news of the reintegration of the Amur region
territory under Russian sovereignty." New settlers on the way to the
Amur, journeying through Sretensk, fervently offered up their prayers to
the Holy Protectress of the Amur region before her Wonderworking
Albazin Icon. Their prayers were heard: the Aigunsk (1858) and Peking
(1860) treaties decisively secured the left bank of the Amur and coastal
regions for Russia.
In 1868 the Bishop of Kamchatka, Benjamin
Blagonravov, the successor to St Innocent, transferred the holy icon
from Sretensk to Blagoveschensk, thereby returning the famous holy icon
to the Amur territory. In 1885, a new period began in the veneration of
the Albazin Icon of the Mother of God and is
associated with the name of the Kamchatka bishop Gurias, who established
an annual commemoration on March 9 and a weekly Akathist.
In
the summer of 1900, during the "Boxer Rebellion" in China, the waves of
insurrection reached all the way to the Russian border. Chinese troops
suddenly appeared on the banks of the Amur before Blagoveschensk. For
nineteen days the enemy stood before the undefended city, raining
artillery fire down upon it, and menacing the Russian bank with
invasion.
The shallows of the Amur afforded passage to the
adversary. In the Annunciation church services were celebrated
continuously, and Akathists were read before the Wonderworking Albazin
Icon. The Protection of the Mother of God was again extended over the
city, just as it had been in earlier times. Not daring to cross the
Amur, the enemy departed from Blagoveschensk. According to the accounts
of the Chinese themselves, they often saw a Radiant Woman
over the bank of the Amur, inspiring them with fear and rendering their
missiles ineffective.
For more than 300 years the Wonderworking
Albazin Icon of the Mother of God watched over the Amur frontier of
Russia. Orthodox people venerate it not only as Protectress of Russian
soldiers, but also as a Patroness of mothers. Believers pray for mothers
before the icon during their pregnancy and during childbirth, "so that
the Mother of God might bestow the gift of abundant health from the
Albazin Icon's inexhaustible well-spring of holiness."
This icon depicts Christ as a child standing in a mandorla before His Mother's breast.
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