Background
Diodor Kolpinskiy was born in Pskov, an Orthodox family. In 1911 along his mother, aunt and grandmother, he converted in 1911 to Latin Rite Catholicism, and left Russia for studies in Rome.
Diodor Kolpinskiy was born in Pskov, an Orthodox family. In 1911 along his mother, aunt and grandmother, he converted in 1911 to Latin Rite Catholicism, and left Russia for studies in Rome.
He graduated from the First Cadet Corps (Saint St. Petersburg), then enrolled at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, at the end of a degree of doctor of philosophy. Returning to Russia he studied at the Faculty of History and Philosophy of Saint St. Petersburg State University.
In 1915 was ordained a priest of Latin Rite, and was appointed parochial vicar at Saint Stanislaus Church (Saint St. Petersburg). In 1917 joined the Byzantine Rite, and he served in Saint St. Petersburg and was the secretary of the Council of the Russian Catholic Exarchate of the Byzantine rite which was convened by Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky in 1917 in Petrograd. Father Kolpinsky read in Russian and in Latin act to establish in Russia the Exarchate.
He served in Edinoverie community in Wojnowo, and later transferred to Vienna.
Around 1924 he served in the Orthodox church in Berlin. From 1927 he taught at the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin and the Missionary Institute in Lublin.
At the institute operated two temple. Foreign the temple of the Eastern rite Kolpinsky gave his own design, built iconostasis in old style, for the Latin Rite church created the project marble throne in the Romanesque style.
Since 1927 Kolpinsky started to issue only at the time of the Russian Catholic magazine " Kitezh (magazine) "in Warsaw, and worked closely with Russian émigré publications.
In 1929 he was sent to the Apostolic Exarchate of Harbin and headed Lycee Saint Nicholas (Harbin). Died on July 8, 1932 in Tianjin from appendicitis.
Kolpinsky was a member of the "Society of the champions of the Reunion of Churches." In 1921 he emigrated to Poland, where for a time he returned to the Orthodox Church.