Patriarch Joasaphus II of Moscow explained

Patriarch Of:Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus'
Enthroned:1667
Ended:1672
Church:Russian Orthodox Church
See:Moscow
Predecessor:Patriarch Nikon of Moscow
Successor:Patriarch Pitirim of Moscow
Birth Date:1591
Death Date:11 February 1672
Buried:Moscow

Joasaph II (Russian: Иоасаф II (Новоторжец), Joasaph of Novy Torg) was Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus' from 1667 until his death five years and one day later in 1672.

Joasaph was archimandrite of the Rozhdestvenskii (Nativity) Monastery in Vladimir from 1654 to April 25, 1656, when he was named archimandrite of the Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra. In 1666, he was a member of the court that tried Patriarch Nikon and deposed him, although it also approved his reforms that had led to the Old Believer Schism.

On February 10, 1667, Joasaph was elected patriarch. He died February 11, 1672, and is buried in the Dormition Cathedral in the Moscow Kremlin.[1]

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Notes and References

  1. Makarii (Bulgakov), Istoriia russkoi tserkvi (Moscow) vol. XII, pp. 760-792.