Traditional Accounts
The synaxarion relates that when Prince Basil Yaroslavich raised his whip against the monk, the prince's hand became numb. By tradition he was healed through the prayer of Saint Tikhon and afterward repented.
late 14th/early 15th century – 1492
A monk who left Moscow for the wilderness near Maloyaroslavl and dwelt in the hollow of a great oak, where disciples gathered and a monastery arose.
Our Venerable Father Tikhon of Kaluga, Hermit of the River Vepreika
Tikhon of Kaluga, also known as Tikhon of Medyn, was a Russian monastic ascetic of the fifteenth century. Raised in Moscow, he received the monastic tonsure at the Chudov monastery before withdrawing into the forested wilderness near Maloyaroslavl, in what is now the Kaluga region.
By tradition he settled on the bank of the River Vepreika and lived for a time in the hollow of an ancient oak. Disciples gathered around him, and from his solitary settlement grew a monastery dedicated to the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos, which was later renamed in his honor. He reposed in 1492, and his veneration was formally established at a church council in 1584.
The synaxarion relates that when Prince Basil Yaroslavich raised his whip against the monk, the prince's hand became numb. By tradition he was healed through the prayer of Saint Tikhon and afterward repented.
After his repose, the body of Saint Tikhon was buried at the cathedral church of the monastery he founded, which became the center of his veneration.