Vladimir Nicolayevich Beneshevich was born on August 9, 1874, in
Druya, Vilna Governorate of the
Russian Empire (now
Vitebsk Region in
Belarus). He was of
Belarusian ethnicity. His father was a bailiff at the local court, and his grandfather was a priest of the
Russian Orthodox Church. He had one brother, Dmitri, who was three years older. Beneshevich graduated 'first class' from
Vilnius Gymnasium in 1893. He then studied law at the
Saint Petersburg State University from 1893 to 1897, graduating with a first-degree diploma. From 1897 until 1901 he studied philosophy, law, and history in Germany, first at the
University of Heidelberg, then at the
University of Leipzig, and finally at the
Humboldt University of Berlin. Upon his return to Russia, he married Amata Ludmila Faddeevne (1888–1967), daughter of professor of classical philology
Faddei Zielinski at the
University of St. Petersburg. The Beneshevichs had three sons: Nikita (1910–1918) and the twins Dmitri (1911–1937) and George (1911–1937). Between 1900 and 1905 Beneshevich worked in libraries in Europe and the Middle East, studying Slavic and Byzantine written sources, and participated in his first archaeological expeditions to the ancient religious center of
Mount Athos,
Mount Sinai, Egypt, Greece, Asia Minor, and Palestine. He was granted access to handwritten monastic collections in 49 European libraries, and worked in Paris, Vienna, Munich, and Rome, discovering many hitherto-unknown legal monuments in the process. The main focus of his research activities was to reconstruct the history of Greco-Roman law, based on a systematic source base. He also briefly (1903–1904) taught history of canon law at the Alexander Lyceum. His research findings were published in his
master's thesis on
The Story of the Sources of Canonical Law of the Greek Orthodox Church in 1905, for which he received a Master of Church Law. He had also discovered three new fragments of the
Codex Sinaiticus (these are now housed at the
Russian National Library in Saint Petersburg). In 1905, Beneshevich was appointed privat-docent of Byzantine history at the faculty of history and philology at the University of St. Petersburg. In 1908, Benshevich was appointed editor of the journal
Обозрения трудов по славяноведению, a post that he would hold until 1918. In 1909, Beneshevich was appointed extraordinary professor, and shortly thereafter ordinary professor of Byzantine history. He also lectured extensively on paleography, and, from 1906 onwards, on the history of canon law at the university's faculty of law, at the
St. Petersburg Theological Academy (1906–1909), at the summit of women's courses (1909–1917), at the Raeva (1910–1911), and at the Military Academy of Law (1909–1912). In 1912, Beneshevich received a doctor of law from the
Athens State University. In the same year, and together with egyptologist
Boris Alexandrovich Turayev and linguist
Nikolay Yakovlevich Marr, Beneshevich initiated the founding of the journal
Christian East under the auspices of the Imperial Academy of Sciences. In 1914, on the eve of
World War I, Beneshevich published his doctoral thesis on the
Synagogue among the 50 works and other Canonical Collections of John Scholasticus. He was granted a Doctor of Church Law the same year. Between 1917 and 1918 Beneshevich served as secretary to the
Council of the Russian Orthodox Church. Between 1919 and 1926 he served in several different capacities in the Church's archives and libraries; from 1923 to 1926, as head of the Public Library of the History of Material Culture Academy, and from 1925 to 1926 as head librarian of the Greek manuscripts department of manuscripts Public Library in Leningrad. In July 1922, and again in 1924, he was arrested in connection with the
Case of the Metropolitan Benjamin, but was not held long in either instance. In 1926, Beneshevich was appointed Secretary of the Byzantine Commission of the USSR. In 1927, he was granted permission to travel to Germany on a three-month scientific mission, where he had the opportunity to study a number of Greek manuscripts. Shortly before his return, the
Bavarian Academy of Sciences offered to translate his work on John Scholasticus. Beneshevich consented. In early 1928, Beneshevich was elected corresponding–member to the
Academy of Sciences of the USSR.
Imprisonment and execution, 1929–1938 In November 1928, he was arrested on charges of spying for the Vatican, Germany and Poland. He was sentenced to three years' imprisonment and sent to
Solovki prison camp. He was returned to Leningrad in 1930 to attend trial with his wife and brother on charges of sedition. In August 1931, he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment and sent to in the Ukhta-Pechora prison camp. The arrest and searches almost completely destroyed his collection of (copies of) ancient manuscripts. Of the 49 manuscripts known from his published prolegomena on them, only three survived. Some 2000 photographs were also destroyed. At the request of the
Old Bolshevik Vladimir Bonch-Bruevich, Beneshevich was released prematurely in March 1933. From 1933 Beneshevich then served as archivist of Greek manuscripts in public libraries, and lectured on Byzantine history at Leningrad State University. The first German edition of his work on
John Scholasticus was published in Munich in May 1937. In October, an article in
Izvestia portrayed this as a betrayal, and questioned why a Russian scientific work was published in Nazi Germany. Beneshevich was dismissed from his post, and on November 27 was arrested on charges of spying for Germany. Beneshevich was struck from the rolls of the
Russian Academy of Sciences on 29 April 1938. He was exonerated of the charges of treason by a Military Tribunal LVO on 20 August 1958, over 20 years after his execution. Beneshevich was rehabilitated by the Academy of Sciences on 19 December 1958. ==Contributions==