Jump to content

Symeon Du

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
His Grace

Symeon
Bishop of Shanghai
Native name
Xi mái Du
ChurchChinese Orthodox Church
Appointed26 September 1950
PredecessorJohn (Maximovitch)
SuccessorVacant
Previous post(s)Bishop of Tianjin (1950)
Orders
Ordination16 September 1941
Consecration30 July 1950
by Alexey I (Simansky)
Personal details
Born
Du Runchen

11 February 1886
Died3 March 1965
Shanghai, People's Republic of China

Bishop Symeon (Chinese: 主敎西麥翁, born Du Runchen, Chinese: 杜潤臣, Russian name Fyodor Semyonovich Du, Russian: Фёдор Семёнович Ду; February 11, 1886 - March 3, 1965) was bishop of the Chinese Orthodox Church. He was the last Eastern Orthodox bishop of Shanghai before the abolition of the see.

Biography

[edit]

He was born on February 11, 1886, in Beijing to a family of Albazinian origin.[1] His father was a church reader. He and his family escaped miraculously during Boxer Rebellion of 1900.

From 1902, he served as psalm reader at the Church of the Presentation of the Lord at the Russian Embassy in Beijing. In 1904, he graduated from the missionary school at the Russian Orthodox Mission in Beijing and for several years served as a psalm reader and catechist in the Yung-ping-fu area (Peitaiho).

In 1908, Bishop Innocent (Figurovsky), chief of the mission, ordained him a deacon. In 1909 Bishop Innocent appointed him to serve at the mission's metochion, the Annunciation Church, in Harbin. In addition to his duties as deacon, he served as a missionary, the treasurer, and manager of the parish's office in Harbin. With the arrival of many refugee Christians from Russia in 1919, he was active in publishing Russian textbooks for the schools in Harbin.

His life as a missionary took him to many cities in China, including Shanghai, Hankou, Haimen, Kaifeng, Weihou, and Mukden, as well as to localities in Manchuria. In 1932, he was assigned to duties in Tianjin where, in 1934, he was elevated to protodeacon.

Symeon Du in 1947

On September 16, 1941, he was ordained to the priesthood and made priest-in-charge of the St. Innocent Mission Church in Tianjin. In 1943, he was elevated to archpriest and in 1945, he was awarded a "palitza".[1] In early 1950, he traveled to the Soviet Union, where he accompanied Patriarch Alexey to a conference in Tbilisi, Georgia, of the Russian Orthodox Church, Georgian Orthodox Church, and Armenian Apostolic Church.

On July 23, 1950, at Trinity-Sergius Lavra, he was tonsured a monk with name Symeon. On July 23, he was raised to archimandrite. On July 30, in the Cathedral of the Annunciation in Moscow he was consecrated Bishop of Tianjin.

On September 26, 1950, Bishop Simeon was appointed as Bishop of Shanghai.

He died on March 3, 1965, in Shanghai.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Orthodox Fellowship of All Saints of China, Biography: Simeon (Du, Fyodor), Bishop of Shanghai, accessed 22 June 2019
[edit]
This article incorporates text from Symeon (Du) of Shanghai at OrthodoxWiki which is licensed under the CC-BY-SA and GFDL.