The Vision and the Yakhrom Icon
According to his life, while still in the service of a boyar, Cosmas accompanied his ailing master on a journey seeking medical treatment along the Yakhroma River. There he experienced a vision of extraordinary light and discovered an icon of the Dormition of the Mother of God affixed to a tree.
He presented the icon to his sick master, who was healed upon contact with it. Cosmas received a divine command to become a monk and to build a monastery.
Monastic Life and Foundation
After his term of service ended, Cosmas traveled to the Kiev Caves Lavra (Kievo-Pecherska Lavra), where he was tonsured a monk and distinguished himself through ascetic practices that impressed even experienced monks. The life relates that he later received angelic instruction to leave the Lavra and retrieve the Dormition icon.
Returning to the place on the Yakhrom River where the icon had appeared, Cosmas built, with donations from pious benefactors, a church dedicated to the Dormition of the Mother of God, roughly forty versts from Vladimir. By tradition this foundation, the Holy Dormition Monastery of Yakhrom, was established around 1482–1483. A community of monks gathered around him and he became its igumen (abbot). His ascetic reputation is said to have reached the Great Prince.
Repose and Dating
The official record holds that Cosmas reposed on February 18, 1492, and was buried in the monastery he had founded; one account places his death at Nebyloye, in the present-day Yuryev-Polsky District.
Scholars dispute this date: some sources propose he died between 1464 and 1473, and others as early as around 1430. He was canonized as a Venerable in the Russian Orthodox Church.
Relics & Shrines
Cosmas's relics rest beneath the Dormition cathedral of the monastery he founded. Tradition records miraculous healings attributed to veneration at his tomb.