Origins and Hidden Childhood
According to his vita, Galacteon was born Gabriel, of the princely Belsky family, around 1535 in Moscow. His parentage is disputed in the sources: his life identifies him as the son of Ivan Ivanovich Belsky, while a number of scholars — among them M. V. Tolstoy, I. P. Veryuzhsky, and the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopaedic Dictionary (ESBE) — identify him instead as the son of Prince Ivan Fedorovich Belsky, who was overthrown by the Shuiskys in 1542. The sources note that even late seventeenth-century Vologda ecclesiastical authorities remained uncertain about his parentage.
During the persecution of the Belsky princes, relatives secretly brought the seven-year-old Gabriel to the town of Staritsa to keep him out of reach of the reprisals at court. The OCA synaxarion frames this concealment as a flight from the wrath of Tsar Ivan the Terrible.
Craftsman, Husband, and Recluse
Gabriel later fled secretly to Vologda, where he lived in obscurity and apprenticed as a leather worker, or cobbler. He married a woman described in the sources as being of simple origins and had one daughter. After he was widowed, he gave himself over to ascetic practice.
He obtained a parcel of land near the Sodemka River and built a small cell there. By the account of Veryuzhsky, he took monastic vows under the name Galaktion at the Boris-and-Gleb Monastery near Rostov, becoming a disciple of the ascetic Irinarkh. He is said to have adopted extreme forms of self-mortification, wearing a hair shirt and chains, and, by report, chaining himself with iron to the ceiling beam of his cell.
Death in the Time of Troubles
On September 22, 1612, during an assault on Vologda in the Time of Troubles, attackers discovered Galacteon in his hermitage and beat him without mercy, striking him with swords and with a wooden club to the head, and left him barely alive. He died of his wounds on September 24, 1612, and was buried at the site of his cell.
A church dedicated to the Sign (Znamenie) of the Mother of God was eventually built on the spot. In 1654, with funds provided by Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, the Holy Spirit (Svyato-Dukhovsky) monastery for men was founded at his burial place.
Veneration and Canonization Status
The sources are explicit that Galacteon was never formally canonized by the Russian Church. In the late seventeenth century Archbishop Gabriel of Vologda is said to have discovered his incorrupt grave, but in 1691 Patriarch Adrian declined formal glorification, citing insufficient documentation and questionable miracles, and directing that the relics not be taken from the earth nor veneration permitted in church.
Despite this, a special liturgical service for him was composed in 1717, and by the late nineteenth century he was popularly venerated as a saint without formal canonization, his relics kept in a silver-plated reliquary beneath the altar of the Znamenskaya Church. The sources consulted record no later formal act of glorification, and the present profile does not assert one; his commemoration on the OCA calendar reflects this long-standing local veneration.
Relics & Shrines
Galacteon was buried at the site of his cell near the Sodemka River, where a church of the Sign of the Mother of God and, from 1654, the Holy Spirit monastery were established. By the late nineteenth century his relics were enshrined in a silver-plated reliquary beneath the altar of the Znamenskaya Church.