Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label Alexander I Tsar

“Praise be to God: The Throne is Again Filled by a Father” –Johann Cornies, 1826.

After the death of Tsar Alexander I in 1825 and subsequent coronation of his heir Nicholas I, Johann Cornies wrote to his friend in St. Petersburg: “Praise be to God that Russia’s throne is again filled by a father. As good and loyal subjects, our wishes and prayers should try to support him ” ( note 1 ). Cornies was the leading Mennonite of his era; he had hosted the emperor in his home for tea only a month before his death ( note 2 ). Cornies’ letters—official and personal over two decades—consistently demonstrate filial piety towards the “blessed Monarch” ( note 3 ) and his “wise, generous and benevolent government.” Some years later Cornies summarized five decades of Mennonite experience under the Imperial House of Russia: “Since its first settlement, the entire Mennonite brotherhood … has lived in peaceful and blessed tranquility under the wise, generous and benevolent government of their Most Serene Highnesses, Emperors and rulers of the land. It cannot sufficiently honour and p