Venerable (Monastic) 17th century

Venerable Leonid of Ustnedumsk

c. 1554 – 1654

Also known as Leonid of Ustnedumsk

A farmer who, bidden in a dream, took up the monastic life in old age and founded a monastery in the northern wilderness at Ustnedumsk, draining the marshes with his own hands.

Feast Day
July 17
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Leonid of Ustnedumsk

Life

Leonid of Ustnedumsk was a Russian monastic saint of the seventeenth century, remembered as one of the first enlighteners of the remote northern wilderness around the River Luza in the Russian North. Before his monastic life he was a farmer in the Poshekhonsk district of Vologda, and he did not enter religious life until comparatively late in his years.

According to his life, at the age of fifty he saw the Mother of God in a dream directing him toward the Morzhevsk Nikolaev hermitage on the River Dvina. After initial hesitation he was tonsured a monk, labored at several northern monasteries, and was eventually ordained hieromonk in 1608 with the blessing of Metropolitan Philaret of Rostov. He founded a monastery at Ustnedumsk, draining the surrounding marshes by digging canals with his own hands, and reposed there reputedly at the age of one hundred in 1654. He is commemorated on July 17.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1554 Birth in the Vologda region Leonid was born in the Poshekhonsk district of Vologda and lived as a farmer by occupation.
  2. c. 1604 Vision of the Mother of God At about the age of fifty he saw the Mother of God in a dream, directing him to go to the River Dvina to the Morzhevsk Nikolaev hermitage. Doubting that the vision was more than a dream, he did not at first follow its direction.
  3. early 1600s Monastic tonsure at Kozhe Lake Instead of going to the Morzhevsk hermitage, he joined the Kozhe Lake monastery, where he was tonsured a monk and spent about three years at work.
  4. early 1600s Labor at Solovki He moved to the Solovki monastery, where he labored in the bakery. The vision recurred, urging him not to resist God's will.
  5. early 1600s Arrival at the Morzhevsk hermitage He traveled to the Morzhevsk hermitage and told Igumen Cornelius (who served 1599–1623) of the Mother of God's command, receiving the abbot's blessing and a Hodegetria icon.
  6. 1608 Ordination as hieromonk With the blessing of Metropolitan Philaret of Rostov, Leonid was ordained hieromonk.
  7. 1652 Church consecrated at Black Lake In his later years he relocated to Black Lake, where a new church was consecrated.
  8. July 17, 1654 Repose Saint Leonid reposed at the reputed age of one hundred. His preserved hair-shirt remained as a reminder of his ascetical labor.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Call to Monasticism

Leonid lived in the Poshekhonsk district of Vologda and was a farmer by occupation, entering monastic life only in his later years. According to his life, at about the age of fifty he saw the Mother of God in a dream, who directed him to go to the River Dvina to the Morzhevsk Nikolaev hermitage.

He initially doubted the vision and decided not to follow it, supposing it to be merely a dream. Instead he joined the Kozhe Lake monastery, where he accepted monastic tonsure and spent about three years at work, before moving to the Solovki monastery, where he labored in the bakery. When the vision recurred and urged him not to resist God's will, he set out for the Morzhevsk hermitage and informed Igumen Cornelius, who served as abbot from 1599 to 1623, of the Mother of God's command. He received the abbot's blessing together with a Hodegetria icon of the Mother of God.

Foundation at Ustnedumsk and Draining of the Marshes

Leonid first established a settlement near the River Luza and Mount Turin, about eighty versts from Ustiug. After encountering local resistance, he relocated further upriver, roughly thirty versts from Lalsk.

To drain the surrounding marshland, the ascetic dug three canals, about two kilometers in length, connecting the River Luza, Black Lake, Holy Lake, and Black Rivulet. According to his life, during this heavy labor he was bitten by a poisonous snake but recovered overnight. With the blessing of Metropolitan Philaret of Rostov, he was ordained hieromonk in 1608. A church honoring the Entrance of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple was built to house the Hodegetria icon. In his later years he relocated to Black Lake, where a new church was consecrated in 1652.

Repose and Legacy

Saint Leonid reposed on July 17, 1654, at the reputed age of one hundred. His preserved hair-shirt remained as a reminder of his ascetical dedication. He is venerated as one of the first enlighteners of these remote northern lands.

His memory is kept on July 17; churches following the Old Calendar commemorate him on July 30. A Troparion to Saint Leonid is preserved, and his holy icons are found in churches at the places of his labors.

Relics & Shrines

His hair-shirt was preserved as a relic and reminder of his ascetic life. His holy icons are kept in churches at the places of his struggles around Ustnedumsk.

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