Hierarch 9th century

Hieromartyr Hermogenes Bishop of Agrigentum

Also known as Hermogenes of Agrigentum

A bishop of Agrigentum in Sicily commemorated among the holy hierarchs; the details of his life are sparsely preserved in English sources.

Feast Day
November 24
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Saint Hermogenes, Bishop of Agrigentum

Life

Hermogenes was a bishop of Agrigentum, the ancient see of Agrigento on the southern coast of Sicily. He is numbered among the holy hierarchs of the Orthodox calendar and is commemorated on November 24. According to the surviving notice, he reposed in peace in the early ninth century, when Sicily still lay within the Byzantine sphere and its bishoprics belonged to the wider Greek-speaking ecclesiastical world.

Very little of his life is preserved in the available sources. Beyond his episcopal rank, his location at Agrigentum, an approximate dating, and his feast day, the synaxaria record no narrative of his upbringing, ministry, or death. Some references reflect uncertainty even about his dates, giving figures as widely separated as the third and the ninth century, though the better-attested notice places his repose in the early ninth century.

The synaxarion attaches to his commemoration a brief verse: that Hermogenes was carried away from the human race, having put to shame the insolence of the demonic race. The line is the principal liturgical witness to his memory, but it supplies no concrete biographical detail and is best read as a general commendation of his sanctity rather than a record of specific events.

Contributions & Legacy

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Sources and Uncertainty

Hermogenes belongs to the sparsely documented company of early Sicilian and pre-schism Western saints whose memory survives chiefly through calendar notices rather than full lives. English-language references are limited to short entries in the synaxaria and liturgical lists for November 24, which agree on his title and see but differ on his dating.

Because the record is so thin, scholarly and liturgical sources hedge on when he lived. One tradition places him in the early ninth century, the period to which his peaceful repose is usually assigned; other listings note an alternative dating centuries earlier. No detailed account reconciles the two, and the saint is best identified simply as a bishop of Agrigentum commemorated among the hierarchs.

Notes

Stub; pre-schism Western (Sicily).

Sources: GOARCH calendar; OCA / J. Sanidopoulos cross-check