Hierarch 14th century

Saint Dionysius Archbishop of Suzdal

d. 1385

Also known as Dionysius of Suzdal · David

A monk of the Kiev Caves who founded a cave monastery on the Volga near Nizhny Novgorod and later, as archbishop of Suzdal, labored for the unity and good order of the Russian Church.

Feast Day
June 26
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Commemorated as

Our Father Among the Saints Dionysius, Archbishop of Suzdal

Life

Dionysius of Suzdal was a fourteenth-century Russian hierarch and monastic founder who began his religious life as a monk of the Kiev Caves monastery, where he was tonsured under the baptismal name David. Carrying with him an icon of the Mother of God that he had received as a blessing connected with the founders of the Kiev Caves, he settled on the Volga near Nizhny Novgorod, dug out a cave hermitage, and gathered a community that grew into a monastery dedicated to the Ascension of the Lord.

Drawn from the monastic life into the governance of the Russian Church, he was consecrated bishop and later raised to archbishop of Suzdal, opposing heresy and disorder during a turbulent period of disputed metropolitan succession. Appointed metropolitan for Russia by the Patriarch of Constantinople near the end of his life, he was arrested in Kiev and died in confinement.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. early 14th c. Tonsure at the Kiev Caves He was tonsured a monk at the Kiev Caves monastery, taking the name Dionysius, and received an icon of the Mother of God associated with the monastery's founders, Saints Anthony and Theodosius.
  2. 1335 Founding of the Ascension monastery After dwelling as a hermit in a cave he had dug on the Volga shore near Nizhny Novgorod, he founded a monastery in honor of the Ascension of the Lord as brethren gathered around him. Some accounts place his arrival from Kiev and the first cave settlement somewhat earlier, around 1328-1330.
  3. 1352 Missionary sending He sent out twelve monks to the upper cities and surrounding countryside to undertake missionary work and to establish further monasteries.
  4. 1374 Consecration as bishop He was consecrated bishop, taking up the pastoral governance of the Suzdal region.
  5. 1379 Dispute over the metropolitan election He contested the election of the archimandrite Mityaya as Metropolitan and opposed the heretical Strigolniki movement then disturbing the Russian Church.
  6. 1382 Raised to archbishop He received the title of archbishop from Patriarch Nilus of Constantinople.
  7. 1384 Appointed metropolitan for Russia Patriarch Nilus appointed him metropolitan for Russia.
  8. October 15, 1385 Repose in captivity On his return to Kiev he was arrested by Prince Vladimir Olgerdovich and imprisoned, dying in confinement; he was buried in the Kiev Caves.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

The Ascension monastery near Nizhny Novgorod

The community Dionysius founded on the steep Volga shore some distance from Nizhny Novgorod grew from a single cave hermitage into a monastery whose later identity preserved the name Pechersky, linking it to the Kiev Caves cloister from which he had come even though the rebuilt site had no caves of its own.

Among those formed under his guidance were Saints Euthymius of Suzdal and Macarius of Zheltovod, both later venerated in their own right. The monastery he established was destroyed by a landslide in 1597 and rebuilt the same year a short distance upstream of the original site.

Feast and commemoration

He is commemorated on June 26, the feast of Saint David of Thessalonica, the patron whose name he had borne at baptism before his monastic tonsure.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints