Stephen of Constantinople was an ascetic of the Byzantine capital who is commemorated on February 27 and is recorded as having reposed about the year 614.
According to the surviving synaxarion notice, he had served at the imperial court during the reign of the emperor Maurice (582-602) before leaving that service to devote himself to the care of others. Beyond this single account little of his life is preserved, and the Orthodox calendars that name him give only a brief notice.
Timeline 3 moments
ReadHide
582-602Service at the imperial courtAccording to the synaxarion notice, Stephen was a courtier under the emperor Maurice (Mauricius), who reigned from 582 to 602.
early 7th centuryFounding of a hospice at ArmatiaHaving left the imperial service, he founded a hospice for the elderly in the Armatia quarter of Constantinople and devoted himself to taking in strangers.
c. 614ReposeHe is recorded as having died peacefully about the year 614, and is venerated as a holy ascetic of Constantinople.
Contributions & Legacy
1 contributions
ReadHide
Life and Work
The fullest surviving account of Stephen comes from the synaxarion notice for February 27, which records that he had been a courtier under the emperor Maurice (582-602). He left the imperial service and founded a hospice for the elderly in the quarter of Constantinople known as Armatia, giving himself over to the reception and care of strangers.
He is venerated in the Orthodox Church as a venerable ascetic. Some calendars characterize him simply as a monk of Constantinople, while the fuller notice presents him chiefly as a former court official turned philanthropist; the sources agree on Constantinople as the setting and on the year 614 as the date of his repose. No birth date, family, named monastery, relics, or miracles are preserved in the available accounts, and the entry survives only as a brief calendar notice.