Equal-to-the-Apostles 18th century

New Hieromartyr Cosmas of Aitolia Equal of the Apostles

c. 1714 – 1779

Also known as Kosmas Aitolos

A monk-priest and tireless preacher who traveled widely teaching and founding schools among Orthodox Christians under Ottoman rule, and was executed in 1779.

Feast Day
August 24
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Hieromartyr Cosmas of Aitolia, Equal-to-the-Apostles

Come to them for
Missionary Work
Education

Life

Cosmas of Aitolia was an eighteenth-century Greek hieromonk who, over roughly two decades of itinerant preaching, became the most influential missionary and educator among the Orthodox Christians of the Ottoman Balkans. Born around 1714 in the village of Mega Dendron near Thermo in Aetolia, he was given the worldly name Constas. After early studies under the archdeacon Ananias Dervisanos, he went to Mount Athos, where he attended the school at Vatopedi under teachers who included Eugenius Voulgaris, was tonsured a monk at the Philotheou monastery with the name Cosmas, and was later ordained hieromonk. He is commemorated on August 24.

Having obtained a written blessing to preach from Patriarch Seraphim II of Constantinople, and afterward from his successor Sophronius, Cosmas left Athos around 1760 to preach the Gospel in the towns and villages of the empire. For roughly nineteen years he traveled almost continuously through Thrace, Macedonia, the Danube regions, Thessalonica, Akarnania and Aitolia, Epirus, the Ionian islands of Lefkada and Kephalonia, and southern Albania, addressing crowds too large for any church. According to the tradition he was accompanied at times by forty or fifty priests and served vigils in open fields and city squares before thousands of hearers.

Alongside his preaching Cosmas placed great stress on education, and is credited with founding a large number of village and town schools so that the Orthodox could read and understand their faith and Scriptures. From his own letter to his brother Chrysanthos it is reported that he established ten higher Greek-language schools and some two hundred elementary schools, for which he often secured both teachers and funds. For this work he is honored as a teacher of the nation and counted among the figures of the Greek Orthodox revival of the period.

On August 24, 1779, in his mid-sixties, Cosmas was seized by the Ottoman authorities and put to death near Kolikontasi (Kolkondas), in the Fier district of present-day Albania, by the mouth of the Seman river. His body was cast into the water and, according to the tradition, recovered after three days by a priest named Mark and buried at a nearby monastery. He was formally glorified by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in 1961, and his relics were distributed to various churches.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1714 Birth in Aetolia Born with the name Constas at Mega Dendron near Thermo in Aetolia.
  2. c. 1760 Begins itinerant preaching Authorized by Patriarch Seraphim II, he leaves Mount Athos to preach in the towns and villages of the empire.
  3. 1760–1779 Missionary tours and school-founding Travels through Thrace, Macedonia, Epirus, the Ionian islands, and Albania, founding schools as he goes.
  4. Aug 24, 1779 Martyrdom Put to death near Kolikontasi in present-day southern Albania.
  5. 1961 Glorification Formally proclaimed a saint by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Itinerant Mission

The defining feature of Cosmas's ministry was its scale and mobility. Rather than settling in one place, he moved from region to region across the Balkans and the Greek lands, preaching in the vernacular to the poorest and least instructed of his fellow Christians. The sources relate that because no church could hold the multitudes who came to hear him, he preached in the open air, and that he set up a wooden cross at the site of each sermon as a memorial of his passing.

His preaching is described in the synaxarion as simple, calm, and gentle. He worked entirely within the bounds permitted to Christians under Ottoman rule, carrying patriarchal letters of authorization, and aimed less at controversy than at strengthening the basic Christian life, literacy, and observance of his hearers.

Educator and Founder of Schools

Cosmas regarded ignorance of the faith and of letters as the chief danger facing the Orthodox under Ottoman rule, and made the founding of schools central to his mission. He is reported to have established around two hundred elementary schools and ten higher schools teaching the Greek language, frequently arranging for teachers and for the funds to sustain them. For this reason he is widely remembered as a founding figure of modern Greek education.

The tradition also preserves a body of prophecies attributed to him concerning the future of the Greek lands and people, which circulated widely after his death and contributed to his fame.

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