Right-believing (Ruler) 14th century

Saint Helen of Serbia

c. 1235 – 8 February 1314

Also known as Jelena Anzujska · Helen of Anjou

Mother of Saints Stephen Milutin and Dragutin, remembered for charity, monastic patronage, and care for the poor.

Feast Day
October 30
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Commemorated as

The Holy Right-believing Queen Helen of Serbia

Life

Saint Helen of Serbia (Helena of Anjou) was a thirteenth- and fourteenth-century queen consort of Serbia, wife of King Stefan Uroš I and mother of two Serbian kings who are themselves venerated as saints, Stefan Dragutin and Stefan Uroš II Milutin. She is remembered for her charity, her patronage of monasteries and churches, and her care for the poor.

Born around 1235, she is described in her hagiography by Archbishop Danilo II as being of a French family; later genealogical research has suggested possible descent through her parents, John Angelos of Syrmia and Matilda of Požega, from the Byzantine House of Angelos and the Hungarian House of Árpád. After the death of her husband she devoted the remainder of her life to pious works, eventually taking monastic vows, and reposed in 1314 at the Church of St. Nicholas in Skadar.

Her feast is kept on October 30 (Old Style; November 12 New Style). She was canonized by the Serbian Orthodox Church.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1235 Birth Helena is born, around the year 1235; the exact place is unknown. Her hagiographer Archbishop Danilo II describes her as being of a French family, and she is traditionally known as Helena of Anjou.
  2. c. 1245–1250 Marriage to King Stefan Uroš I Helena marries Stefan Uroš I, King of Serbia. Their children include the future kings Stefan Dragutin (reigned 1276–1282) and Stefan Uroš II Milutin (reigned 1282–1321), another son named Stefan, and a daughter, Brnjača, who became a nun.
  3. 1277–1282 Foundation of Gradac Monastery Gradac Monastery, an endowment of Queen Helen, is built during the reign of her son King Stefan Dragutin. Its main church is dedicated to the Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple, and the monastery becomes her burial site.
  4. until 1308 Provincial administration as dowager-queen Following the death of her husband, Helena holds the administration of the provinces of Zeta and Travunia. She governs regions of mixed Serbian Orthodox and Roman Catholic population and is noted for religious tolerance.
  5. 1308 Monastic tonsure Helena becomes a nun at the Church of St. Nicholas in Skadar (modern Shkodër, Albania), which she had herself founded or renewed.
  6. 8 February 1314 Repose Helena dies at the Church of St. Nicholas in Skadar. She is buried at Gradac Monastery, her own foundation.

Contributions & Legacy

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Family

Helena married King Stefan Uroš I of Serbia around 1245–1250. Her children included Stefan Dragutin, who reigned as Serbian king from 1276 to 1282; Stefan Uroš II Milutin, who reigned from 1282 to 1321; a further son named Stefan; and a daughter, Brnjača, who became a nun. Both Dragutin and Milutin are venerated as saints, and Helena is most commonly identified in the synaxarion as their mother.

Her own parents are recorded as John Angelos of Syrmia and Matilda of Požega. While her hagiographer Archbishop Danilo II describes her family as French, modern genealogical research has proposed descent through these parents from the Byzantine House of Angelos and the Hungarian House of Árpád.

Charity and Care for the Poor

After the death of her husband, Helena devoted her life to pious deeds. The synaxarion relates that she built a shelter for the poor and established monastic houses for those who wished to live in purity and virginity. Near the city of Spich she founded the Rechesk monastery.

She is also credited with establishing the first girls' school in medieval Serbia, maintaining a court library, and encouraging the transcription of monastic books.

Patronage of Churches and Monasteries

Helena was a notable founder and benefactress of religious houses. Her endowments included Gradac Monastery, the Church of St. Nicholas in Skadar, and the Monastery of Saints Sergius and Bacchus. She also repaired churches that had been devastated by the Mongol invasion of 1242.

Gradac Monastery, built between 1277 and 1282 during the reign of her son Dragutin, has its main church dedicated to the Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple. Helena's frescoes also appear at Gračanica Monastery.

Governance and Religious Tolerance

As dowager-queen Helena administered the provinces of Zeta and Travunia until 1308. These regions held a mixed population of Serbian Orthodox and Roman Catholic Christians, and she became known for religious tolerance in governing them.

Relics & Shrines

Helena was buried at Gradac Monastery, her own foundation. The monastery was devastated in the late fourteenth century and partially restored in the sixteenth century. Monks fleeing the Turks departed taking with them the holy relics of their founder, and the current location of her relics is unknown.

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