Venerable (Monastic) 14th century

Venerable Sergius and Herman Wonderworkers of Valaam

Also known as Sergius of Valaam · Herman of Valaam

The founders of the monastery on the island of Valaam in Lake Ladoga, who brought the monastic life and the light of Christ to the pagan peoples of the northern frontier.

Feast Day
June 28
Also Sep 11
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Fathers Sergius and Herman, Wonderworkers of Valaam

Come to them for
Missionary Work

Life

Sergius and Herman are venerated together as the founders of the monastery on the island of Valaam in Lake Ladoga, in the northern reaches of Rus'. They are remembered as among the first to establish the monastic life on the island and as missionaries who carried Christianity to the Karelian peoples of the surrounding frontier. The two are commemorated as a single pair, and their principal feast falls on June 28, with a second commemoration on September 11 marking the translation of their relics.

The early biography of the two founders is preserved only in tradition, and its details are uncertain. The synaxarion followed here places their settlement on Valaam in 1329 and their repose about the year 1353, during a period when the populations of the region were tested in the faith, in part because of Swedish military efforts to impose Catholicism in the fourteenth century. Other traditions assign the monastery a far earlier origin; because the community is not mentioned in records before the sixteenth century, dates for its foundation have been proposed ranging from the tenth to the fifteenth centuries, and the exact period of the founders' lives is not securely fixed.

By one tradition Sergius came from Byzantium to the region of Lake Ladoga, while Herman is reported to have been Karelian-born from the area near Sortavala. The brethren they gathered on Valaam spread Orthodoxy through the frontier land, and the missionary work attributed to the founders included preaching among the local inhabitants and baptizing those who received the Gospel. The monastery they began later grew into one of the chief centers of monastic life in the Russian North, and the saints are honored as enlighteners of Karelia.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 1329 Settlement on Valaam According to the synaxarion followed here, Sergius and Herman settle on the island of Valaam in Lake Ladoga and gather a monastic community.
  2. c. 1353 Repose The two founders repose about this year, the exact date being uncertain.
  3. September 11 Translation of relics Their second commemoration marks the translation of their holy relics.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Foundation of Valaam

The monastery stands on the island of Valaam in Lake Ladoga, in the Karelia region of what is now northwestern Russia. By tradition Sergius first settled in the caves of the island, which had been a site of older pagan worship, and preached the Gospel to its inhabitants; the community he began was first known as the Holy Trinity Monastery and was later renamed for the Transfiguration. According to the recension followed here, Sergius and Herman settled on the island in 1329 and gathered a community of brethren around them.

The sources differ widely on when the monastery was founded. A traditional account dates it as early as the tenth century, while other reckonings place the founding in the twelfth century or as late as the fourteenth; because the monastery does not appear in surviving records before the sixteenth century, the question remains unresolved. Whatever the precise date, the founders are remembered for establishing the monastic life on the island and for directing the community's missionary energy outward toward the surrounding peoples. The monastery they began became, in later centuries, one of the principal monastic centers of the north, controlling a number of smaller sketes by the early twentieth century.

Missionary Work and Repose

The brethren of Valaam carried the Christian faith to the Karelian peoples of the northern frontier, and the saints are remembered as enlighteners of Karelia. The tradition records that the founders preached among the local population and baptized those who received the Gospel. This work was carried on at a time when the region's peoples were wary of Christianity, in part because of Swedish attempts to impose Catholicism by military force in the fourteenth century.

Sergius and Herman reposed about the year 1353. Their relics were later subject to translation; by one tradition they were removed from Valaam to Novgorod and afterward returned to the island. The translation of their holy relics is commemorated on September 11.

Notes

Named pair commemorated as one. Sep 11 = translation of their relics.

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