Venerable (Monastic) 15th century

Athanasius of Murom

Also known as Athanasius the Igumen of Murom

An abbot who labored at the Murom (Mursky) monastery founded by Saint Lazarus; his chains were long preserved as relics. He is commemorated together with Saint Lazarus.

Feast Day
March 8
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Athanasius, Abbot of Murom, the Wonderworker

Life

Athanasius of Murom was a Russian monastic who served as igumen (abbot) of the monastery of Saint Lazarus of Murom, also called Murmansk, on Murom Island in Lake Onega. He is traditionally placed in the mid-fifteenth century and is commemorated by the Orthodox Church on March 8, the same day as Saint Lazarus, the monastery's founder, with whom he is venerated together.

Almost nothing of his individual life has survived: the synaxarion entry frankly notes that no account of his ascetic labors was preserved. What endured instead was the physical memory of his asceticism. After his repose his body was placed in a special chapel at the monastery, and his chains were kept there as evidence of his struggles. By the second half of the seventeenth century he was already described as a 'venerable wonderworker,' and a troparion and kontakion in his honor came into use.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. mid-14th century Founding of the Murom monastery Saint Lazarus of Murom establishes the monastery on Murom Island in Lake Onega in the Russian North; he reposes in 1391.
  2. mid-15th century Abbot of Murom Athanasius serves as igumen of the monastery of Saint Lazarus of Murom (Murmansk).
  3. after his repose Relics and chains preserved His body is placed in a special chapel at the monastery and his chains are kept there as evidence of his ascetic exploits.
  4. 17th century Recognized as a wonderworker By the second half of the seventeenth century Athanasius is described as a 'venerable wonderworker'; a troparion and kontakion in his honor are in use.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

The Monastery of Saint Lazarus

The community in which Athanasius labored had been founded in the mid-fourteenth century by Saint Lazarus of Murom, a monk from Constantinople who came to Russia in 1343 as an iconographer in the service of the Archbishop of Novgorod. Directed by visions, Lazarus established a monastery on Murom Island in Lake Onega, in the Olonets region of the Russian North, where he built a church of the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos, a church of the Resurrection of Lazarus, and a wooden church of Saint John the Forerunner. Saint Lazarus reposed in 1391, and his disciples and successors continued the community he had planted in the far north.

Athanasius governed this monastery as its abbot in the generation or so after the founder, in the mid-fifteenth century. His leadership belongs to the early history of monasticism in the Russian North, where small island and forest communities like Murom carried the ascetic and missionary life into a remote frontier.

Relics and Veneration

After his death Athanasius was honored locally at the monastery of Saint Lazarus alongside its founder. His chains, preserved in the chapel where his body lay, became the chief relic and witness to his hidden ascetic struggle. The recognition of him as a 'venerable wonderworker' by the seventeenth century reflects an enduring local cultus rather than a documented biography.

In iconography Athanasius is shown holding a prayer rope in his left hand and a scroll in his right, the sign of a teacher; when the scroll is depicted open it bears the admonition, 'Listen, my brother, and do not sin until the end of the age.' He is portrayed in a light green robe and brown mantle with the blue Great Schema and kukulion of a fully professed monastic.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints