New Martyr 20th century

New Hieromartyrs Peter Sneznitsky & Michael Tikhonitsky

Also known as Peter Sneznitsky, Michael Tikhonitsky, Priests

Two priests martyred in the Soviet persecution (1918)

Feast Day
September 7
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

The New Hieromartyrs Peter Sneznitsky and Michael Tikhonitsky were two Russian Orthodox priests put to death during the Soviet persecution of the Church in 1918. They are commemorated together among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, the vast assembly of clergy and laity killed for the faith following the Bolshevik Revolution.

Both men were parish presbyters of the Russian Church. Surviving records identify them by name and rank but preserve relatively little detail about their individual lives, a circumstance common to many of the new martyrs of the early Soviet period.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Martyrdom

Peter Sneznitsky and Michael Tikhonitsky were both killed in 1918, during the first wave of state violence against the clergy that accompanied the Russian Civil War and the early consolidation of Soviet power. They are listed as New Hieromartyrs, the term used in the Orthodox Church for ordained clergy who suffer death for Christ.

Michael Tikhonitsky (1846–1918) served as a priest in the town of Orlov in the Vyatka region. He was the father of the future hierarch Vladimir (Tikhonitsky), later Metropolitan of the Russian Orthodox parishes in Western Europe. Following his canonization, Michael Tikhonitsky's relics were placed in the Church of the Nativity of the Theotokos in Orlov.

Commemoration

Peter Sneznitsky and Michael Tikhonitsky are both included among the Holy New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, the collective commemoration of those who died in the persecutions of the twentieth century. Each appears by name and rank — presbyter, New Hieromartyr — in the lists of the Russian new martyrs.

Commemorated with Read Hide
Notes

Among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

Sources: Synaxarion