Venerable (Monastic) 4th century

Saint Kanides the Monk of Cappadocia

Also known as Canides

A Cappadocian of pious parents who from earliest youth gave himself to monastic struggle, living in a cave in continual prayer and fasting.

Feast Day
June 10
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Kanides the Monk of Cappadocia

Life

Saint Kanides was a hermit-monk of Cappadocia, in Asia Minor, remembered for an ascetic life of extraordinary severity that the synaxarion places at the close of the fourth century. The accounts name his parents as the pious Theodotos and Theophano (also rendered Theophanou) and report that he was born around 379, during the reign of the Emperor Theodosios the Great.

Drawn from childhood to the solitary life, he is said to have withdrawn at about the age of seven to a mountain cave, where he remained in continual prayer and fasting. He is venerated as one of the saints of Cappadocia, and his memory is kept in the Orthodox Church on June 10.

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Life and Ascetic Practice

By the synaxarion's account Kanides was the child of devout Cappadocian parents, Theodotos and Theophano, and his life is marked by ascetic discipline from its very beginning: tradition relates that his mother abstained from rich foods throughout her pregnancy. While still a small child, he was drawn to the solitary life, and after his baptism and weaning he is said to have left for a mountain at about the age of seven, enclosing himself in a small cave.

There he is described as living in extreme austerity, taking a single weekly meal of raw vegetables without salt. The sources add that the damp of the cave caused the hair of his head and beard to fall away. The synaxarion relates that he continued in this manner for some seventy-three years before reposing in peace; the OCA account dates his repose to the year 460. He is commemorated among the saints of Cappadocia.

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