New Martyr 19th century

Monastic Martyr Ignatius of Bulgaria

d. October 1814

Also known as Ignatius the Monk · John of Eski Zagora

A Bulgarian who became a monk on Mount Athos and later confessed Christ publicly under Ottoman rule, suffering martyrdom at Constantinople.

Feast Day
October 8
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Monastic-Martyr Ignatius of Bulgaria

Life

Ignatius of Bulgaria (baptized John) was a nineteenth-century Bulgarian monk of Mount Athos who, under Ottoman rule, publicly confessed Christ and was martyred at Constantinople in October 1814. He is numbered among the New Martyrs of the Ottoman period.

Born in the village of Eski Zagora in the Trnovo region of Bulgaria to parents George and Maria, John lost his father to a violent death at the hands of Muslims during the Serbian revolt, after which his mother and sisters were captured and forcibly converted to Islam. He himself, having once yielded to a coerced conversion under fear, later sought to wash away that lapse through monastic life on the Holy Mountain and ultimately through martyrdom.

Tonsured a monk with the name Ignatius at the Skete of the Honorable Forerunner of Iveron Monastery on Mount Athos, he traveled to Constantinople, confessed his faith before the Ottoman judge, and was hanged. He is commemorated on October 8 individually, and on May 1 together with the New Martyrs Acacius of Neochorion and Euthymios of the Peloponnesos, with whom he shared a common Athonite milieu.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. Early life Birth and family in Bulgaria John is born in the village of Eski Zagora in the Trnovo region of Bulgaria to George and Maria. The family later relocates to Philippopolis, where John attends school.
  2. During the Serbian revolt Death of his father and forced conversion of his family Amid the Serbian revolt against Ottoman rule, his father George refuses to fight against fellow Orthodox Christians and is stabbed and beheaded by Muslims. His mother and sisters are captured and eventually converted to Islam, and John flees.
  3. Young adulthood Monastic life at Rila and a coerced lapse John enters the Rila monastery in western Bulgaria and lives in obedience to an Elder for six years. When Turkish soldiers demand his conversion, he agrees out of fear, but afterward makes his way to Mount Athos, settling at the Skete of Saint Anna.
  4. 1814 Tonsure as Ignatius Stirred by the martyrdom of Euthymios of the Peloponnesos (beheaded March 22, 1814), John desires a like witness for Christ. Placed under the spiritual direction of Elder Acacius, he receives monastic tonsure with the name Ignatius.
  5. October 1814 Confession and martyrdom at Constantinople Traveling to Constantinople with the monk Gregory, Ignatius appears before the kadi, proclaims his faith in Christ, throws down his turban, and denounces Mohammed as a false prophet. He is hanged at Daktyloporta; his body remains suspended for three days before Christians ransom it and bury it on the island of Prote.

Contributions & Legacy

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Historical Context

Ignatius belongs to the cohort of New Martyrs who arose under Ottoman rule, when Orthodox Christians who had been pressured or coerced into Islam frequently sought to atone for the lapse by openly reaffirming Christ, knowing the act carried a death sentence under Ottoman law. His own path follows this pattern: a conversion accepted under fear, a withdrawal into Athonite asceticism, and a deliberate return to public confession.

He is closely associated with two other New Martyrs of the period, Acacius of Neochorion and Euthymios of the Peloponnesos. All three lived in similar times, experienced conversion away from Orthodoxy under duress, repented, and pursued asceticism at the Skete of the Honorable Forerunner of Iveron Monastery on Mount Athos before witnessing for Christ in martyrdom. The martyrdom of Euthymios in March 1814 directly inspired Ignatius to seek the same witness.

Relics & Shrines

After Ignatius was hanged at Daktyloporta and his body left suspended for three days, Christians ransomed it and buried it on the island of Prote.

His head is preserved at the Monastery of Saint Panteleimon on Mount Athos.

Veneration

Ignatius is commemorated on October 8 as his individual feast, and on May 1 together with Saints Acacius of Neochorion and Euthymios of the Peloponnesos.

No formal act of glorification with a recorded date is preserved; his veneration as a New Martyr, like that of his companions, appears to be traditional rather than tied to a documented synodal decree.

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