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

All fixed commemorations below celebrated on September 28 by Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.[note 1]
For September 15th, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on September 2.
Feasts
Saints
- Martyrs Maximus,[4][5] Theodotus, and Asclepiodota, of Adrianopolis (305-311)[1][3][6] (see also: September 17)
- Holy Two Virgin-Martyrs, by the sword.[7]
- Martyr Porphyrius the Mime, of Caesarea (361)[1][5][8][9][note 2] (see also: November 4)
- Great-martyr Nicetas the Goth and those with him (372)[1][3][5][11][12][note 3][note 4]
- Saint Joseph, Abbot of Alaverdi Monastery in Georgia (570)[1][3][13][14][15]
- Venerable Philotheos the Presbyter of Asia Minor, Wonderworker (10th century)[1][5][16][17]
- Venerable Sabinus, a bishop who became a monastic.[18]
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Pre-Schism Western saints
- Saint Nicomedes, by tradition he was a priest martyred in Rome, perhaps under Domitian (c. 90)[19][note 5]
- Saint Valerian, a companion of St Photinus (Pothinus) of Lyons in France (178)[19][note 6][note 7]
- Saint Albinus (Aubin, Alpin), Bishop of Lyons (c. 390)[10][19][note 8]
- Saint Mamilian of Palermo, Bishop of Palermo in Sicily (460)[19][note 9]
- Saint Aprus (Aper, Apre, Epvre, Evre), Bishop of Toul (507)[10][19][note 10]
- Saint Leobinus (Lubin), Abbot of Brou, then Bishop of Chartres (c. 556)[10][19][note 11]
- Saint Hernin (Hernan), a hermit in Brittany at a place called Loc-Harn after him (6th century)[19][note 12]
- Saint Merinus (Merin, Merryn, Meadhran), abbot of Paisley Abbey (c. 620)[14][19][note 13]
- Saint Aichardus (Aicard, Achard), Abbot of St Benedict's at Quinçay near Poitiers, then Abbot of Jumièges (c. 687)[10][19][note 14]
- Saint Ritbert, monk and abbot of a small monastery in Varennes in France (c. 690)[19]
- Saint Ribert, Monk and Abbot of Saint-Valèry-sur-Somme in France (7th century)[19][note 15]
- Saints Emilas and Jeremiah, two young men, the former of whom was a deacon, imprisoned and beheaded in Cordoba in Spain under the Caliph Abderrahman (852)[19][note 16]
Post-Schism Orthodox saints
- Venerable Meletios, founder of the Monastery of Sergius.[5][21][note 17]
- Venerable Nicetas, Bishop of Chytri, near Kythrea, in Cyprus.[5][22][note 18]
- Saint Symeon of Thessaloniki, Archbishop of Thessaloniki (1429)[1][3][5][14][23]
- Saint Nicetas, disciple of St. Sergius of Radonezh and founder of the Theophany Monastery in Kostroma (15th century)[1]
- Saints Bessarion I (1490-1499) and Bessarion II (1527-1540),[24] Metropolitans of Larissa.[1][5][14][25][note 19][note 20]
- Saint Joseph the New of Partoёs, Metropolitan of Timișoara, Romania (1656)[1][14][26]
- Saint Gerasimos the New, founder of the sacred monastery of the Holy Trinity in Sourvia, near Makrinitsa (c. 1740)[1][5][27][28]
- New Martyr John of Crete, at New Ephesus (1811)[1][5][29][30]
New martyrs and confessors
- New Hieromartyr John Ilinsky, Priest (1918)[3][14][31]
- Virgin-martyr Eudokia Tkachenko (1918)[3][14][32]
- New Hieromartyrs Andrew Kovalev,[33] Gregory Konokotin,[34] Gregory Troitsky,[35] and John Yakovlev,[36] Priests (1921)[3][14]
- Venerable New Hiero-confessor Ignatius (Biryukov), Archimandrite, of the Aleksievo-Akatov Monastery in Voronezh (1932)[1][3][14][37]
- New Hieromartyr Demetrius Ignatenko, Priest (1935)[3][14][38]
- New Hieromartyrs John Borozdin,[39] Jacob Leonovich,[40] Peter Petrikov, and Nicholas Skvortsov, Priests (1937)[3][14]
- New Hieromartyr Nicholas Tsvetkov, Deacon (1937)[3][14]
- Martyrs Mary Rykov and Ludmila Petrov (1937)[3][14]
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Other commemorations
Icon gallery
- Martyrs Maximus, Theodotus, and Asclepiodote, of Adrianopolis.
- St. Porphyrius the Mime, of Caesarea.
- Great-martyr Nicetas the Goth.
- Great-martyr Nicetas the Goth.
- St. Symeon of Thessaloniki, Archbishop of Thessaloniki.
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"). - He succeeded in escaping from prison and reappeared at Tournus near Autun, where he again preached to the people. He was captured a second time and beheaded.
- The successor of St Justus in Lyons in France between 381 and 390. He is said to have built the church of St Stephen and chosen it for his Cathedral.
- He was exiled to Tuscany by the Arian King Genseric. His relics were eventually returned to Palermo.
- Born near Trier in Germany, he became a very able and just lawyer. He gave up this profession to become a priest and in time became Bishop of Toul in France.
- Born near Poitiers in France, he was the son of a peasant. Early in life he became a hermit, then a priest, Abbot of Brou and finally Bishop of Chartres.
- "ST. HERNIN was one of the many Christians of Great Britain who took refuge in Brittany during the sixth century. He led a life of solitude entirely hidden from the world, but the miracles wrought at his tomb revealed his sanctity, and gained the veneration of the neighbouring population. A church was built over his sepulchre which still remains, and is known as Loc-Harn. Many relics of the Saint are preserved there and held in due reverence."[20]
- A disciple of St Comgall at Bangor Abbey in Ireland.
- Born in Poitiers in France, the son of an officer at the court of Clotaire II, early in life he became a monk at Ansion in Poitou. Here he spent thirty-nine years, later becoming Abbot of St Benedict's at Quinçay near Poitiers. Finally he succeeded St Philibert as Abbot of Jumièges, where there were nearly one thousand monks.
- He may also have been a bishop in Normandy and Picardy. He is the patron of several churches near Rouen.
- His memory is preserved in the Siniaitic Typikon (No. 1094, p. 35) as follows:
- «Μηνὶ Σεπτεμβρίω ιε’, ἐκοιμήθη ὁ Ὅσιος πατὴρ ἡμῶν Μελέτιος καὶ κτήτωρ τῆς Μονῆς τοῦ Σεργίου».
- His memory is referenced in John Hackett's "A History of the Orthodox Church of Cyprus" (1901).
- See: (in Greek) Βησσαρίων Λαρίσης. Βικιπαίδεια. (Greek Wikipedia).
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References
Sources
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