New Martyr 20th century

New Hieromartyr Herman of Vyaznikov

1883–1937

Also known as Herman (Ryashentsev), Bishop of Vyaznikov

Bishop of Vyaznikov, martyred in the Soviet persecution (1937)

Feast Day
September 2
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Hieromartyr Herman (Ryashentsev), Bishop of Vyazniki

Life

Herman (Ryashentsev) of Vyazniki was a bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church who spent nearly the whole of his episcopate in Soviet imprisonment and exile before being shot in 1937. Born Nikolai Stepanovich Ryashentsev in 1883, he was tonsured a monk early in the century and consecrated a bishop in 1919, on the eve of the harshest decades of the persecution of the Church. He is venerated among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia.

From his first arrest in 1921 until his execution near Syktyvkar in 1937, his life was a near-unbroken succession of arrests, prison terms, and remote exiles across Siberia, Central Asia, the Solovki camps, and the Russian north. He was numbered among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Church when the wider body of victims of the Soviet repressions was glorified.

Timeline 9 moments Read Hide
  1. 1883 Birth Born Nikolai Stepanovich Ryashentsev on 22 November 1883 in Tambov, in the Tambov Governorate of the Russian Empire.
  2. 1903–1905 Monastic profession and ordination Tonsured a monk in 1903 and ordained a hieromonk in 1905.
  3. 1919 Consecration as bishop Consecrated Bishop of Volokolamsk, a vicar of the Moscow Diocese, on 14 September 1919.
  4. 1921 First arrest Arrested on 19 February 1921 for his preaching; released later the same year. This was the first link in what became a continuous chain of arrests and imprisonments.
  5. 1922–1925 Imprisonment and Siberian exile Re-arrested in 1922 and held in Butyrka prison, then sentenced in 1923 to three years' Siberian exile, served at the village of Samarovo (now Khanty-Mansiysk) and in the Tobolsk district, where for a time he was still able to serve in churches that remained open.
  6. 1928 Bishop of Vyazniki Appointed Bishop of Vyazniki, a vicar of the Vladimir Diocese, on 26 June 1928; he was arrested again in Vyazniki in December of the same year.
  7. 1929–1933 Solovki and the northern camps Sentenced in 1929 to a term in the labour camps, he was imprisoned in the Kem and Solovki camps, where he contracted typhus, and afterward exiled to settlements near Kotlas and Veliky Ustyug in the Russian north.
  8. 1937 Repose by martyrdom After a final arrest in Syktyvkar in February 1937, he was sentenced on 13 September and executed by shooting on 15 September 1937.
  9. 2001 Glorification Canonized on 6 October 2001 by the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church and numbered among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Church.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Episcopate Under Persecution

Herman's tenure as a bishop coincided almost entirely with the Soviet campaign against the Church, and he spent the great majority of it under arrest or in exile rather than in the governance of a diocese. After his consecration as Bishop of Volokolamsk in 1919 and his later appointment to Vyazniki in 1928, repeated sentences carried him from Butyrka prison in Moscow to exile in western Siberia, Central Asia, the Solovki camps, and the settlements of the far north.

Sources describe his last years, in and around Syktyvkar in the Komi region, as a period when he was largely deprived of any possibility of celebrating the services or receiving the sacraments. His repeated transfers under guard and the conditions of his confinement are presented by his hagiographers as the road that led to his martyrdom.

Veneration

He is commemorated among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, the body of clergy, monastics, and laypeople who died in the Soviet repressions. In the official list of these martyrs he is recorded as 'Herman, Bishop of Vyazniki (Ryashentsev), Confessor,' commemorated together with the others on the Sunday of the New Martyrs, while he is also venerated as a hieromartyr.

Commemorated with Read Hide
Notes

Among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

Sources: Synaxarion