Our Venerable Father Peter the Patrician of Constantinople
Life
Peter of Constantinople, often called Peter the Patrician, was a ninth-century Byzantine officer who renounced rank and worldly life to become a monk. Born into a patrician family at Constantinople in the late eighth century, he served as a commissioned officer during the reign of the emperor Nikephoros (802–811) and took part in the army's campaigns against Bulgaria.
Taken captive in battle, he later returned to Constantinople and embraced monastic life, training for many years under Saint Joannicius the Great on Mount Olympus in Asia Minor. He is venerated as a monastic saint, and his memory is kept on July 1.
Timeline 6 moments
ReadHide
late 8th centuryBorn into a patrician family at ConstantinopleBorn into a patrician family at Constantinople.
802–811Serves as a commissioned officer during theServes as a commissioned officer during the reign of Emperor Nikephoros, taking part in campaigns against Bulgaria.
during the Bulgarian campaignTaken captive in a battle in whichTaken captive in a battle in which the emperor was fatally wounded.
after his releaseReturns to ConstantinopleReturns to Constantinople, renounces the world, and becomes a monk on Mount Olympus, training under Saint Joannicius the Great.
final yearsSpends his last eight years at ConstantinopleSpends his last eight years at Constantinople, founding a church and monastery named for Saint Euandrus.
854Dies at about the age of seventyDies at about the age of seventy and is buried in his monastery.
Contributions & Legacy
3 contributions
ReadHide
Military Service and Captivity
According to the synaxarion, Peter was commissioned as an officer during the reign of the emperor Nikephoros (802–811) and shared in the Byzantine army's campaigns against Bulgaria. In one of these engagements the emperor was fatally wounded, and Peter was among the soldiers taken captive.
The tradition relates that, while he was in captivity, the Evangelist John the Theologian appeared to him during prayer one night and freed him. Released, Peter made his way back to Constantinople.
Monastic Life
Returning to the capital, Peter abandoned worldly life and withdrew to Mount Olympus in Asia Minor, a major center of Byzantine monasticism, where he became a monk. The account states that he was a disciple of Saint Joannicius the Great for thirty-four years.
His asceticism is described as severe: strict fasting and constant vigil, wearing a coarse hair-shirt and going barefoot. He spent the final eight years of his life at Constantinople, where, according to the synaxarion, he founded a church and a monastery dedicated to Saint Euandrus (Evander).
Relics & Shrines
The synaxarion records that Peter died in 854, at about seventy years of age, and was buried in his own monastery at Constantinople. No further account of his relics is preserved in the available sources.