Paul of Latros was a tenth-century monastic ascetic and hermit of Asia Minor, commemorated on December 15. By tradition he was born at Pergamum and was orphaned in childhood, losing his father early; sources relate that his father had been an officer in the imperial army. After receiving his early formation in a monastery, he devoted himself fully to the monastic life and settled on Mount Latros (also called Latmos), the mountain near Miletus from which his name derives.
On Mount Latros Paul withdrew into deeper solitude, secluding himself in a cave to pursue a more austere ascetic discipline. The synaxarion relates that through his labors he was granted gifts of spiritual insight and wonderworking, and that disciples gathered around him so that a monastic community formed under his guidance. He became known as a spiritual director to monks while maintaining his own eremitic regimen.
Paul's reputation reached the imperial court, and the sources record that the emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (reigned 912–959) corresponded with him, seeking his prayers and counsel. He is also associated with monastic foundation on the island of Samos, where, according to the tradition, he established a monastery and restored monasteries that had been ruined in earlier Arab raids. Having foretold his death, he reposed in the mid-tenth century, by most accounts around the year 955.