Life and Monastic Founding
Born in 1448 in Mandera near Lake Ladoga, in the Obonezhskaya pyatina of the Novgorod Republic, the future saint was given the baptismal name Amos. His parents, Stefan and Vassa, were peasants who later entered monastic life themselves, taking the names Sergiy and Varvara.
He departed his home to become a monk at the Valaam Monastery. After serving as a novice, he received monastic tonsure with the name Alexander in 1474. Following his parents' deaths, he moved to the Novgorod region near Olonets, settling in a forest near Holy Lake, where he lived as a solitary for a number of years before disciples gathered around him.
In 1506 Archbishop Serapion of Novgorod appointed him hegumen of the Trinity Monastery, which afterward came to bear his name as the Alexander-Svirsky Monastery. An early wooden Trinity church was built in 1508; a stone church followed in 1526.
Sources describe his extreme humility: he is said to have worn tattered clothing, slept on bare ground, and shared in the monastery's manual labor, including grinding wheat at night.
Visions and Spiritual Gifts
By the account of his life, in 1508 three men robed in radiant white garments appeared to him and instructed him to build a church dedicated to the Holy Trinity; this vision became the defining episode of his veneration. He was ordained priest and appointed igumen of the community.
Near his death, after singing an Akathist, he is reported to have received a vision of the Mother of God with the Infant Christ, with a promise of abundance for the monastery.
His vita was composed in 1545 by his disciple Herodion (Kochnev), with the blessing of Metropolitan Macarius of Moscow and Archbishop Feodosiy of Novgorod.
Relics & Shrines
The Russian Orthodox Church canonized Alexander in 1547. His relics were uncovered and reportedly found incorrupt; the dossier records the uncovering as April 27, 1641 (New Style), corresponding to April 17 Old Style, which established a second commemoration alongside his principal feast on August 30.
In the twentieth century the relics became a point of dispute. The Bolsheviks confiscated them in December 1918, and when the coffin was opened questions were raised about whether it held actual remains or a wax figure; later Soviet commissions reported that human remains were present and confirmed their authenticity. The relics were rediscovered in December 1997, again described as incorrupt, and subsequently returned to the Svir Monastery.
Legacy
Alexander is counted among the major figures of Russian monasticism, and his foundation east of Lake Ladoga became an enduring monastic center in the Russian north.
Seven of his disciples are venerated as saints: Ignatius, Leonid, Cornelius, Dionysius, Athanasius, Theodore, and Therapon of Ostrov.