Venerable (Monastic) 11th century

Saint Procopius of Sazava

c. 970 – 1053

Also known as Procopius of Bohemia

A Bohemian priest who spread Christianity and founded the Sazava monastery dedicated to Saint John the Forerunner; reposed in 1053.

Feast Day
September 16
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Procopius of Sazava

Life

Procopius of Sazava was a Bohemian priest, hermit, and monastic founder who labored to spread the Christian faith among the Czech people in the early eleventh century. He is best known as the founder and first abbot of the monastery on the River Sazava, dedicated to Saint John the Forerunner, and is commemorated in the Orthodox Church on September 16. He reposed in 1053.

According to tradition, Procopius was born around 970 in the village of Chotoun, in Central Bohemia near Kourim. He studied and was ordained to the priesthood, and accounts relate that he was married and had a son before withdrawing from secular life. He later embraced the monastic life and eventually retired as a hermit to a cave on the banks of the Sazava River.

A community of hermits gathered around Procopius, and with the support of the Duke of Bohemia this community was established as a monastery in the early 1030s, with Procopius as its first abbot. He guided the community for roughly two decades until his death. The monastery he founded became a notable center of Slavonic monastic life, where, by tradition, the divine services were celebrated in Old Church Slavonic rather than in Latin.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 970 Birth in Bohemia Procopius is born, by tradition, in the village of Chotoun in Central Bohemia.
  2. early 1030s Sazava monastery founded The hermit community on the Sazava is established as a monastery with Procopius as its first abbot.
  3. 1053 Repose Procopius reposes after about twenty years guiding the Sazava community.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Foundation of the Sazava Monastery

The hermitage that grew up around Procopius on the River Sazava was incorporated as a monastery by the Duke of Bohemia in the early 1030s, and Procopius served as its first abbot. The Orthodox tradition records that the monastery was dedicated to Saint John the Forerunner.

The Sazava monastery is remembered as an important center where the Divine Liturgy was celebrated in Old Church Slavonic, in continuity with the Slavonic liturgical tradition, rather than in Latin — a distinctive feature for a monastic house in the Czech lands of that period. This Slavonic observance continued at Sazava until the later eleventh century, after which the Slavonic monks were displaced and the Latin rite prevailed.

Veneration

Procopius is commemorated in the Orthodox Church on September 16, a date that coincides with the synaxis of the saints of Carpatho-Rus. He is venerated as a righteous father and monastic founder, and is counted among the pre-schism saints of the Western and Slavic lands recognized within the Orthodox calendar.

Notes

Pre-schism Western/Slavic saint.

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