Confessor 9th century

Saint Niketas the Confessor

Also known as Niketas of Apollonias

Archbishop of Apollonias in Bithynia who defended the veneration of the holy icons during the iconoclast persecution and suffered for the faith.

Feast Day
March 20
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Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Niketas the Confessor, Archbishop of Apollonias in Bithynia

Life

Niketas the Confessor was a bishop of Apollonias (also called Apolloniada), a city in Bithynia in Asia Minor, who is venerated for his defense of the veneration of the holy icons during the Byzantine iconoclast controversy. The Orthodox Church commemorates him on March 20. His diocese was, according to the tradition, subject to the metropolitan see of Nicomedia.

The sources describe Niketas as a man of deep learning in the Holy Scripture and of gentle character. The Orthodox Church in America records that he was noted for his profound knowledge of Holy Scripture and was a pious and kindly man, while the synaxarion tradition calls him faithful, pious and Orthodox, merciful and compassionate, and very learned in his study of Scripture. He is further remembered as a capable preacher and shepherd of his flock.

When iconoclasm prevailed, Niketas upheld the Orthodox teaching that the icons of Christ, the Theotokos, the angels, and the saints are venerated rather than worshiped, and he refused pressure to abandon their veneration. For this confession he was exiled and subjected to hardships. The accounts of his death differ in emphasis: the OCA states that he was exiled and died in prison, while the synaxarion relates that the hardships of his suffering brought him to sickness, and that he gave up his soul to God, receiving the crown of confession.

Timeline 1 moments Read Hide
  1. 813–820 Iconoclast persecution under Leo the Armenian According to the OCA, Niketas championed the veneration of the holy icons during the reign of the iconoclast emperor Leo the Armenian and was exiled for his confession.

Contributions & Legacy

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Confession during Iconoclasm

The Orthodox Church in America places Niketas's confession during the reign of the iconoclast emperor Leo the Armenian, who ruled from 813 to 820, in the second period of Byzantine iconoclasm. As a hierarch he is counted among those bishops who refused to comply with the imperial campaign against the icons and who accepted exile and deprivation rather than renounce their veneration.

Some commentaries instead assign Niketas to the eighth century, that is, to the first iconoclast period, and a few give his feast as March 22; the synaxarion itself does not name the reigning emperor and notes only that he lived during the iconoclast controversy. The Church's commemoration on March 20 and the broader tradition place him among the confessors of the icons of that era.

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