A Saint Without a Vita
Nectarius is among the genuinely obscure saints of the Athonite calendar. The OCA Synaxarion for July 10 commemorates him as "Monastic Martyr Nectarius of Saint Anne Skete on Mount Athos" but supplies no biographical detail, noting only that no information is available. The OrthodoxWiki calendar for the same date likewise records only his title, his monastic affiliation, and his location.
Searches of broader Orthodox reference collections, including the corpus of Athonite saints' lives, return no narrative specifically attached to a martyr named Nectarius of Saint Anne's Skete. His era and century are unknown, and his entry is treated as an honest stub pending further sources and clergy review.
The Skete of Saint Anne
The Skete of Saint Anne, with which Nectarius is associated, is a dependent monastic community attached to the Great Lavra on Mount Athos. It lies on the shore of the Aegean Sea, roughly 800 meters from the New Skete, with the hamlet of Vouleftiria occupying its lower western section. Its central church (kyriakon) was built in 1680 during an enlargement of the skete under Patriarch Dionysius III of Constantinople. Access, as throughout Mount Athos, is restricted to men.
The skete holds a notable place in modern Orthodox history as the birthplace of the Kollyvades movement, a spiritual renewal that arose there in 1754 over a dispute about whether memorial commemorations of the dead should be held on Saturdays, according to ancient custom, rather than on Sundays. Centered on figures such as Makarios of Corinth and Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain, the movement sought a return to patristic theology, frequent Holy Communion, and the unceasing Jesus Prayer.
The Athonite Martyrs
Nectarius's title of monastic martyr places him within the broad tradition of Athonite martyrs. During the Ottoman period, Mount Athos produced a substantial body of martyrs and new martyrs, numbering on the order of sixty across the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Reference sources that survey this corpus do not, however, identify by name a martyr called Nectarius of Saint Anne's Skete, leaving his precise place within that tradition undocumented in the available material.