Martyr 13th century

Martyrs Michael and Theodore of Chernigov

Michael: c. 1185 – September 20, 1246

Also known as Michael of Chernigov · Theodore the Councilor

Prince Michael of Chernigov and his councilor Theodore refused to perform pagan rites before the Mongol khan and were killed for confessing Christ.

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

The Holy and Right-Believing Prince Michael of Chernigov and his Councilor Theodore, Passion-Bearers

Life

Michael of Chernigov was a prince of the Rurikid dynasty who held a succession of the principal seats of medieval Rus', and his councilor Theodore was the boyar who attended him. Summoned to the camp of the Golden Horde in 1246, both refused the purification and idol-worship rites demanded of them and were executed, and they are venerated together as martyrs and passion-bearers.

Michael Vsevolodovich, born around 1185 (some sources give 1179 or 1195), was a son of Vsevolod Olgovich Chermny. Over his career he ruled Pereyaslavl (1206), Novgorod-Seversk (1219–1226), Chernigov, Novgorod, and Galicia, and twice held Kiev as Grand Prince. He fought in the Battle of the Kalka River against the Mongols in 1223.

When he and Theodore would not deny Christ before the khan, both were tortured and beheaded. Michael was canonized as a martyr before 1271 at Rostov, and the pair are commemorated on September 20.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1185 Birth of Michael Michael Vsevolodovich is born, a son of Vsevolod Olgovich Chermny; some sources give 1179 or 1195.
  2. 1206 Prince of Pereyaslavl Michael takes up the first of his many princely seats.
  3. 1223 Battle of the Kalka River Michael participates in the early clash between the princes of Rus' and the Mongols.
  4. 1236–1239 Grand Prince of Kiev Michael holds Kiev as Grand Prince for the first time, ruling again in 1241–1243.
  5. 1246 Martyrdom at the Golden Horde Summoned to Saray, Michael and his councilor Theodore refuse the pagan rites and are tortured and beheaded; Michael dies on September 20 at Saray, near modern Astrakhan.
  6. before 1271 Canonization at Rostov Michael is canonized as a martyr.
  7. 1578 Translation of relics to Moscow Tsar Ivan the Terrible has Michael's relics transferred (February 14) from Chernigov toward Moscow; since 1774 they rest in the Holy Archangels Cathedral in the Kremlin.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Prince and ruler

Michael Vsevolodovich belonged to the Olgovichi branch of the Rurikid dynasty. He served as Prince of Pereyaslavl in 1206, of Novgorod-Seversk from 1219 to 1226, and of Chernigov from 1223 to 1235 and again from 1242 to 1246. He held Novgorod in 1225–1226 and 1229–1230, Galicia in 1235–1236, and was twice Grand Prince of Kiev, in 1236–1239 and 1241–1243.

As a ruler he promoted commerce, negotiating trade treaties with Polish and Hungarian powers, and granted the Novgorodians tax relief and broader political autonomy. Sources describe him as pious and meek from childhood. He suffered from poor health that, by tradition, was relieved around 1186 through the prayers of Saint Niketas the Stylite.

Michael took part in the Battle of the Kalka River in 1223, an early clash between the princes of Rus' and the advancing Mongol forces.

Martyrdom at the Horde

When Michael was summoned to the Golden Horde in 1246, the khan's officials required him and his companion Theodore to walk through fire as a purifying rite and to bow before pagan idols — the elements of the sun and fire and an image of the deceased Genghis Khan. Michael refused, declaring that a Christian worships God alone, the Creator of the world, and not creatures.

He acknowledged that he submitted to the khan's earthly authority but maintained that he could not worship idols. According to the account of the Franciscan traveler Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, Michael said he would bow to Batu but not to the image of a dead man, since that was improper for a Christian.

Theodore, Michael's faithful boyar, was offered great honor and his lord's princely rank if he would comply, but he remained steadfast and followed the example of his prince, enduring the same tortures. Both were severely beaten; Michael was beheaded by an apostate named Domanus, and Theodore was likewise beheaded. Their bodies were preserved until faithful Christians were able to bury them in secret.

Veneration and legacy

Michael was canonized as a martyr before 1271 at Rostov. He is venerated in both the Eastern Orthodox and the Roman Catholic churches, with a feast day on September 20. The account of the martyrdom is corroborated by the thirteenth-century report of Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, who recorded conditions at the Mongol court.

Relics & Shrines

Michael's major shrine was the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Chernihiv. Around 1580 — the relics were transferred on February 14, 1578 — Tsar Ivan the Terrible ordered his remains removed from the Transfiguration Cathedral in Chernigov and brought to Moscow's Cathedral of the Holy Archangels in the Kremlin. Since 1774 they have been kept in the Holy Archangels Cathedral in the Kremlin.

Notes

Named pair kept as one row.

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