Boris Mouravieff


Boris Mouravieff was a Russian historian, philosopher, writer and university professor. He is known for his three-volume work Gnosis: Study and Commentaries on the Esoteric Tradition of Eastern Orthodoxy.

Biography

Early years: Russia

Boris Mouravieff was born in Kronstadt, Imperial Russia, on 8th March 1890. He was the second of Count Piotr Petrovitch Mouravieff's three sons. His father was an Admiral and Secretary of State to the Russian Imperial Navy. His ancestor's included General Prince Nicolas Mouravieff-Karski, Andreï Mouraviov, General Count Michel Mouravieff-Vilenski and General Count Nicolas Mouravieff-Amourski.
A commissioned officer of the Imperial Russian Naval Academy Mouravieff rose through the ranks, in particular from 1909 to 1912 when he served aboard the Russian cruiser Aurora. Aurora won fame in 1917, giving the signal for the start of the Bolshevik Revolution. During the First World War, he served in the Black Sea Fleet. Promoted to lieutenant commander in 1916, he commanded a flotilla of fast torpedo boats of which he had been the designer and the promoter.
In March 1917 at the age of 27, he was promoted to frigate captain, before being appointed Principal Private Secretary to Alexander Kerensky in the first provisional government, led by Prince Georgy Lvov. Following this he was appointed deputy chief of staff of the Black Sea fleet by Kerensky, who in turn became head of the Russian government until his overthrow by the Bolsheviks during the October Revolution of 1917. Shortly after the signing of Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, in 1918, he left the military but remained in Crimea to devote himself to business interests, archaeological work as well as esoteric and historical research.
At the end of 1920, Mouravieff left Russia for Constantinople and in 1922 he moved again to Bulgaria until 1924.
Since his youth, Mouravieff had been interested in the esoteric tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Assisted by indications left by Andreï Mouraviov, his great-uncle and a founder of the Skete of Saint Andrew, one of the great Orthodox monasteries of Mount Athos. The latter had undertaken research in Egypt, Armenia, Kurdistan and even Persia to find traces of this tradition and manuscripts from the first centuries of our Common Era.

Exile

While in Constantinople between 1920-21 Mouravieff attended public lectures given by P. D. Ouspensky and became acquainted with Gurdjieff, with whom he had contact in later years both at Fontainebleau and in Paris. Mouravieff and Ouspensky became close friends and worked together either in Paris or London for many years most notably on the manuscript of In Search of the Miraculous. They met for the last time at Lyne Place Manor, near London, in May 1937. Mouravieff detailed the nature of his relationship with both Ouspensky and Gurdjieff in an article published by Synthese in 1957 entitled Ouspensky, Gurdjieff and the Fragments of an Unknown Teaching.

In France

Mouravieff arrived in France as a refugee in 1924. He lived first in Paris, then moved to Bordeaux. In 1935, while in Bordeaux he met Larissa Bassof-Volkoff, born in 1901 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Larissa was a ballerina and had a child from her first marriage, Boris Vsevolod Volkoff, born in 1928 in Neuilly. Boris Mouravieff married her in 1936 and all three moved to Paris the same year.
Up until 1941 Mouravieff worked as a consulting engineer for various oil companies, while devoting his free time to historical research, as well as to the esoteric tradition of Eastern Orthodoxy. Since 1921, Mouravieff had pursued his research into the political and diplomatic history of Russia, and in particular to Peter the Great, which gave rise to a number of articles and books. .
On June 11, 1940, Boris Mouravieff left Paris for Carry-le-Rouet in the South of France, where the firm that employed him had relocated. He then moved to Aix-en-Provence until July 1943, and finally to Haute-Savoie, Neuvecelle, above Evian. Refusing to collaborate with the Germans, he was arrested in early 1944 by the Gestapo, interned in Annemasse, then released under surveillance .

Switzerland

At this point resistance fighters of the French Gendarmerie in the department organised his flight and that of his family on March 9, 1944 for Switzerland. Received as refugees, Boris and Larissa Mouravieff are first assigned to residence in a refugee camp in Randa in Valais. At the end of the war, they were allowed to settle in Geneva in an establishment called "Home for intellectual refugees", while waiting to occupy an apartment in town.
Boris Mouravieff is 55 years old. He has to start from scratch again. His material situation is precarious: he hardly earns his living by means of lessons and industrial translations.
As early as April 1945, Boris Mouravieff applied for enrolment as a student at the Institute for Advanced International Studies in Geneva. In 1951, he graduated from this institute for his work: "The Russian-Turkish Alliance in the Middle of the Napoleonic Wars".
Around the same time, his wife opened the "Larissa Mouravieff Classical Dance School", which she ran for a quarter of a century. At the beginning, Boris Mouravieff participated by accompanying the lessons, on the piano.
During this period, he undertook work to formalize the esoteric Christian tradition of Eastern Orthodoxy. He initially planned to present this doctrine in romantic form .

