Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

December 10 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

Day in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

December 10 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
Remove ads

December 9 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - December 11

Thumb
The Eastern Orthodox cross

All fixed commemorations below celebrated on December 23 by Eastern Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.[note 1]

For December 10th, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on November 27.

Saints

Remove ads

Pre-Schism Western saints

  • Saints Carpophorus and Abundius, a priest and his deacon who suffered under Diocletian (c. 290-300)[14][note 7]
  • Virgin-martyr Eulalia of Barcelona, the most famous virgin-martyr in Spain, burnt at the stake under Diocletian (304)[14][note 8][note 9]
  • Saint Julia of Mérida (Eulalia of Mérida), a martyr together with St Eulalia, in Mérida in Spain under Diocletian (304)[14][note 10]
  • Saint Mercurius and Companions, at Lentini in Sicily, soldiers who were beheaded under the governor Tertyllus, in the time of Emperor Licinius (c. 308)[7][14][note 11]
  • Saint Deusdedit of Brescia, Bishop of Brescia in Italy, played a leading part in the Councils against Monothelitism (c. 700)[14]
  • Pope Saint Miltiades, Pope of Rome from 311 to 314, who condemned Donatism and was venerated as a martyr on account of his many sufferings during the persecution of Maximian (314)[14][note 12]
  • Pope Saint Gregory III, who was much troubled by Iconoclasm and the raids of the Lombards (741)[14]
  • Saint Sindulf of Vienne (Sindulphus), the thirty-first Bishop of Vienne in France (c. 669)[14]
  • Saint Guitmarus, fourth Abbot of Saint-Riquier in France (765)[14]
  • Saint Hildemar (Hildemanus), a monk at Corbie who became Bishop of Beauvais in France in 821 (844)[14]
Remove ads

Post-Schism Orthodox saints

New martyrs and confessors

  • New Hieromartyr Alexander (Shklaev) of Perm, Protopresbyter (1918)[17][18][19]
  • New Hieromartyr Jacob (Shestakov) of Perm, Priest (1918)[17][18][19]
  • Hieromartyr Eugraphus (Pletnev) of Perm, Priest, and his son, Mikhail Pletnev (1918)[17][18][19]
  • New Hieromartyrs of Ryazan: Protopresbyters - Anatolius Pravdoliubov, Alexander Tuberovsky, Eugene Kharkov, and Constantine Bazhanov (1937),[17][18][19] and with them:
    • New Hieromartyr Nicholas Karasiov, Priest.[17][18][19]
    • Martyrs Peter Grishin, Michael Yakunkin, Eusebius Tryakhov, Dorotheus Klimashev, Laurentius Kogtyev, Gregory Berdenev.[17][18][19]
    • Virgin-martyrs Alexandra Ustiukhina and Tatiana Yegorova.[17][18][19]
    • New Hieromartyr Michael Kobozev, Priest.[17][19]
    • New Hieromartyr Sergius Sorokin, Hieromonk of Sreznevo (Ryazan) (1937)[3][17][19]
  • Virgin-martyr Eudocia (after 1937)[17]
  • New Hieromartyr Protopresbyter Nicholas Rozov of Yaroslavl-Rostov (1938)[18][19]
  • New Hieromartyr Alexis Vvedensky, Priest (1938)[17][19]
  • Virgin-martyrs Anna Ivashkina and Tatiana Byakirevoy, Confessors (1948)[17][19]
  • Virgin-martyr Thecla Makusheva, Confessor (1954)[17][19]
  • Venerable New Nun-Confessor Anna Stoliarova, Schema-nun of Sreznevo, Ryazan (1958)[3][17][19]

