Venerable-Martyr Unknown

Monastic Martyr Gideon of Karakalou

died December 30, 1818

Also known as Gideon of Mount Athos

A monastic martyr of Karakalou Monastery on Mount Athos, of whom no detailed life survives.

Feast Day
December 30
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy New Venerable Martyr Gideon of Karakallou

Life

Gideon of Karakallou was a monk of the Monastery of Karakallou on Mount Athos who was martyred at Tyrnavos in Thessaly on December 30, 1818, during the period of Ottoman rule. He is venerated among the New Martyrs, and the synaxaria honor him as the only registered saint associated with Karakallou. His feast is kept on December 30. (The Orthodox Church in America's brief notice records only that he was a monastic martyr of Karakallou; the fuller account below follows the Greek synaxaristic tradition.)

According to that tradition, he was born Nicholas in Kapourna, near Makrynitsa of Pelion, to parents named Avgerinos and Kyratza, and was the eldest of eight children. When he was about twelve his family relocated to Gierme under the pressure of Ottoman taxation, and as a youth he worked in a relative's grocery store in Velestino. There a Turk named Ali drew him into his household service, and Ali's son had him circumcised and converted to Islam under the name Ibrahim. After two months the young man repented and wept bitterly over his apostasy, fled to his father, and eventually made his way to Mount Athos.

At Karakallou he confessed his fall, was received again through Holy Chrismation, and was tonsured a monk with the name Gideon. The tradition relates that he lived as a monk for some thirty-five years, distinguished for obedience, humility, and asceticism, and was given the duty of caring for the church as sacristan or ecclesiarch. In his later years the desire for martyrdom kindled within him, and with the blessing of the fathers he left the Holy Mountain and returned toward the region where he had once denied Christ.

Coming to Velestino and other places, he openly confessed Christ before the Ottoman authorities. He was seized, brought to Tyrnavos, and there, refusing to renounce his faith, his hands and feet were severed by order of the governor; he died of his wounds on December 30, 1818. He was first buried at Tyrnavos, and in 1837 portions of his relics were translated to Karakallou on Mount Athos, while his head is kept in the Metropolitan Church of Panagia Phaneromeni in Tyrnavos.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1797 Sojourn at a monastery dependency By tradition he spent about six years at a monastic dependency in Crete before settling at Karakallou.
  2. 1818 Martyrdom at Tyrnavos He was put to death at Tyrnavos on December 30, his hands and feet severed by order of the Ottoman governor.
  3. 1837 Translation of relics Portions of his relics were translated to Karakallou Monastery on Mount Athos.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Apostasy and Repentance

The Greek synaxaristic tradition presents Gideon's early life as a fall followed by a lifelong reparation. Taken as a boy into the service of a Turk named Ali, he was circumcised and made to profess Islam under the name Ibrahim. The accounts emphasize that within two months he repented, weeping bitterly over what he had accepted, and fled. His later journey to Mount Athos and his reception back into the Church through Chrismation are presented as the deliberate undoing of that denial.

By tradition his subsequent monastic life, and finally his return to confess Christ in the very region where he had apostatized, are read as the completion of his repentance. The synaxarion relates that he sought martyrdom only with the blessing of the fathers of his monastery before leaving the Holy Mountain.

Martyrdom and Relics

Having publicly confessed Christ and reproached his former apostasy, Gideon was arrested and taken to Tyrnavos in Thessaly. The accounts relate that, when he would not renounce his faith, the governor ordered his hands and feet to be cut off, and that he died of these wounds on December 30, 1818.

He was buried at Tyrnavos. The tradition records that portions of his relics were transferred to Karakallou Monastery on Mount Athos in 1837, while his head is preserved in the Metropolitan Church of Panagia Phaneromeni in Tyrnavos.

Notes

Honest stub; OCA gives no details.

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