Martyr 16th century

Martyr John of Kazan

died 1529

A Russian held captive in Kazan who, refusing to deny Christ, was struck down and left for dead, surviving long enough to receive the Mysteries before his repose.

Feast Day
January 24
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr John of Kazan

Life

John of Kazan was a Russian layman from Nizhni Novgorod who was taken captive during a Tatar raid in the reign of Great Prince Basil and carried off to Kazan. There he was held as a slave and, refusing to abandon his Christian faith for Islam, was mortally wounded and left for dead. He survived long enough to receive the Mysteries before his repose, and is commemorated as a martyr on January 24.

According to the synaxarion, John was assigned to a master named Alei-Shnur, a relative of the Khan. By day he served his master faithfully, while by night he kept vigil in prayer, enduring insults and abuse. When his master pressed him to become a Muslim, John firmly confessed that he worshiped Jesus Christ as God and would not be moved.

In the winter the Tatars bound John, led him out to a Russian cemetery, wounded him grievously with swords, and cast him into the snow. The tradition relates that he revived, made his way to the dwelling of fellow Russians in Kazan, and asked them to summon a priest. After receiving Communion he spent the remainder of the night in prayer, and at sunrise the following morning he gave up his soul to God. He suffered on January 24, 1529.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 1529 Martyrdom at Kazan John, refusing to deny Christ, was mortally wounded, received Communion, and reposed on January 24.
  2. 1592 Canonization By tradition John was glorified at the petition of Saint Hermogenes of Kazan.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Captivity and Confession

The events of John's life belong to the period of Tatar raids on the Russian lands before the fall of the Khanate of Kazan. Inhabitants of Nizhni Novgorod were carried into captivity and distributed among masters in Kazan, and John fell to the household of Alei-Shnur, who was related to the Khan. The synaxarion presents him as a diligent and faithful servant whose nights were given over to prayer.

The decisive moment of his life was his refusal to convert to Islam. According to the tradition, he openly declared himself a Christian and would not renounce Christ under any pressure or torture, which provoked his master to order his death.

Martyrdom and Burial

John was bound and taken to a Russian cemetery outside the city, where he was given many wounds and pierced with a sword, then left in the snow. Having survived the night and received the Mysteries, he reposed at dawn on January 24, 1529.

His body was secretly buried in an old Russian cemetery in the forest near Kazan, a site later associated with the Holy Assumption Zilant Monastery, where his veneration is centered. By tradition he was canonized in 1592 at the petition of Saint Hermogenes, then serving at Kazan and afterward Patriarch of Moscow.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 24