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October 15 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
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October 14 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - October 16

All fixed commemorations below celebrated on October 28 by Eastern Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.[note 1]
For October 15th, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on October 2.
Saints
- Martyrs Sarbelus (Thathuil) and his sister Bebaia, of Edessa (98-138)[1][2][3] (see also: January 29 )
- Hieromartyr Lucian of Antioch, Presbyter of Greater Antioch (312)[1][4][5][6][note 2]
- Venerable Barsus the Confessor, Bishop of Edessa (378)[1][5][7][8]
- St. Theophilus I of Alexandria, 23rd Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch of the See of St. Mark (d. 412).[9][10]
- Saint Sabinus, Bishop of Catania, Wonderworker (760)[1][2][5][8][11][12][note 3]
- Venerable Euthymius the New, of Thessalonica, Confessor (889)[1][5][8][13][14] (see also: January 4)
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Pre-Schism Western saints
- Saint Agileus, martyred in Carthage in North Africa, (c. 300)[12][note 4][note 5]
- Saint Aurelia of Strasbourg (Alsace, Gaul) (c. 383)[1][2][12][15]
- Saint Severus of Trier, Bishop of Trier in Germany, Confessor (c. 455)[12][15][note 6]
- Saint Antiochus of Lyon (Andeol), Bishop of Lyon (5th century)[12][note 7][note 8]
- Saint Cannatus (Canus Natus), Bishop of Marseilles in France after St Honoratus (5th century)[12]
- Saint Fortunatus, a martyr in Rome (537?)[12][note 9]
- Saint Leonard of Vandœuvre, a hermit who founded Vandoeuvre, now Saint-Léonard-des-Bois, near Le Mans in France (c. 570)[12]
- Saint Thecla, Abbess, of Ochsenfurt, Germany (c. 790)[1][2][12][15][note 10][note 11]
- Saint Odilo, a monk at Gorze Abbey in Lorraine in France, who became Abbot of Stavelot-Malmédy in Belgium (c. 954)[12]
- Saint Callistus, martyr (1003)[12][note 12]
- Saint Bruno of Merseburg (Bruno-Boniface), Archbishop of Mersburg, martyred by the heathen Prussians (1009)[12][note 13][note 14]
- Saint Willa, a nun at Nonnberg Abbey near Salzburg in Austria who reposed as an anchoress (c. 1050)[12]
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Post-Schism Orthodox saints
- Hieromartyr Lucian, Hieromonk of the Kiev Caves (1243)[1][2][8][19][20]
- Saint John, Bishop of Suzdal (1373)[1][2][19][21][note 15]
- Saint Dionysius, Archbishop of Suzdal (1385)[1][2][8]
New Martys and Confessors
- New Hieromartyr Symeon Konyukhov, Priest (1918)[2][19]
- New Hieromartyr Valerian Novitsky, Priest, of Telyadovich (1930)[1][2]
- New Hieromartyr Demetrius Kasatkin, Priest (1942)[2][19][22]
- New Hiero-confessor Athanasius (Sakharov), Bishop of Kovrov (1962)[1][2][19][23][note 16]
- Synaxis of the 23 New Hieromartyrs of the Minsk Diocese of Belorussia (1930-1950):[1][2][24]
- Archimandrite: Seraphim (Shakhmut), of Zhyrovichy Monastery (1945);
- Priests: Alexander Shalai (1937); Vladimir Zubkovich (1938); Vladimir Izmailov (1930); Vladimir Pasternatsky (1938); Vladimir Khirasko (1932); Dimitry Pavsky (1937); John Voronet (1937); Leonid Biryukovich (1937); Matthew Kritsuk (1950); Michael Novitsky (1935); Michael Plyshevsky (1937); Porphyrius Rubanovich (1937); Sergius Rodakovsky (1933); Valerian Novitsky (1930); Vladimir Taliush (1933); Vladimir Khrischanovich (1933); Dimitry Plyshevsky (1938); John Vecherko (1933); John Pankratovich (1937); Nicholas Matskevich (1937); Peter Grudinsky (1930); and
- Deacon: Nicholas Vasyukovich (1937).
Other commemorations
Icon gallery
- 'Hieromartyr Lucian of Antioch, Presbyter of Greater Antioch.
- St. Sabinus, Bishop of Catania, Wonderworker.
- New Hiero-confessor Athanasius (Sakharov), Bishop of Kovrov.
- Reliquary of New Hiero-confessor Athanasius (Sakharov), Bishop of Kovrov.
- Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos "She Who Ripens the Grain".
Notes
- 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"). - Bishop of Catania in Sicily. After a few years as bishop he resigned and became a hermit.
- "S. AUGUSTINE preached a sermon on the festival of S. Agleus, and mention is made of the church dedicated to this saint in the life of S. Fulgentius of Ruspe. S. Gregory the Great received the relics of the saint from Dominicus, Bishop of Carthage, as appears from a letter of the great pope which is extant."[16]
- Born in France, he was a disciple of St Germanus of Auxerre and St Lupus of Troyes. He accompanied St Germanus to Britain to oppose the Pelagian heresy. He preached the Gospel to the Germans on the lower Moselle and became Bishop of Trier in Germany (446-c 455).
- When St Justus, Bishop of Lyons in France, joined the hermits in Egypt, the priest Antiochus was sent to seek him out and persuade him to return to his diocese. The priest's efforts were in vain and on his return to Lyons he was himself chosen bishop.
- [Roman and German Martyrologies. Wyon, Wilson, and Bucelinus.]
- "S. Thecla was a virgin in Wimborne Abbey, who accompanied S. Lioba to Germany when the latter was summoned thither by her kinsman, S. Boniface. Thecla was apparently also related to S. Boniface; she was made by him abbess of the monastery of Kitzingen-on-the-Maine, on the death of S. Hadeloga in 766. Before that she ruled the abbey of Ochsenfurt."[17]
- "ST. THECLA was one of the holy religious whom St Boniface called from England, to establish the rule of St. Benedict, among those of her own sex, in the country which he had recently conquered to the Faith. She was a kinswoman of St. Lioba, and like her a disciple of St. Tetta at Wimborne. It is probable that the two went to Germany at the same time. Thecla, at all events, was at one time an inmate of St. Lioba's Monastery at Bischoffsheim, as is mentioned in the life of the latter Saint. At one time St. Thecla presided over the Abbey of Ochsenfurt, where she may have been placed by St. Boniface himself; and it was, perhaps, subsequently that she succeeded St. Hadeloga at Kitzengen. It was in this latter abbey that she completed her earthly course, and closed a holy life in a peaceful and saintly death."[18]
- Born in Huesca in Spain, together with St Mercutialis he went to France and was killed by the Saracens.
- See: (in Russian) Иоанн (епископ Суздальский). Википе́дия. (Russian Wikipedia).
- See: (in Russian) Афанасий (Сахаров). Википе́дия. (Russian Wikipedia).
- See: (in Russian) Спорительница хлебов. Википе́дия. (Russian Wikipedia).
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References
Sources
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