Life and Asceticism
According to tradition, Prochorus received a vision directing him to settle as a hermit near the Pshinja River, where he spent many years in solitary prayer. Sources describe his place of withdrawal as the wilderness along the river — variously rendered as the Bransk or Vranski desert — where he established a monastic community.
He is remembered as one of the great ascetics of monastic life in the medieval Balkans. Hermits of this kind are credited with exerting both social and cultural influence on the peoples of the Balkan Peninsula during the Middle Ages.
The Encounter with Romanos Diogenes
By tradition, a hunter pursuing a deer came upon the hermit, and their extended conversation led Prochorus to prophesy the hunter's future greatness. The hunter is identified as Romanos Diogenes, who became Byzantine emperor in 1068 — one year after the saint's death.
Upon learning of the hermit's repose, Emperor Romanos is said to have funded the construction of the Prohor Pčinjski Monastery as a sign of thanksgiving to God and to the saint. An icon preserved in the monastery depicts the encounter, showing wild animals approaching the saint without fear.
Veneration and Legacy
After his death, miracles were reported from the saint's relics, a sign of his continued veneration within the Orthodox tradition.
According to Serbian chronicles, King Milutin (reigned 1276–1320) commissioned a church dedicated to Saint Prochorus, indicating formal ecclesiastical veneration and royal patronage during the medieval period. The monastery founded in his memory bears his name to this day.
Sources differ on the precise dating of his life. While he is most commonly placed in the eleventh century — born around the year 1000 and dying in 1067, his life tied to the future emperor Romanos Diogenes — one account places his repose at the end of the tenth century.