Saint Savva Brancovici Metropolitan of Ardeal, Confessor
c. 1620 - 1683 (Metropolitan of Transylvania 1656-c.1680)
Also known as Sava Brancovic of Transylvania
Metropolitan of Transylvania, of a Serbian family, who strengthened the Orthodox under heavy pressure and suffered imprisonment; honored as a confessor.
Feast Day
April 24
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Saint Savva Brancovici, Metropolitan of Ardeal, Confessor
Life
Savva Brancovici was Metropolitan of Ardeal (Transylvania) in the seventeenth century, a hierarch of a Serbian family who labored to strengthen the Orthodox of the principality against sustained Calvinist pressure. Deposed and imprisoned in his last years, he died of the injuries inflicted on him and is venerated as a confessor. He is commemorated on April 24.
He came from an old Serbian family that had taken refuge near Arad in Transylvania, and was born around 1620 with the name Symeon. After clerical and monastic formation he was elected to the metropolitan see, took the monastic name Savva at his tonsure, and was consecrated bishop in Wallachia.
Timeline 4 moments
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c. 1620Birth into a Serbian family in TransylvaniaSymeon, the future Savva, was born about 1620 into an old Serbian family that had settled near Arad in Transylvania.
1656Election and consecrationA council of clergy and laity at Alba Iulia elected Symeon as Metropolitan of Transylvania in 1656. He traveled to Wallachia, received monastic tonsure with the name Savva, and was consecrated bishop on September 16, 1656.
1656-1680Episcopate and pastoral workAs metropolitan Savva set up a print shop and published service books, manuals of instruction for clergy and laity, and a catechism, working to defend and order the Orthodox Church amid Calvinist proselytism and the wars that troubled the region.
1680-1683Imprisonment, torture, and deathDriven from his see on false accusations, Savva was imprisoned in Blaj in 1680 and endured cruel torture over some three years. Released through outside intervention, he died of his injuries on April 24, 1683, and is honored as a confessor.
Contributions & Legacy
2 contributions
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A Serbian hierarch in Calvinist Transylvania
Savva governed the Orthodox Church of Transylvania during a period when the Reformed (Calvinist) authorities of the principality pressed the Romanian and Serbian Orthodox population toward the Reformed confession. His response was both pastoral and practical: he established a printing press and issued service books, instructional manuals for clergy and laity, and a catechism, equipping his flock to hold to the Orthodox faith.
His resistance to conversion efforts eventually cost him his see. He was removed on false accusations and, in 1680, imprisoned at Blaj, where the sources relate that he suffered cruel torture over roughly three years before being released, broken in body.
Confessor and saint
Savva died on April 24, 1683 of the injuries he had received in prison, and the Church remembers him as a confessor who suffered for Orthodoxy rather than abandon it. He was canonized by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1955, and his feast falls on the same day as that of Saint Iorest, an earlier confessor-metropolitan of the same Transylvanian see.