Other commemorations

Notes

  1. The notation Old Style or (OS) is sometimes used to indicate a date in the Julian Calendar (which is used by churches on the "Old Calendar").
    The notation New Style or (NS), indicates a date in the Revised Julian calendar (which is used by churches on the "New Calendar").
  2. The Holy Martyrs Minos, Hermogenes and Eugraphos suffered for their faith in Christ under the emperor Maximian (305-313). Saint Minos was sent by the emperor from Athens to Alexandria to suppress the riots that had arisen between the Christians and the pagans. Distinguished for his gift of eloquence, Minos instead openly began to preach the Christian faith and he converted many pagans to Christ. Learning of this, Maximian dispatched Hermogenes to the Alexandria district to conduct a trial over the saints, and moreover was given orders to purge the city of Christians. Hermogenes, although he was a pagan, was distinguished however by his reverent bearing. And struck by the endurance of Saint Minos under torture and by his miraculous healing after the cruel torments, he also came to believe in Christ. Maximian himself then arrived in Alexandria. Neither the astonishing stoic endurance under torture of Saints Minos and Hermogenes, nor even the miracles of these days manifest of God in this city, in any way mollified the emperor, but instead vexed him all the more. The emperor personally stabbed Saint Eugraphos, the secretary of Saint Minos, and then gave orders to behead the holy Martyrs Minos and Hermogenes. The remains of the holy martyrs, cast into the sea in an iron chest, were afterwards found (about this see under 17 February) and transferred to Constantinople. The emperor Justinian built a church in the name of the holy Martyr Minos of Alexandria. Saint Joseph the Melodist (Comm. 4 April) composed a canon in honour of the holy martyrs.[4]
  3. "At Ancyra, in Galatia, St. Gemellus, martyr, who, after severe torments, consummated his martyrdom by being crucified, under Julian the Apostate."[7]
  4. See also: (in Greek) Θεότεκνος. Βικιπαίδεια. (Greek Wikipedia).
  5. He may be the same saint commemorated on October 10, although the Greek sources state he was martyred by the sword, while the Slavic sources affirm he was drowned.
  6. Born at an unknown date at the foot of Mt. Kyminaion (= Mt. Kyminas in Bithynia?) to middle-class (autarkeis) parents, Thomas had a religious education, studying the Psalter, the apostolic epistles, and other ecclesiastic writings. He became a monk, and was then appointed hegoumenos of a monastery newly founded by the magnate Galolektes on the Sangarios River. After some years he retired to a hermitage, which soon became a monastery. For years he was sorely afflicted by demonic attacks in the form of mosquitoes, flies, wasps and snakes, from which he was finally delivered after prayer to God. Thomas was famed for his gift of healing and clairvoyance, as shown when he was able to reply to a pittakion sent by Leo VI (886-912) without opening and reading it. The allusion to Leo is the only chronological indication in his late synaxarion notice, found in a 15th-century manuscript. Grégoire suggests that Thomas is to be identified with the palace priest who blessed the marriage of Leo VI and Zoe in 906.[13]
  7. "The same day, Saints Carpophorus, priest, and Abundius, deacon, who became martyrs in the persecution of Diocletian. They were first most cruelly beaten with rods, then imprisoned and denied food and drink; being racked a second time and again thrown into prison, they were finally beheaded."[7]
  8. Prudentius wrote a long hymn describing her martyrdom and she is mentioned by other writers. Born in Mérida, aged thirteen she was burnt at the stake there under Diocletian.
  9. "At Merida, in Spain, in the time of Maximian, the martyrdom of the holy virgin Eulalia, who, at twelve years of age, suffered many torments for the confession of Christ, by order of the governor Dacian. Finally she was stretched on the rack, torn with iron hooks, had her sides burned with flaming torches, and fire being forced down her throat, she expired."[7]
  10. "Again, in the same city, St. Julia, virgin and martyr, the companion of blessed Eulalia, who would not be separated from her when the latter went to suffer."[7]
  11. A group of soldiers told to escort Christian prisoners to their place of execution in Lentini in Sicily. The soldiers were so impressed by the prisoners that they too declared themselves believers in Christ and all of them were beheaded together.
  12. "AT Rome, pope St. Melchiades, who, having suffered much in the persecution of Maximian, rested in the Lord when peace was given to the Church."[7]
Remove ads

References

Sources

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads