Arrival in Moscow In 1432, a council of Russian bishops chose
Jonah, the bishop of
Ryazan and
Murom, to succeed
Photius as metropolitan. By 1433, Jonah had already styled himself as the metropolitan designate. However, there was a delay in sending Jonah as Grand Prince
Vasily II of Moscow did not regain the throne until 1434. Jonah eventually was dispatched to Constantinople at the end of 1435 or the beginning of 1436. However, by the time of his arrival,
Joseph II, the patriarch of Constantinople, had already chosen Isidore as metropolitan. According to a letter written by Jonah, it was decreed by the patriarch "and the divine and holy council" that "when Isidor either by God’s will dies, or should anything else happen to him", then Jonah was to be "metropolitan in Russia". Vasily II wrote to the emperor: "What shall we then do? You did not come to us in time and we appointed another to that most holy metropolitan see and we cannot now do otherwise. Isidor is already metropolitan in Russia, and you, [Jonah], go back to your see, the bishopric of Ryzan. And should God's will preordain that Isidor dies, or should anything else happen to him, then you, Iona, shall be metropolitan in Russia after him." Isidore arrived in the metropolitan seat of
Moscow in April 1437 and was accompanied by Jonah. From the Byzantine point of view, Isidore was ideal based on his erudition, diplomatic skills and command of languages. Isidore's participation in the
Council of Basel in particular gave him experience in the interchange of interdoctrinal arguments. Simeon of Suzdal, who had accompanied him, wrote that "the Greeks thought him to be more than all the others a great metropolitan and philosopher". When Isidore first arrived in Russia, nobody suspected him of being a supporter of the union of Rome. Vasily II was unwilling to accept Isidore at first, but this was only due to Jonah having been overlooked in Constantinople. Russian chronicles say that Vasily II tried everything to prevent him from going to "the eighth Latin Council and not to be led astray by their [i.e. the Latins'] heresy", while Jonah also claimed that "however much my lord and son, Grand Prince Vasily, urged him not to go, he was unable to stop him". However, the accounts of Jonah and the chroniclers were written only after Isidore's "betrayal of Orthodoxy". It is also possible that Vasily II requested Isidore to delay his departure in order to deal with the backlog of ecclesiastical business. On 8 September 1437, after promising Vasily II that he would "strengthen the faith and unite the Church in Orthodoxy", Isidore left Moscow with his retinue numbering one hundred. His retinue included one bishop,
Avraamy of Suzdal, and a number of clerics. Avraamy also brought along the monk Simeon, who wrote his polemical
Tale of the Council of Florence, as well as other scribes, one of whom was likely the anonymous author of the
Journey to the Council of Florence, which was the earliest known Russian description of Western Europe. There were three staging posts in Russia:
Tver,
Novgorod and
Pskov. Afterwards, Isidore spent eight weeks in
Riga. Finally, he arrived at
Ferrara on 18 August 1438. He found that the patriarch and emperor had been waiting for the Russian delegation since March, while the Western princes never came.
Council of Florence On 5 July 1439, at the
Council of Florence, all the Greeks headed by the emperor, except for
Mark of Ephesus, signed the Decree of Union. The only Russian prelate present, Avraamy of Suzdal, signed the union, but, according to Simeon of Suzdal, this was only under duress. In his
Tale of the Council of Florence, Simeon says that Avraamy "did not wish [to sign], but Metropolitan Isidor arrested him and gaoled him for a whole week. Then he signed under constraint." Isidore was made cardinal and Apostolic Delegate "in the Province of Lithuania, Livonia and Russia and in the states, dioceses, territories and places of
Lechia [Poland] which are regarded as subject to you in your right as metropolitan". Isidore left Florence on 6 September 1439 and his journey to Moscow took nearly twice as long as his journey to Ferrara. Simeon of Suzdal and the envoy of the prince of Tver, having fallen foul of Isidore, fled from
Venice in December 1439. The envoy presumably reached Tver in early 1440, after which the news of the union would have reached Moscow. In addition, the author of the
Journey to the Council of Florence left Isidore's retinue in August 1440 and arrived in Russia the following month. As a result, Isidore may have been apprehensive of his reception there. From 15 September to 27 December 1439, Isidore was in Venice, before heading to
Buda, where he issued an
encyclical "to the Polish, Lithuanian and German [i.e.
