New Martyr 19th century

Venerable New Martyr Onuphrius of Hilandar

c. 1786 – 1818

Also known as Onuphrius the Bulgarian

A monk of Hilandar on Mount Athos who suffered martyrdom for Christ at Chios.

Feast Day
January 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Venerable New Martyr Onuphrius of Hilandar

Life

Onuphrius was a Bulgarian monk of the Hilandar Monastery on Mount Athos who suffered martyrdom on the island of Chios in 1818. He was born Matthew in Gabrovo, in the diocese of Tarnovo, and is venerated as one of the New Martyrs of the Ottoman period. He is commemorated on January 4.

According to the tradition recorded of his life, in his youth he spoke, in a moment of anger toward his parents, of becoming a Muslim — words overheard by Muslims who sought to hold him to them — and he afterward bitterly regretted them. This episode is presented in the accounts of his life as the spiritual wound he later sought to expiate through martyrdom. He was first tonsured a monk under the name Manassas, and according to a Bulgarian account received this first tonsure at the Troyan Monastery of the Holy Mother of God before settling at Hilandar on the Holy Mountain, which at the time was home to many Bulgarian monks.

At Hilandar he placed himself under the elder Nikephoros and prepared for martyrdom through a sustained period of asceticism, prayer, and fasting, after which he was tonsured into the great schema with the name Onuphrius. Together with the elder Gregory of the Peloponnese he traveled to Chios. There he openly confessed Christ, was subjected to severe tortures, and was beheaded; his body was cast into the sea. He died at the age of thirty-two.

Contributions & Legacy

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Martyrdom at Chios

Onuphrius's death belongs to the broad movement of New Martyrs who, during the centuries of Ottoman rule, deliberately went before Muslim authorities to confess Christ, often after a period of ascetic preparation under a spiritual elder. After about four months of intense prayer, fasting, and struggle on Mount Athos, he set out for Chios in the company of the elder Gregory. By the Bulgarian account he openly denounced Muhammad and threw off the Turkish turban before the authorities; he was then beheaded on the seashore and his body thrown into the sea. The date given for his martyrdom is January 4, 1818.

Greek fathers of Mount Athos are credited with compiling the accounts of his life and the liturgical services in his honor, through which his veneration spread. He is honored both in the Bulgarian tradition, as a native of Gabrovo, and on the Holy Mountain where he was formed.

Sources and Uncertainties

The Orthodox Church in America synaxarion and a Bulgarian hagiographical account agree on the core of his life: birth at Gabrovo as Matthew, monastic formation under the elder Nikephoros, the names Manassas and Onuphrius, the journey to Chios with the elder Gregory, and the beheading in 1818 at the age of thirty-two. The Bulgarian account adds further detail — a birth year of about 1786, a first tonsure at the Troyan Monastery, ordination as deacon at Hilandar, and his father's own later monastic profession at Hilandar — which is not present in the briefer OCA entry.

Notes

Modern martyr — clergy/source review advised.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 4