Saint Anthony of Rome or Anthony the Roman (Russian: Антоний Римлянин, romanizedAntony Rimlyanin; 1067 – 3 August 1147)[1] was the founder of the Antoniev Monastery in Novgorod.[2]


Anthony of Rome
Lid of the shrine of Anthony of Rome, 1573
Bornc. 1067
Rome
Died3 August 1147
Novgorod
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church
Feast3 August
17 January

Background

edit

The hagiographic account on the life of Saint Anthony of Rome is only known since the second half of the 16th century. It claims that Anthony was born in Rome in 1067 to a Greek Orthodox family, and became a monk there.[1] After the persecution of Eastern Orthodox believers started, he left the city and made a home at the seashore, and according to his legend, a storm started which lifted the stone on which he was praying, which carried him to a shore near the Russian city of Novgorod.[1] Anthony, who did not speak Russian, was informed by a Greek merchant that he was in Novgorod, met with Nikita, the bishop of Novgorod, and obtained a permission to found the monastery at the site his stone arrived to the shore.[2]

It has been reported that the monastery church was consecrated by Anthony not in 1119, but that he was made hegumen only in 1131–1132, immediately after Niphont was installed as the bishop of Novgorod. This long delay is unclear; presumably it was related to some frictions between Novgorodian church hierarchs. Anthony died in 1147 and was buried in the monastery.[2]

Since 1597, Anthony is venerated as a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church. The feast days are 17 January and 3 August.[2]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Tradigo, Alfredo (2006). Icons and Saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Getty Publications. p. 354. ISBN 978-0-89236-845-7.
  2. ^ a b c d Антоний Римлянин (in Russian). Православная Энциклопедия. Retrieved 1 June 2012.

Sources

edit
edit