Venerable (Monastic) 16th century

Venerable Sebastian of Poshekhonye

d. c. 1500

A monastic founder who established a monastery on the River Sokhota in the Poshekhonye region and labored there in asceticism, reposing about the year 1500. Also commemorated December 18.

Feast Day
February 26
Also Dec 18
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Sebastian of Poshekhonye, Founder of the Sokhota Transfiguration Monastery

Life

Sebastian of Poshekhonye, also known as Sebastian of Sokhota, was a Russian monastic founder who established a monastery dedicated to the Transfiguration of the Lord in the forested Poshekhonye region. He reposed about the year 1500, though some sources place his death in 1492.

Drawn to the ascetic life from a young age, he entered monastic community early, was ordained hierodeacon and later hieromonk, and ultimately withdrew into the dense forests along the River Sokhota, where his solitary labors gathered a community of monks around him.

He is commemorated on February 26 and December 18.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1492-1500 Repose Sebastian reposed about the year 1500, with some sources dating his death to 1492.
  2. 1764 Closure of the monastery The monastery he founded, by then annexed to the Cherepovets Ascension Monastery, was shut down.
  3. mid-19th century Stone church over the relics A stone church was built over his relics.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Monastic Life and Foundation

According to tradition, Sebastian felt a disposition toward the ascetic life even as a teenager and entered one of the many monasteries then active in the region. He served in various monastic roles and was ordained as both hierodeacon and hieromonk.

Rather than remaining within the walls of an established house, Sebastian withdrew into the dense forests of the Poshekhonye region, along the River Sokhota, some 90 versts from the city of Romanov (now Tutaev) in the Yaroslav district. There he built a temple dedicated to the Transfiguration of the Lord.

His solitary efforts drew other monks to him, and a monastic community formed under his guidance. Known as the Sokhota Monastery, it later came to be called the Poshekhonye Monastery. The monks supported themselves by cultivating the soil, living from the work of their own hands.

Biographical details about Sebastian remain scarce; practically no information survives concerning his childhood and early life.

Relics & Shrines

Sebastian was buried at the monastery he founded. After his death the community was later annexed to the Cherepovets Ascension Monastery, and the house itself was closed in 1764.

A stone church was constructed over his relics during the mid-nineteenth century.

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