Venerable (Monastic) 16th century

Saint Innocent of Komel and Vologda

d. 1521 (some sources 1511 or 1522)

Also known as Innocent of Komel · Innocent of Vologda · Innocent Okhlyabinin

Descended from the Moscow princely Okhlyabinin family, Innocent became a monk under Saint Cyril of White Lake and was a disciple of Saint Nilus of Sora. He later founded a hermitage in the Komel forest near Vologda and reposed in the early 16th century.

Feast Day
March 19
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Innocent of Komel and Vologda, Disciple of Saint Nilus of Sora

Life

Saint Innocent of Komel and Vologda was a Russian monastic of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, descended from the Moscow princely Okhlyabinin (Okhlyabin) family. He took monastic vows at the Monastery of Saint Cyril of White Lake, where he became a disciple of the celebrated ascetic teacher Saint Nilus of Sora.

After years of pilgrimage and skete life alongside Saint Nilus, Innocent founded a communal monastery in the swampy forested lands of the Vologda region, where he served as superior for some thirty years and established a strict cenobitic rule. He reposed on March 19, traditionally dated 1521, leaving written spiritual instructions for his community.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. Late 15th c. Monastic profession Innocent, of the Moscow princely Okhlyabinin family, becomes a monk at the Monastery of Saint Cyril of White Lake and a disciple of Saint Nilus of Sora.
  2. Late 15th c. Pilgrimage to the East He travels with Saint Nilus to Palestine, Constantinople, and Mount Athos before returning to Russia, where the two establish a skete near the Sora River.
  3. c. 1491 Foundation in the Vologda region Following Saint Nilus's instruction, Innocent founds a cenobitic monastery near the Eda River, building a church dedicated to Saint John the Baptist and serving as superior for some thirty years.
  4. Mar 19, 1521 Repose Saint Innocent dies and is buried near a marsh beneath a commemorative stone; the year is also given by some sources as 1511 or 1522.
  5. 1538 Destruction of the hermitage The monastery is destroyed in a Tatar raid, then later rebuilt and maintained into the eighteenth century.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Formation Under Saint Nilus of Sora

Innocent was born in Moscow into the princely Okhlyabinin family, a line that some sources identify with the Okhlyabin boyars. He entered monastic life at the Monastery of Saint Cyril of White Lake, one of the foremost centers of northern Russian monasticism, and there came under the spiritual guidance of Saint Nilus of Sora, the leading exponent of contemplative skete monasticism in Russia.

Together Innocent and Nilus undertook a pilgrimage through the Christian East, visiting Palestine, Constantinople, and the monasteries of Mount Athos before returning to Russia. After their return the two helped establish a hermitage near the Sora River, roughly fifteen miles from Saint Cyril's monastery, where, in the manner of the sketes, they raised a cross, dug a well, and built separate cells for solitary prayer.

Foundation in the Komel Forest

Following the instructions of Saint Nilus, Innocent left to found his own community, settling in the swampy and forested region near the Eda River in the Vologda lands, among the Komela, Nurma, and Eda rivers. Sources place the foundation around 1491, at some distance from Vologda.

He built a church dedicated to Saint John the Baptist and organized the community as a cenobitic (communal) monastery, serving as its superior for about thirty years. He instituted a strict rule: young, beardless monks were excluded from the community, women were forbidden to enter, and a monk who departed had to surrender his cell. He guided the brethren using the teachings of the Fathers, drawing on John Chrysostom, Symeon the New Theologian, and Anthony the Great, and left written spiritual instructions for the monastery.

Repose and Later History

Saint Innocent reposed on March 19, a date traditionally given as 1521 and marked over his grave near a marsh by a commemorative stone. Other sources propose alternative years for his death, including 1511 and 1522, and the precise year remains uncertain.

Some years after his repose, the hermitage was destroyed in a Tatar raid in 1538. It was afterward rebuilt and continued into the eighteenth century. No standalone English-language biography of the saint exists; the OCA synaxarion and OrthodoxWiki are the principal accessible English sources for his life.

Notes

Disciple of Saint Nilus of Sora; reposed c. 1521.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints