Venerable (Monastic) 14th century

Saint Nikodemos the Sanctified of Tismana

14th-15th century (c. 1320 - d. 1406)

Also known as Nikodemos of Tismana

A Serbian-born monk and priest who founded and renewed monasteries in Romania, especially Tismana.

Feast Day
December 26
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Nikodemos the Sanctified of Tismana

Life

Nikodemos the Sanctified of Tismana was a monk and priest of the late fourteenth century who carried the hesychast monastic tradition of Mount Athos into the Romanian lands. Born around 1320 at Prilep, a town in a region older sources describe as southern Serbia (in present-day North Macedonia), he is reported by tradition to have come of a distinguished family connected to the ruling houses of Serbia and Wallachia. He left the prospects of secular advancement to take up the monastic life on the Holy Mountain.

After his formation at Athos he became a founder and organizer of monasteries across Serbia and the Romanian principality of Wallachia, most enduringly the monastery of Tismana in Oltenia, dedicated to the Mother of God. Active in both ecclesiastical diplomacy and the copying of manuscripts, he worked under the patronage of a succession of princes and reposed at Tismana on 26 December 1406, the day on which he is commemorated.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1320 Birth at Prilep Born at Prilep, in a region described by older sources as southern Serbia.
  2. 1375 Mission to Constantinople Took part in a delegation to the Patriarchate of Constantinople to reconcile it with the Church of Serbia; elevated to archimandrite by Patriarch Philotheos.
  3. 1378 Foundation of Tismana Established the monastery of Tismana in Oltenia, dedicated to the Dormition of the Theotokos.
  4. 1405 Copying of the gospels Tradition records that he copied the four gospels in Church Slavonic.
  5. 26 December 1406 Repose Reposed and was buried in the narthex of the church at Tismana monastery.
  6. 1955 Glorification by the Romanian Orthodox Church The Holy Synod decreed his general veneration; the first service in his honor was held at Craiova on 28 October 1955.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Origins and monastic formation

Sources place Nikodemos's birth at Prilep around the year 1320. Accounts of his parentage vary: he is described as of Macedonian-Romanian origin, and tradition relates a family connected by kinship to the ruling prince of Wallachia Nicolae Alexandru Basarab and to the holy Prince Lazar of Serbia. According to the synaxarion his parents wished to see him advance in worldly rank, but he set aside this prospect for the monastic life.

He met traveling monks of the Hilandar monastery in Serbia and went with them to Mount Athos, where he entered Hilandar and labored with perseverance. There he was trained in the hesychast tradition. After a period of discipleship he was tonsured a monk, ordained deacon, and in time ordained priest. Beyond Athos he is recorded to have traveled to Constantinople, acquiring virtue through his love of labor.

Foundations in Serbia and Wallachia

Nikodemos became the founder and renewer of several monastic communities. In Serbia he is associated with a monastery near the Danube; in Wallachia he established a community by the waters of the Motru and the monastery of Vodita, dedicated to Saint Anthony the Great. His most significant and lasting foundation was the monastery of Tismana in Oltenia, dedicated to the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos, which sources date to 1378. He is also credited with the reconstruction or renewal of other houses, and he introduced the hesychast monastic order at his foundations.

Through these foundations Nikodemos became a principal organizer of communal monastic life in the Romanian lands, drawing on the discipline he had received on the Holy Mountain.

Diplomacy, patrons, and manuscripts

In 1375 Nikodemos took part in a delegation sent to the Patriarchate of Constantinople to reconcile it with the Church of Serbia. The sources relate that Patriarch Philotheos elevated him to the rank of archimandrite and gave him a patriarchal staff together with particles of holy relics.

His work was supported by a succession of rulers, among them the Wallachian princes Radu I, Dan I, and Mircea the Old, to whom he is said to have served as father confessor. He was a scribe as well as an organizer: tradition records that he copied the four gospels in Church Slavonic in 1405, and he is reported to have been fluent in Serbian, Church Slavonic, and Greek.

Repose, relics, and glorification

Nikodemos reposed on 26 December 1406 and was buried in the narthex of the church at Tismana monastery. His relics were preserved at Tismana, and the sources name among them a finger, a quantity of myrrh, and a lead cross kept in a vessel.

His veneration was recognized in the Eastern Orthodox Church in earlier centuries, and the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church decreed his general veneration in 1955; the first service in his honor was celebrated in the Metropolitan cathedral of Oltenia at Craiova on 28 October 1955. He is commemorated on 26 December.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • The Four Gospels in Church Slavonic — A manuscript copy of the four gospels in Church Slavonic attributed to the saint as scribe.
Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints