Venerable (Monastic) 15th century

Mark Jonah, and Bassa of the Pskov Caves

15th century

Also known as Mark of the Pskov Caves · Jonah of the Pskov Caves · Bassa of the Pskov Caves

Honored as founders of the Pskov Caves Monastery. Mark was the first hermit to settle in the natural caves by the Kamenets stream; Jonah established the monastery there, and Bassa, the wife of Jonah, became a nun and was among its first.

Feast Day
March 29
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Fathers Mark and Jonah, and our Venerable Mother Bassa, Founders of the Pskov Caves Monastery

Life

Saints Mark, Jonah, and Bassa are venerated together as the founders of the Pskov Caves Monastery (Pskovo-Pechersky), one of the most enduring monastic communities of northwestern Rus'. They are commemorated jointly on March 29. The monastery grew from natural caves along the Kamenets stream, on a hill that local inhabitants called 'the holy hill.'

Mark was the first hermit known by name to have settled in the caves; Jonah, a former married priest, excavated the cave church and organized the monastery; and Bassa, Jonah's wife, received the monastic tonsure and was among the community's first. The official founding of the monastery is dated to August 15, 1473, when the cave Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos was consecrated.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1470 John flees to the caves John, a married priest at Iuriev (Tartu), flees persecution and withdraws to the caves by the Kamenets stream, later becoming the monk Jonah.
  2. 1472 The cave entrance uncovered By tradition, the peasant Ivan Dementiev uncovers a cave entrance bearing the inscription 'The cave built by God.'
  3. August 15, 1473 Consecration of the cave church The cave Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos is consecrated, the date regarded as the founding of the Pskov Caves Monastery.
  4. 1480 Repose of Saint Jonah Jonah dies peacefully after laboring at the monastery; chain mail is found hidden on his body.
  5. 1519 Monastery rebuilt After damage from Livonian forces, the monastery is rebuilt by the Pskovian dyak Mikhail Munekhin-Misyur.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Saint Mark the Hermit

Of the first elders who lived in the caves by the Kamenets stream, only Mark is known by name; the records preserve nothing certain of his origins or his death. Tradition holds that he came from the Kiev Caves Lavra. According to the monastery Chronicle, 'a certain Elder was living at the Kamenets near the cave,' and he was recorded among the early elders in the monastery Synodikon.

The sources relate that when Abbot Saint Cornelius doubted the inscription bearing Mark's name and ordered it removed, he fell gravely ill, and recovered only after begging forgiveness at Mark's grave and restoring the name. His relics and clothing were later reported to have been found well-preserved by Abbot Dorotheus.

Saint Jonah, Founder of the Monastery

Jonah was originally a married priest named John, from the Moscow lands, who served at Iuriev (modern Tartu) in a church established by Pskovians and dedicated to Saints Nicholas and George. According to the accounts, around 1470 he fled persecution by the Catholic Germans and, learning of the martyrdom of his fellow priest Isidore, withdrew to the newly discovered caves by the Kamenets stream to maintain an Orthodox presence there.

He received the monastic name Jonah, dug out the cave church, and built two cells on pillars. The cave Church of the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos was consecrated on August 15, 1473, a date regarded as the official founding of the Pskov Caves Monastery. By tradition, a blind woman regained her sight before an icon at the consecration. Jonah labored at the monastery until his peaceful death in 1480; the accounts relate that chain mail was found hidden on his body, taken as a sign of his secret ascetic labors.

Saint Bassa

Bassa was Jonah's wife, named Maria in the world. She received the monastic tonsure with the name Bassa and reposed shortly afterward, numbered among the community's first nuns. The synaxarion relates that her coffin was twice found risen from the ground after burial, which the monks understood as a sign of divine favor, and she was reburied on the left side of the cave.

Tradition holds that her relics were preserved as a protection of the monastery; the accounts relate that when Livonian knights later attempted to open her coffin, they were repelled. She is also commemorated on March 19.

Founding and Setting

The monastery arose from natural caves along the Kamenets stream. By tradition, in 1472 a peasant named Ivan Dementiev, clearing forest, uncovered a cave entrance bearing the inscription 'The cave built by God.' The mid-15th-century settlement of hermits in these caves and the 1473 consecration of the cave church mark the beginnings of the community.

The monastery suffered damage from Livonian forces and was later rebuilt; according to the historical record it was reconstructed by a Pskovian official, the dyak Mikhail Munekhin-Misyur, in 1519. The relics of the three founders rest within the monastery.

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