Teutonic Knights'] lands and to all Orthodox Christian Russia" in March 1440. After a brief stay in Poland, Isidore spent the first half of the summer in
Galicia. By mid-August, he reached
Vilnius and he spent the next six months in Lithuania. Following this, he visited
Kiev and then
Smolensk, where he took Simeon as prisoner.
Return to Moscow in 1883 Isidore arrived in Moscow on 19 March 1441. The chronicle says: "With great pride, falsehood and Latin arrogance he [had] carried before him a Latin crucifix and a silver crozier... Should anyone not bow down before the crucifix he ordered them to be beaten with the crozier, as is done in the presence of the pope." It then says: "The metropolitan entered the holy cathedral church of [the Dormition of] the Mother of God and served the holy Liturgy, commemorating in the first place Pope Eugene without mentioning the Orthodox patriarchs." The grand prince of Moscow was given a letter from the pope stating "the Eastern Church is now one with us" and giving much of the credit to "our most holy brother Isidor, your metropolitan... of all Russia and legate from the Apostolic Throne... We ask you in piety to receive this Metropolitan Isidor for his justice and for the good of the Church...". According to Simeon, "realizing the delusion of the metropolitan", the grand prince ordered Isidore to be "cast out from his spiritual rank" and, "for such soul-destroying heresy, to be expelled from the town of Moscow and from all his land". The chronicles say that three days later, Isidore was arrested and placed under supervision in the
Chudov Monastery. The chroniclers of the grand prince wrote in their account that "the princes, the boyars and many others — and especially the Russian bishops — remained silent, slumbered and fell asleep," and it was not until "the divinely wise, Christ-loving sovereign, Grand Prince Vasily Vasilyevich... shamed Isidor and called him not his pastor and teacher, but a wicked and baneful wolf" did "all the bishops of Russia who were then in Moscow wake up, and the princes and boyars and grandees and the multitude of Christians come to their senses... and begin to call Isidor a heretic". According to
John L. I. Fennell: "Clearly Simeon and the chroniclers distorted facts in their depiction of Isidor's reception in Moscow, colouring their accounts according to their prejudices." Fennell noted that between 19 March and 15 September 1441, when Isidore left Moscow, he was at some time recognized by Vasily II as the lawful metropolitan. The
Nikon Chronicle and grand princely codex of 1479 both agree that on 15 September 1441, Isidor escaped with two of his disciples,
Gregory and Afanasy. Isidore fled to Tver, where he was placed under house arrest by
Boris of Tver, according to the chronicles of Pskov. Afterwards, he reached
Novogrudok and then Rome. The grand princely codex of 1479 describes Isidore's "secret escape by night like a thief" and mentions that "Grand Prince Vasily Vasil'evich sent no one to bring him back, nor did he have any desire to hold him back". Vasily II wrote a letter to
Patriarch Metrophanes II, which was never sent, requesting for a Russian candidate to be appointed as metropolitan. The letter mentions Isidore's return to Moscow, calling himself
Legatus a latere and carrying before him "a Latin sculptured crucifix with [Christ's] two feet nailed with one nail", but not his imprisonment or escape. It also says Isidore "commemorated the pope" and "subjected us to the Roman Church and the Roman pope". The only action by Vasily it mentions is that he summoned a synod of six bishops, who concluded that "all Isidor's business.. is alien and different from the divine and holy canons". As a result, a decision was made to send envoys to Constantinople in order to request the appointment of a Russian metropolitan by "the God-loving bishops of our fatherland". Vasily II returned to power in February 1447 following a flare-up in the civil war and Jonah was finally appointed as metropolitan on 15 December 1448 by a council of Russian bishops. In 1458,
Gregory the Bulgarian was chosen by the uniate patriarch of Constantinople as the new metropolitan of Kiev, but his legitimacy was rejected in Moscow. According to the hypothesis proposed by the Russian historian
William Pokhlyobkin, it may have been Isidore who produced the first genuine recipe of Russian
vodka while being detained in the Chudov Monastery.{{cite book ==Later life==