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Photius of Kiev

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==Life==
Saint Photius, Metropolitan of Kiev and All Russia, was a Greek from the Peloponnesian city of Monembasia (Malbasia). At a young age, he entered a [[monastery]] and was [[tonsure]]d under the Elder Acacius, a great ascetic who later became the Metropolitan of Monembasia.
After the death of [[Cyprian of Moscow|St . Cyprian]] in 1407, the Russian [[See]] (Lithuania and Russia) was vacant. Patr. [[Matthew I of Constantinople|Matthew of Constantinople]] appointed Photius with the title of Metropolitan of Kiev and Vladimir. In September of 1408 St . Photius was made metropolitan, and the next year he year arrived in Rus. He spent half a year in Kiev, where he concerned himself with settling affairs in the southern dioceses [[diocese]]s of the Russian Church, then included within the principality of Lithuania and Russia.
The saint perceived that the throne of the metropolitan, the spiritual center of churchly life in Rus, could not remain in the Kiev lands, where everything increasingly fell under the dependence of [[Catholicism|Catholic]] Poland. So in 1408, he transferred to Moscow and became Metropolitan of Moscow and all Russia. In Moscow, however, Photius had to deal with much adversity, such as drought, starvation, pestilence and fires, which had fallen upon Russia. Photius found his metropolitan residence ravaged and ecclesiastic treasury empty. Everything seemed to be in chaos, and he didn't know a single word of Russian. But he knew how to highly advance the spiritual significance, the material prosperity and well-being of the [[church]]es under the See of Moscow.
Favorable conditions in the Church allowed St . Photius to provide assistance to the increasingly impoverished Patriarch of [[Constantinople]] and to strengthen the international position of the [[Russian Orthodox Church]] and the Russian realm.
Photius is remembered as a [[clergy]]man who helped the poor and took good care of his Russian flock like none of the foreign [[bishop]]s. He built a [[church]] and the so-called house of silence and prayer on the Sengo Lake not far from Vladimir, where he used to retreat for meditation. In 1430, when Photius was in Vladimir, the Mongols raided the city, but he managed to escape to the lake. He stayed there for three months until the Grand Prince of Moscow sent for him.
After his return to Moscow an [[angel]] appeared before Photius and told him about his forthcoming death. He reposed peacefully on the Feast of the Placing of the Robe of the Most Holy Theotokos at Blachernae, on [[July 2]], 1431.
His [[relics]] were uncovered in the year 1471 along with [[Cyprian of Moscow|St Cyprian]] and [[Jonas of Moscow|St Jonah]] during the construction of the new stone [[Dormition Cathedral (Moscow Kremlin)|Dormition Cathedral]] in the Moscow Kremlin.
==See also==
==Sources==
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photius%2C_Metropolitan_of_Moscow Wikipedia]
*[httphttps://ocafswww.oca.org/FeastSaintsLife.asp?FSID=saints/lives/2020/07/02/101867 -saint-photius-metropolitan-of-kiev St Photius the Metropolitan of Kiev] – [[OCA]] web site.
title=Metropolitan of Moscow and all Russia|
years=1408-1431|
after= [[Isidore the Apostate]]}}
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[[Category:Bishops]]
[[Category:Patriarchs of Moscow]]
[[Category:15th-century bishops]]
[[Category:Russian Saints]]
[[Category:Saints]]
[[Category:15th-century saints]]
 
[[ro:Fotie al Kievului]]
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