Life and Death
Basil came from Yaroslavl to the remote Siberian frontier town of Mangazea, a settlement on the River Taz, where he found employment with a merchant and served as a clerk. His life records that he kept to prayer and the church amid the rough conditions of the trading post.
The accounts of his life relate that during the Paschal Matins service the merchant's shop was robbed. Rather than seek the true culprits, the merchant accused Basil, and the governor had him seized and tortured. Through the tortures the boy continued to declare his innocence, and he was at last struck dead with a ring of keys. He died on Pascha of 1600, still a youth. His body was concealed in a marsh, weighted down with stones.
Relics & Shrines
The grave's location was revealed decades after the burial, and when the coffin was recovered from the marsh the relics were found to be incorrupt. A chapel was raised over the site.
In 1670 the relics were translated to the church of the Holy Trinity Monastery near Turukhansk. Metropolitan Philotheus of Siberia sent a carved reliquary to the monastery in 1719, and when a new stone church was completed at the monastery in 1787 the relics were transferred into it.
Veneration and Legacy
Basil of Mangazea is honored as the first saint to be glorified in Siberia, and his veneration stands at the head of the saints associated with the Tobolsk diocese.
His life reports that healings and other wondrous events accompanied the revelation of his relics, and a chapel built over them became a place where pilgrims sought his intercession. He is commemorated on March 23.
Sources and Uncertainty
The accounts of Basil's life differ on some details. The interval between his death and the revelation of his relics is given as forty-two years in one account and as fifty-two years (with the revelation dated to 1652) in another; the date of his death on Pascha 1600 is consistently reported.