Nikolai Pavlovich Raev | |
Term Start: | 30 August 1916 |
Term End: | 3 March 1917 |
Birth Date: | 30 October 1855 |
Awards: | Order of St. Vladimir 3rd classOrder of St. Vladimir 2nd classOrder of St. Anna 2nd classOrder of St. Anna 1st class Order of Saint Stanislaus 1st class |
Nikolai Pavlovich Raev (Russian: Николай Павлович Раев;, Nizhny Novgorod – 26 February 1919, Armavir) was a Russian state and public figure and teacher. Active State Councillor (1896). The last Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod in the Russian Empire (from August 30, 1916 – until the fall of the monarchy in March 1917).[1]
He was born on October 18, 1855, in the family of archpriest Pavel Ivanovich Raev. In 1861 his father took monastic orders with the name of Palladium. In 1892–1898 Palladium was Metropolitan of St. Petersburg and Ladoga and the first member of the Holy Synod.[2] He graduated from the gymnasium and in 1878, special classes of the Lazarev Institute of Oriental Languages.
On January 1, 1879, he was appointed to serve in the Moscow branch office with the rank of provincial secretary.
From September 1894, he served under the minister of National Education as an official for special assignments.
Raev received the rank of a state councilor on January 1, 1896, and was appointed a member of the Council of the Minister of Education on October 12, 1905.
On December 3, 1905, on his initiative, private higher women's courses of N. P. Raev, which were officially called "History and Literary and Legal Women's Courses".[3] From 1906, the courses were called "St. Petersburg Free University of Women". Turned the courses into one of the best private women's universities, having selected an outstanding staff of teachers; among them – M.V. Bernatsky, V.D. Kuzmin-Karavaev, N.O. Lossky, I. Kh. Ozerov, L.I. Petrazhitsky, M.A. Reisner, S.V. Rozhdestvensky, S. M Seredonin, P.B. Struve, Baron M. Taube, S.L. Frank. For students of the Jewish faith, he achieved the right to live in the capital, and for all graduates in 1913 – equal to the graduates of universities the right to teach in the senior classes of female gymnasiums.[2] Raev remained the director of the St. Petersburg Free University until August 30, 1916. The university itself existed until 1917.
Raev was dismissed from the post of Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod on August 7, 1916, by A.N. Volzhin (with appointment to the State Council),[4] against which the Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna was set up. By decree to the Senate of the government on August 30 of the same year Raev was appointed to this post,[5] who had a reputation as a Rasputin: he maintained personal relations with Grigori Rasputin and even visited him.[6]
Protopresbyter of the army and navy Georgy Shavelsky in his posthumously published memoirs claimed:[7]
Shavelsky also noted that Raev had an ordinary mind and did not show much knowledge. In addition, the appearance of the new chief procurator was very comical: a bright, black-colored wig, painted with the same color mustache and beard, bruised cheeks and lacquered shoes: "He gave the impression of a youthful old man of indecent tone," "in the Synod, Raev was colorless, outside the Synod <...> ridiculous".[8]
September 15, 1916 the highest decree to fulfill the post of comrade of the chief prosecutor was appointed Prince N.D. Zhevakhov, he also had a reputation as a "Rasputin" and friend of Metropolitan Pitirim of Petrograd.[9]
On February 27, 1917, when in Petrograd the troops of the Moscow garrison crossed over to the side of the rebels, Raev, like the comrade of the chief procurator, Prince Zhevakhov, proposed to the Synod to publicly condemn the revolutionary movement, but this proposal was not supported by the members of the Synod.[10]
After the fall of the monarchy in March 1917, he was dismissed on March 3. He was interrogated by the Extraordinary Investigation Commission of the Provisional Government, but was not arrested.
Under the Provisional Government, the cases of the Bezrodnovs and Baryatinskys began to be examined, as a result of which an investigation was opened against the former chief prosecutor, but he left for the Caucasus, and the October Revolution led to the liquidation of the investigative body of the provisional government.[9]
He lived in the North Caucasus under the former Petrograd Metropolitan Pitirim (Oknov).