Our Venerable Father Theodosius, Prince Theodore of Ostrog, of the Kiev Caves
Life
Saint Theodore of Ostrog was a fifteenth-century prince of Volhynia who, after a public life spent defending Orthodoxy and endowing churches, withdrew to the Kiev Caves monastery and was tonsured a monk under the name Theodosius. He belonged to the line of Saint Vladimir, the baptizer of Rus, being descended from Vladimir's great-grandson Svyatopolk-Michael, prince of Turov and afterward Great Prince of Kiev.
As a ruling prince he held administrative authority over the cities of Vladimir, Dubno, and Ostrog, together with extensive estates across Podolia and Volhynia. His later monastic life and the discovery of his incorrupt relics in the Far Caves of the Kiev Caves Lavra led to his veneration as one of the monastic fathers commemorated there.
Timeline 5 moments
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1386Hereditary possession of Ostrog confirmedThe earliest documentary mention of Prince Theodore dates to 1386, when the Polish king Jagiello and the Lithuanian prince Vitovt affirmed his hereditary possession of the Ostrog district.
1432Freedom of Orthodoxy secured in VolhyniaAccording to the synaxarion accounts, following military victories Theodore prevailed upon Prince Jagiello to guarantee under law the freedom of Orthodoxy in Volhynia.
1440Administration of Volhynian citiesTheodore received the rights of administration over the cities of Vladimir, Dubno, and Ostrog, and was granted extensive holdings in the best regions of Podolia and Volhynia.
after 1441Tonsure at the Kiev CavesHe entered the Kiev Caves monastery, where he received the monastic tonsure with the name Theodosius, and lived there in ascetic struggle until his repose.
c. 1483ReposeThe exact year of his death is uncertain; tradition and historians place it in the second half of the fifteenth century, probably 1483, when he died at a great old age.
Contributions & Legacy
2 contributions
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Defense of Orthodoxy in Volhynia
Theodore's public reputation rested on his patronage of the Church and his resistance to the pressures upon Orthodoxy in the region. The synaxarion records that he gained prominence through the construction of churches and through his defense of Orthodoxy in Volhynia against the encroachment of Papism.
His landholdings and administrative authority across Podolia and Volhynia gave him standing to act on behalf of the Orthodox population during a period of Polish and Lithuanian rule over the western Rus lands.
Relics & Shrines
After his repose Theodore, in monasticism Theodosius, was buried in the Far Caves of the Kiev Caves Lavra, in the cave that bears his name. His body was discovered incorrupt and continues to rest there.
Beyond his individual feast on August 11, he is numbered among the monastic fathers of the Far Caves whose collective commemoration is kept on August 28.