The initial leader of the Skoptsy was Andrei Ivanov Blokhin, a peasant who fled the estate he had been born on. He was converted to the
Khlysty sect by the preacher Mikhail Nikulin, who informed him that, alongside the other abstinences practiced by the Khlysty, he must castrate himself. Around the late 1760s, he and his friend castrated themselves, and began preaching the practice of castration to peasants in the
Oryol region.
Akulina Ivanovna, the successor to Nikulin's teacher and a popular Khlysty prophet around Oryol, was also a leading figure in the early Skoptsy movement. By 1772, the core of the Skoptsy movement was thirty-nine men and four women, a large majority of the men having undergone castration. Several members of this core group were identified to have come from Ivanovna's following. The sect would be discovered by Russian authorities in 1772, with varying claims on how they were identified. While clerical investigators used religious decrees against
Old Believers and
heretics who attempted to hide to prosecute the Skoptsy,
Catherine the Great approached the case from a more secular angle, seeking to end the sect before it grew through the means of civil court rather than religious law. Almost all those found to be Skoptsy were pardoned, and only Blokhin, Nikulin, and Aleksei Sidorov, identified as the movement's leaders, were punished. Selivanov was convicted of having persuaded thirteen peasants to castrate themselves. He initially escaped, but was apprehended in 1775 and exiled to
Nerchinsk, Siberia. His followers organized to locate and free him. He was found living in
Irkutsk, and managed to escape and move to Moscow in 1795. In 1797, he moved to
Saint Petersburg where, according to Skoptsy accounts, he was interviewed by Tsar
Paul I. He claimed to be the Tsar's father,
Peter III (who had been assassinated in 1762), following which Paul I had him confined to the madhouse at Obukhov hospital. He was released in 1802. For the next eighteen years, until 1820, he lived in Saint Petersburg, in the house of one of his disciples. He received double homage as Christ and tsar, identifying himself as both Tsar Peter III and as
Christ Returned. Peter had been popular among the
Raskolniks (dissidents) because he granted them
liberty of conscience, and among the peasants because when pillaging the convents he divided their lands among the labourers. Selivanov claimed the title "God of Gods and
King of Kings", and proclaimed salvation of believers through castration. Selivanov succeeded in gaining followers even among the upper classes of Saint Petersburg. When the Governor General of Saint Petersburg,
Mikhail Miloradovich, learned that two of his nephews, as well as several members of the guards regiments and sailors, were members of the sect, he asked the imperial government to intervene. Eventually, in June 1820, it was decided to arrest Selivanov again and confine him to the
Monastery of Saint Euthymius in
Suzdal, where he remained until his death in 1832, allegedly his hundredth year. During his stay in Suzdal, his followers continued to plead for his release. Although this was denied, Selivanov was free to receive visitors in the monastery, and his followers worshipped him there. He also left writings, known under the title
The Message (Послание) and
Harvest (Страды), as well as nine letters addressed to the priest Sergeyev. Despite the furious investigations of the
Third Department (the tsar's secret police), the Skoptsy did not disappear after Selivanov's death, and scandals continued to arise. The sect established a presence in Saint Petersburg, Moscow, Morshansk and Odessa, and later in Bucharest and Iași in Romania, where members of the sect had fled due to the persecution by Russian authorities. By 1866, the sect was reported as having 5,444 members (3,979 men and 1,465 women). Although the Skoptsy prescribed castration as a precondition for entering paradise, only a minority of members (703 men and 100 women) had undergone bodily mutilation.
