Venerable (Monastic) 15th century

Venerable Ephraim Abbot of Perekop

1412 – 1492

Also known as Ephraim of Perekop · Eustathius

A Russian monk drawn to solitude from youth who founded the Perekop monastery near Novgorod, remembered as a wonderworker and monastic father.

Feast Day
September 26
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Ephraim, Abbot of Perekop, Wonderworker of Novgorod

Life

Ephraim of Perekop was a fifteenth-century Russian monastic founder who established a monastery on the River Verenda near Lake Ilmen, in the territory of Novgorod. Born in 1412 in the town of Kashin and baptized Eustathius, he is remembered in the Russian tradition as a wonderworker and is commemorated on September 26, the day of his repose.

According to the synaxarion, Eustathius left his parents' home in his youth and entered the monastery of the Most Holy Trinity at Kalyazin. After some years he moved to the monastery of Saint Savva of Vishersk, where in 1437 he received monastic tonsure and the name Ephraim. He was subsequently ordained a priest at Novgorod by Saint Euthymius, the city's archbishop.

Ephraim later withdrew to an island at the mouth of the River Verenda, where he founded his own community. He built a wooden church dedicated to the Theophany of the Lord and, to supply the monastery with water, dug a canal connecting the site to Lake Ilmen. From this work of digging the monastery took its name, Perekop, derived from the Russian word meaning 'to dig through.' He afterward built a stone church dedicated to Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker, the construction of which was completed in 1466.

Ephraim reposed on September 26, 1492, and was buried at the church of Saint Nicholas he had built. In the following century his relics were transferred, on May 16, 1545, to the monastery's relocated site, and he was numbered among the saints at the Russian council of 1549. He is commemorated both on September 26 and on May 16, the date associated with the translation of his relics.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. 1412 Born at Kashin Born and baptized Eustathius in the town of Kashin.
  2. 1437 Tonsured a monk Received the monastic name Ephraim at the monastery of Saint Savva of Vishersk.
  3. 1466 Stone church of Saint Nicholas completed The stone church he built at the Perekop monastery was finished.
  4. 1492 Repose Died on September 26 and was buried at the church of Saint Nicholas.
  5. 1545 Translation of relics His relics were transferred on May 16 to the relocated monastery.
  6. 1549 Glorification Numbered among the saints at the Russian council of 1549.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Monastic Formation

The sources relate that Ephraim was drawn to monastic life from his youth, leaving his parental home while still young to settle at the Kalyazin monastery of the Most Holy Trinity. After a period there he transferred to the community of Saint Savva of Vishersk, a noted ascetic of the Novgorod region, and received his tonsure with the name Ephraim in 1437.

His ordination to the priesthood was performed at Novgorod by Saint Euthymius, who served as archbishop of the city in the fifteenth century. This connection places Ephraim within the wider circle of Novgorodian monasticism of his era.

Foundation of the Perekop Monastery

Ephraim established his own monastery on an island at the mouth of the River Verenda, near Lake Ilmen. There he first raised a church in honor of the Theophany of the Lord. To provide the community with a reliable water supply, he dug a canal joining the site to Lake Ilmen; the monastery's name, Perekop, derives from this labor of digging through.

A more permanent stone church dedicated to Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker was later built under his direction and completed in 1466. It was in this church that he was buried after his repose.

Repose and Relics

Ephraim died on September 26, 1492. By tradition his relics were transferred on May 16, 1545, when the monastery was relocated, and he was glorified as a saint at the Russian council of 1549. His memory is kept on September 26, the day of his death, and on May 16, the day associated with the translation of his relics.

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