Teaching

In April 1955, Boris Mouravieff becomes privat-docent at University of Geneva where he gives two courses until 1961, one concerning the history of Russia before 1917 and the other esoteric philosophy. This last course will be entitled precisely: "Introduction to esoteric philosophy according to the esoteric tradition of Eastern Orthodoxy". It will regularly bring together between ten and thirty students. The introductory speech of the 1956 academic year on the theme of "The Problem of the New Man" will be published by the journal "Syntheses". Other articles will follow this first publication.
The teaching provided at the University of Geneva served as the basis for writing his master work, "Gnôsis", the first volume of which was published in April 1961 by the editions "La Colombe" in Paris. The mastery and the clarity of the presentation were recognized and the work obtained the following year the price of esoteric literature Victor-Émile Michelet. A rigorous and concrete spirit, Boris Mouravieff presents and comments, through this work, the esoteric tradition of Eastern Orthodoxy in a language that is clear and accessible to a cultivated person of our time.
That same year, 1961, Boris Mouravieff created the Center for Esoteric Christian Studies, based in Geneva, which he chaired and led until his death. The main goal assigned to the C.E.C.E. was to contribute to the formation of the New Man whom Boris Mouravieff wished for, in a critical historical period - ours - which he qualified as
"Transition period", between a cycle which is ending and a new cycle, carrying promises as much as heavy dangers.
Following the publication of volume I of Gnôsis , Boris Mouravieff receives a voluminous correspondence. He does not just respond to people interested in the education disclosed in "Gnôsis": he encourages the creation of study groups that are emerging in Geneva, Paris, Lille, Brussels, Cairo, Congo, etc. These groups, formed under the aegis of the C.E.C.E., aimed to jointly deepen the doctrine set out in Gnôsis.
In 1962, Boris Mouravieff took leave of the University of Geneva to devote himself entirely to the activities of the Center and to the writing of the last two volumes of the trilogy of "Gnôsis". Volume II appeared in 1962, volume III in 1965.
Within the framework of the C.E.C.E., Boris Mouravieff sees his audience widened to multiple groups whose work he follows, personally responding to the collective or individual questioning of their members. Visits will support the activity of certain groups such as Paris, Lille or Brussels. In the same way, he made a trip to Greece in July 1964.
To inform the groups and coordinate their work, "Information Bulletins" are periodically published by the C.E.C.E. for members. The development of the activity of the C.E.C.E. was made possible thanks to a patronage which made it possible to have the necessary material means.
The last years of Boris Mouravieff's life are devoted to this teaching activity. In a perspective of clarification, deepening and practical application, he undertook the writing of a “Collection of Notes on esoteric Christian teaching: The Stromata”, in imitation of Clement of Alexandria. With these Stromates, grouped under the general title of "The Art of Winning", Boris Mouravieff embarks on a vast and ambitious project. The aim was to supplement the teaching given in "Gnôsis" with practical elements answering the questions that the study of doctrine raised among students. The first chapter appeared in 1966. Two other chapters were published posthumously.

Death

This intense activity has an impact on Boris Mouravieff's state of health. In March 1965, already, a heart attack imposed him a short rest in Cannes. In June 1966, he was struck down by a crisis of rheumatoid arthritis accompanied by severe pain which forced him to live in bed.
Boris Mouravieff died in Geneva of a heart attack on September 28, 1966, at 8.15 p.m., at the age of 76. He rests at Saint-Georges cemetery, in Geneva.
The C.E.C.E. ceases operations shortly after the death of its founder.

Posterity

His widow, Larissa Mouravieff published chapters 2 and 3 of the first "Stromate" in 1968 and 1970. She watches over the archives of the Center and, in 1988, has them deposited at the Public and University Library of Geneva before leaving for Canada to join her son. Larissa Mouravieff died in Montreal on September 26, 1989, leaving Boris Vsevolod Volkoff, sole heir of rights. When the latter died, in March 2012, the remaining archives were handed over to the Library of Geneva, where a Mouravieff collection had been set up, which could be consulted by researchers who request it.