Hierarch 18th century

Saint Panaretus of Cyprus

c. 1710 – 1790

Also known as Panaretos of Cyprus

A hierarch of Cyprus venerated by the Church; few details of his life are preserved.

Feast Day
May 1
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Panaretos, Bishop of Paphos

Life

Saint Panaretos of Paphos was an eighteenth-century hierarch of the Church of Cyprus who served as Bishop of Paphos from 1767 until his repose in 1790. Sources record him as a learned and ascetic prelate who, beyond his pastoral and building activity, helped lead the Cypriot hierarchy in a petition to Constantinople against an oppressive Ottoman governor of the island.

He was glorified as a saint by the Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in 1794, a few years after his death, and is commemorated on May 1.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1710 Birth in Peristeronopigi By the accounts preserved, Panaretos was born around the start of the eighteenth century in the village of Peristeronopigi, in the Mesaoria plain northwest of Famagusta, Cyprus.
  2. early life Education and monastic tonsure He was educated at the Greek Orthodox school in Nicosia and became a monk at the Monastery of Saint Anastasios in his home village.
  3. by 1764 Abbot of Pallouriotissa Before his episcopate he served the Church of Cyprus in several capacities, including as abbot of the Monastery of the Virgin Mary at Pallouriotissa in Nicosia.
  4. January 1767 Consecrated Bishop of Paphos He was consecrated Bishop of Paphos in January 1767, succeeding Bishop Chrysanthos, and held the see until his death in 1790.
  5. 1783 Petition to Constantinople He joined Archbishop Chrysanthos and fellow bishops in a journey to Constantinople that secured the removal of an Ottoman governor of Cyprus who had oppressed the island's Orthodox population.
  6. 1790 Repose He reposed in 1790; sources place his death and funeral in early June of that year.
  7. 1794 Glorification He was glorified as a saint by the Holy Synod of the Patriarchate of Constantinople in 1794.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Episcopal ministry

As Bishop of Paphos, Panaretos is remembered for restoring and renovating numerous monasteries and churches throughout his metropolitan district. He also took an interest in scholarship and printing: sources credit him with funding the 1780 publication of a philosophical work by Theophilos Korydalleus and with supporting the 1788 publication of Archimandrite Cyprian's 'Chronological History of Cyprus.'

His most prominent public act was his part, in 1783, in the Cypriot hierarchy's petition to Constantinople for the discharge of the Ottoman governor of the island, who according to the accounts had oppressed the Orthodox people of Cyprus.

Ascetic life

The Cypriot accounts describe Panaretos as a man of strict personal asceticism. He is said to have eaten only once a day, after vespers, to have spent much of the night in standing prayer, and to have bound his body with an iron chain as a discipline. Tradition relates that the chain was discovered only after his death.

By tradition he is also said to have foretold his own repose.

Relics & Shrines

The chains that Saint Panaretos wore in his ascetic discipline were given to the Monastery of Stavrovouni in Cyprus, where the sources report they are still preserved.

The accounts relate that at his funeral a paralyzed man was healed upon touching his relic.

Notes

Honest stub; the OCA entry gives no biographical detail. Flagged for review.

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