Our Venerable Father Clement the Stylite of Mount Sagmata
Life
Saint Clement the Stylite was a 12th-century ascetic of Boeotia in central Greece who is remembered for taking up the rigorous labor of the pillar (stylite asceticism) on Mount Sagmata. According to monastic tradition, he was born into a pious and well-to-do Athenian family and showed religious devotion from childhood.
By tradition he renounced worldly life and entered the monastery founded by Saint Meletios on Mount Kythairon in Boeotia, then withdrew to a solitary cave on a promontory of Mount Sagmata, where he pursued a life of prayer, fasting, and ascetic struggle. He became known for working miracles, and his fame is said to have reached the imperial court. He reposed in peace in the year 1111, and his memory is kept on January 27. He is commemorated among the Synaxis of All Saints of Boeotia.
Timeline 4 moments
ReadHide
12th centuryAthenian birthBorn, by tradition, into a pious and wealthy family of Athens, showing devotion to God from a young age.
12th centuryEntry into monastic lifeBy tradition entered the Monastery of Myoupolis, founded by Saint Meletios on Mount Kythairon in Boeotia, where he lived for a period as a model monk in obedience and humility.
12th centuryWithdrawal to Mount SagmataWithdrew to a cave set like a column on a promontory of Mount Sagmata, where he took up the labor of the pillar in solitary prayer; disciples gathered around him.
1111ReposeReposed peacefully, by tradition in the year 1111, after giving final counsel to his disciples.
Contributions & Legacy
4 contributions
ReadHide
Ascetic Life
Saint Clement is honored as a stylite — an ascetic who struggled upon, or in the manner of, a pillar. The liturgical sources praise him as one who 'contested alone most willingly on the mountain of Sagmata on a narrow pillar,' appearing as a steadfast pillar of the hermits and a support of monastics. By tradition he had first lived under the monastic discipline established by Saint Meletios on Mount Kythairon before seeking the greater solitude of Mount Sagmata. There he is said to have practiced prayer, fasting, and ascetic labor, drawing disciples by his reputation for holiness and working many miracles.
Imperial Patronage of the Monastery
Tradition connects Saint Clement and the Monastery of the Holy Transfiguration of the Saviour on Mount Sagmata with the Emperor Alexios I Komnenos, who is said to have donated relics and estates to the monastery; a precious fragment of the True Cross is associated with these imperial benefactions. These accounts come from monastery tradition and later sources rather than from the standard synaxaria.
Relics & Shrines
The Holy Monastery of the Transfiguration of the Saviour at Sagmata, one of the oldest monasteries of the region, stands atop Mount Sagmata in High Boeotia, not far from Thebes. By tradition the saint's skull and the cave in which he practiced his asceticism are preserved there; a chapel dedicated to Saint Clement, containing his tomb, stands near the monastery, with a path leading to the steep cave associated with his struggles.
Sources & Commemoration
Saint Clement is an obscure local saint of Boeotia; the Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion notes that he is not mentioned in the Synaxaristes nor in the Menaion, and that his commemoration derives from liturgical sources including the Laurentian Codex. His feast is kept on January 27 (the OCA observance); some sources commemorate him on January 26, with an alternate observance on May 1. Because the documentary record is thin, the biographical particulars rest largely on monastery tradition.