Alexandre Dumas, père, writes about the sect, calling them
scopsis, towards the end of his account of his journey through Caucasia, ''Le Caucase, Memoires d'un Voyage
(1858), where he met them in Georgia. In the book The Idiot, Fyodor Dostoevsky mentions that the home of Parfyon Semyonovich Rogozhin is rented to Skoptsy tenants. Dostoevsky also mentions Skoptsy in the 1872 novel Demons and the 1880 novel The Brothers Karamazov''. Repressive measures were tried along with ridicule: male Skoptsy were
dressed in women's clothes and paraded wearing
fools' caps through the villages. In 1876, 130 Skoptsy were deported. To escape prosecution some of the sect emigrated, mostly to
Romania, where some of them mixed with old-believer exiles known as
Lipovans. Romanian writer
I.L. Caragiale acknowledges that toward the end of the 19th century all the horse-powered cabs in Bucharest were driven by Russian Skoptsy (
Scopiți in
Romanian). Though the law was strict in Russia—every
eunuch was compelled to register—the Skoptsy movement did not abate in its popularity. The Skoptsy became known as
moneylenders, and a bench known as the "Skoptsy's Bench" stood in Saint Petersburg for many years. The Skoptsy may have had as many as 100,000 followers in the early 20th century, although repression continued and members of the sect were put on trial.
Leon Trotsky, in a report from Romania in 1913, wrote about the Skoptsy in the Dobruja region who worked as horse-cab drivers and played a predominant role in the local horse trade.
Patrick Leigh Fermor in
The Broken Road describes his encounters (in 1933/4) with two "Skapetz" (sic) in a
Bucharest tavern and as a passenger in their horse-drawn cabs: "They conversed in oddly high-pitched voices in a language that sounded at first like Bulgarian but soon turned out to be—judging by its shifting vowels and liquid sounds—Russian."
Olivia Manning in
The Great Fortune (1960) describes the Skoptsy carriage drivers of
Bucharest based on her visit in 1939.
After the October Revolution After the
Bolsheviks seized power during the
October Revolution, they focused on weakening the Russian Orthodox Church and the influence of religion, as they posed threats to the authority of the new government. Many early Bolshevik decrees, such as stripping the Orthodox Church of its privileges and asserting the equality of different religions indirectly strengthened the Russian minority sects, including the Skoptsy, by removing the tools previously used to suppress them.
Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich, a
power broker within the emerging state used this freedom from previous repression to court the Skoptsy and other minority sects. Posing these groups as
proto-Communists victimized by the Tsarist government, Bonch-Bruevich also gained favor for the sects among the Soviet government. The Skoptsy were broadly receptive to these appeals. The Skoptsy writer Gavriil Men'shenin celebrated the revolution as a "new dawn of life", and Kuzma Lisin's followers claimed that the revolution was predicted by Christ, who said that they should welcome it. to be used against them in the 1929 trials. The treatment of the Skoptsy in the Soviet Union worsened as time progressed. While the Skoptsy's wealth could be seen as aspirational during the free market years of the
New Economic Policy, the political landscape strongly shifted as
Joseph Stalin replaced the economically liberal NEP with pro-collectivization policies that opposed the accumulation of wealth. In the context of this change, the Skoptsy began to be seen as exploiters of labor. Bonch-Bruevich, once a staunch supporter of the Skoptsy, began to adopt the anti-religious party line. Writing to prominent Skoptsy who complained of the repression, he stated that the Skoptsy arrested must have been fanatics or harming people's welfare. He also began to oppose the practice of castration, especially of children. In 1927 a propaganda play was put on in Moscow denigrating the Skoptsy, and the
Soviet secret police arrested a Leningrad Skoptsy community of 158 people. Two other groups of Skoptsy in Saratov and Moscow would also be arrested, and the three communities were put on trial from 1929 to 1931. Prosecutors and the party portrayed the Skoptsy as exploitative
NEPmen perpetuating the old religious order. The ruling of the 1929 trial of the Leningrad Skoptsy stated that the sect was a formal, organized conspiracy with anti-Soviet aims, and the Skoptsy were convicted of both inflicting physical injury and
counter-revolutionary activities. The Skoptsy population rapidly declined during
Soviet collectivization, numbering only about 2,000 people by 1929. The remaining Skoptsy were driven into seclusion, with little record of their activities after the trials. Unsubstantiated reports from the 1970s placed several dozen Skoptsy in
Tambov Oblast, and several hundred in
Oryol Oblast. These surviving groups no longer self-castrated, and maintained their population by adopting orphans of the Second World War. ==See also==