Venerable (Monastic) 16th century

Venerable Nilus of Stolbensk Lake

died 1554

Also known as Nilus of Stolobnoye

A peasant-born monk who sought the solitary ascetic life on Stolbensk Lake, known for prayer, humility, and endurance.

Feast Day
December 7
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Nilus of Stolbensk Lake

Life

Nilus of Stolbensk Lake (also called Nilus of Stolobnoye) was a sixteenth-century Russian hermit, born into a peasant family in the Novgorod diocese. He is remembered as one of the solitary ascetics of the post-Byzantine Russian north, whose decades of withdrawal on an island in Lake Seliger gave rise, after his death, to the monastery that bears his name.

By tradition Nilus was tonsured a monk in 1505 at the monastery of Saint Savva of Krypetsk near Pskov, of whom he is counted a spiritual disciple. After about ten years in the community he withdrew to the River Sereml near Ostashkov, where the sources relate that he led a strict ascetic life for some thirteen years. As people from the surrounding area began to seek him out for instruction, he prayed for a more secluded place of stillness.

Around 1528 Nilus settled on the island of Stolobnoye (Stolobny) in Lake Seliger, near Ostashkov, where he passed the remainder of his life in solitude. He died on December 7, 1554, and was buried on the island. A monastic community later formed at the site of his struggles, and his relics were translated in 1667.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 1505 Monastic tonsure By tradition tonsured at the monastery of Saint Savva of Krypetsk near Pskov.
  2. c. 1528 Settles on Stolobnoye Withdrew to the island of Stolobnoye in Lake Seliger, near Ostashkov.
  3. 1554 Repose Died on December 7 and was buried on the island.
  4. 1594 Monastery opened A monastic cloister was opened on the island, later known as Nilov Monastery.
  5. 1667 Translation of relics His relics were translated.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Ascetic Life on Lake Seliger

The sources relate that during his first year on Stolobnoye Nilus lived in a dugout, afterward building a hut and a small chapel. He remained on the island for roughly twenty-six to twenty-seven years until his death, devoting himself to fasting, prayer, and hesychia (stillness).

A distinctive feature attributed to his asceticism is that he never lay down to sleep: by tradition he permitted himself only a light nap while leaning on a prop. Accounts of his earlier solitude describe an austere diet, with mention of his subsisting on what the wilderness provided.

Nilov Monastery and Veneration

A monastery was established on Stolobnoye island at the place of Nilus's labors. According to the tradition, the cloister later known as Nilo-Stolobenskaya Pustyn (Nilov Monastery) was opened in 1594 with the permission of Patriarch Job, a monk named Herman being associated with its founding in fulfillment of Nilus's bequest. The monastery became a major pilgrimage center in the region.

Nilus is commemorated on December 7, the day of his repose, and a second feast is kept on May 27, associated with the translation of his relics.

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