Venerable (Monastic) 15th century

Venerable James of Zheleznoborov

second half of the 14th century – 11 April 1442

Also known as James of Zheleznoborov · Iakov of Zheleznoborov · James, Abbot of Zheleznoborov

Born into a noble family in the late 14th century, he became a disciple of Saint Sergius of Radonezh and founded a monastic community at Zheleznoborov near Galich in the Kostroma region.

Feast Day
April 11
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father James, Abbot of Zheleznoborov

Life

James of Zheleznoborov was a Russian monastic founder of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, remembered as a disciple of Saint Sergius of Radonezh and as the founder of a monastery on the Tebza River in the Galich district of the Kostroma region. He is commemorated on April 11, the day of his repose.

According to the synaxarion, he was born in the second half of the fourteenth century into the noble Anosov (also rendered Amosov) family, whose lands lay near Galich in Kostroma Province. As a young man he came to Saint Sergius of Radonezh, who tonsured him into monasticism, and he spent several years at the Holy Trinity Monastery before seeking a more solitary life.

In 1392, with the blessing of his elder, James withdrew into the forest to the banks of the Tebza River, at a place called Iron Pines (Zhelezny Borok) on account of the iron-ore deposits in the area, which gave both the locality and the saint their name. There he gathered a community and, with the patronage of the princes of Moscow, built a monastery dedicated to the Entry of the Theotokos into the Temple, together with a church in honor of the Holy Prophet and Forerunner John, into which he introduced a strict cenobitic rule modeled on that of the Trinity-Saint Sergius Monastery.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. second half of the 14th c. Birth near Galich Born into the noble Anosov (Amosov) family in the Kostroma region.
  2. before 1392 Tonsured by Saint Sergius Became a disciple of Saint Sergius of Radonezh at the Holy Trinity Monastery.
  3. 1392 Withdrawal to Iron Pines Retreated with his elder's blessing to the Tebza River, founding what became the Zheleznoborov monastery.
  4. 1415 Connection with the Moscow princes By tradition, was asked to pray for the wife of Great Prince Basil and associated with the birth of the future Basil the Dark.
  5. 11 April 1442 Repose Died after appointing his disciple Dositheus as his successor; buried in the monastery's church of Saint John the Forerunner.
  6. 1613 Relics found His relics were reported found incorrupt.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Monastic foundation and ascetic life

The monastery James founded took its name, Zheleznoborov, from the iron-bearing soil of the place where he settled. The synaxarion records that he maintained a strict communal discipline after the pattern of his teacher's monastery, and that his own labors included digging ponds and giving relief to displaced and impoverished people who came to the community. The accounts describe his personal asceticism as including the wearing of a hair shirt and chains.

By tradition his reputation for holiness was established during his own lifetime. The synaxarion relates that in 1415, when Sophia, the wife of Great Prince Basil (reigned 1389–1425), fell gravely ill before childbirth, the prince sent to James asking his prayers and whether she would survive; the tradition connects the saint with the safe birth of the prince's son, the future Basil the Dark. A later visit, dated to 1450, is recorded in which that son came to thank the saint.

Repose and veneration

Sensing that his death was near, James appointed his disciple Dositheus to succeed him as abbot of the monastery. He reposed on April 11, 1442, and was buried in the church of Saint John the Forerunner within the monastery he had founded.

His relics were reported found incorrupt in 1613, and local veneration developed around them; official church approval for his local commemoration is recorded as being granted before 1628, with a chapel dedicated to him in existence by 1635. The synaxarion notes that numerous healings were recorded at his relics before the monastery's closure in the Soviet period.

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