Venerable (Monastic) 17th century

Venerable Simon Abbot of Volomsk

1586–1641

Also known as Simon of Volomsk

A peasant's son who, after long pilgrimage and monastic struggle, founded a monastery in the Volomsk wilderness, where he was slain by robbers.

Feast Day
July 12
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Life

Venerable Simon, Abbot of Volomsk, was a seventeenth-century Russian monastic who, after years of pilgrimage and solitary struggle, established a monastery in the Volomsk wilderness southwest of Velikiy Ustyug. He was slain by robbers in 1641, and is venerated both as a venerable monastic and as a monk-martyr.

Born in 1586 the son of a peasant named Michael from the vicinity of Volokolamsk, Simon embraced the monastic life after extensive pilgrimages, received tonsure at the Pinegsk Makariev monastery, and ultimately drew disciples to the remote forest where he built a church and served as abbot until his violent death.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. 1586 Birth Simon is born the son of the peasant Michael in the vicinity of Volokolamsk.
  2. c. 1610 Monastic tonsure At the age of twenty-four, after extensive pilgrimages through Orthodox monasteries, Simon receives monastic tonsure at the Pinegsk Makariev monastery.
  3. 1613 Withdrawal to the Volomsk forest Simon settles in the Volomsk forest, approximately eighty versts southwest of Ustiug (Velikiy Ustyug) near the River Kichmenga, where he spends five years in solitude, sustaining himself by self-cultivated vegetables and occasional bread from nearby settlements.
  4. 1620 Foundation of the monastery and abbacy As seekers of the quiet life gather to him, Simon, by a grant of Tsar Michael Theodoreovich and with the blessing of the Rostov Metropolitan Barlaam, builds a temple in honor of the Cross of the Lord and becomes the monastery's abbot.
  5. July 12, 1641 Martyrdom Simon is murdered in his own monastery; his remains are interred on the left side of the church.
  6. 1646 Beginning of veneration Grace-filled miracles reported at his relics prompt the beginning of his veneration.

Contributions & Legacy

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Early Life and Monastic Beginnings

Simon was born in 1586, the son of a peasant named Michael who lived in the vicinity of Volokolamsk. At the age of twenty-four he undertook extensive pilgrimages through Orthodox monasteries, and at the conclusion of these wanderings he received monastic tonsure at the Pinegsk Makariev monastery.

The Volomsk Wilderness

In 1613 Simon withdrew to the Volomsk forest, roughly eighty versts southwest of Ustiug (Velikiy Ustyug), near the River Kichmenga. There he passed his first five years in solitude, sustaining himself by the vegetables he cultivated and occasional bread brought from nearby settlements.

As others drawn to the quiet life began to gather around him, Simon obtained a grant from Tsar Michael Theodoreovich and the blessing of the Rostov Metropolitan Barlaam, and built a temple in honor of the Cross of the Lord. In 1620 he became the abbot of the resulting monastery. He was remembered for his strict asceticism — his virtue, his dedication to labor, and his fasting and prayer.

Martyrdom and Veneration

On July 12, 1641, Simon was murdered in his own monastery. His remains were interred on the left side of the church. Reports of grace-filled miracles at his relics led to the beginning of his veneration in 1646, and his Life was written in the course of the seventeenth century.

Because he was a venerable monastic slain by robbers, Simon is commemorated in the dual character of a monk-martyr (hosiomartyr) as well as a venerable abbot.

Relics & Shrines

Simon's remains were interred on the left side of the church of his monastery in the Volomsk wilderness. Miracles reported at his relics prompted the beginning of his veneration in 1646.

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