Life of Foolishness for Christ
By tradition Xenia was born sometime between roughly 1719 and 1731 in Saint Petersburg, in the Russian Empire. Her husband, Andrey Fyodorovich Petrov, held the rank of colonel and served as a chanter at the Saint Andrew Cathedral.
After his sudden death she distributed her property to the poor and embraced the path of a fool-for-Christ. Sources relate that she wandered the streets clothed in her husband's garments, and that she took his name for herself, answering to Andrei Feodorovich rather than to her own. By tradition she refused offered shelter at night and withdrew into the open fields, where she passed the nights in prayer.
The townspeople came to value her presence; merchants who aided her believed it brought them good fortune. According to her epitaph she spent forty-five years as a pilgrim in this manner and lived seventy-one years in all.
Gift of Clairvoyance
The synaxarion and later accounts attribute to Xenia the gift of clairvoyance. By tradition she foretold the death of the Empress Elizabeth in 1761 and that of the imprisoned John IV Antonovich in 1764.
Veneration and Legacy
Following her death her grave became a place of pilgrimage. By tradition pilgrims took dirt from her grave, which was reported to bring healing.
The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia canonized her on September 24, 1978 (September 11, Old Style) at the Synodal Cathedral in New York. The Russian Orthodox Church formally canonized her on June 6, 1988, during the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church. The Romanian Orthodox Church added her to its calendar, with sources noting a January 24, 2020 inclusion.
She is honored as the patron saint of Saint Petersburg, and by some accounts around forty churches and chapels bear her name worldwide. Her feast is kept on January 24 (Old Style); sources also note February 6 on the New Calendar.
Relics & Shrines
Xenia's grave is located in the Smolensky Cemetery in Saint Petersburg. It is marked by an ornate chapel constructed in 1902, which remains a place of pilgrimage.