fbpx
Wikipedia

Simeon of Verkhoturye

Simeon of Verkhoturye (Russian: Симеон Верхотурский; 1607–1642), also known as Simeon of Merkushino (Russian: Симеон Меркушинский), is a Russian Orthodox righteous saint. He is the patron saint of the Ural region.[1] The main feast day of Saint Simeon is 18 December (OS), or 31 December (NS).

Simeon of Verkhoturye
Saint, Righteous, Wonderworker
Bornca 1607
Died1642
Venerated inRussian Orthodox Church
Canonized1694
Major shrinerelics at the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye
part of relics at the Ascension Church of Ekaterinburg and the Assumption cathedral of Ekaterinburg
FeastFirst translation of relics:
12 (25) May

Synaxis of All Saints of Siberia:
10 (23) June
Second translation of relics:
12 (25) September
Glorification:
18 (31) December

Synaxis of All Saints of Ekaterinburg:
29 January (11 February)
PatronageUral

Believers pray to God asking for Simeon for help, consolation, strengthening, correction, treatment of the soul and body, and delivering from evil. Needy people pray to Simeon to escape from death. Often believers with eye diseases or palsy refer to Simeon for help.[2]

Biography edit

 
Simeon of Verkhoturye with hagiography

The facts of the life of Simeon are very short and only known through the hagiography compiled by metropolitan Ignatius (Rimsky-Korsakov) of Tobolsk and Siberia in the late 17th century from stories by his contemporaries, after the priest had examined the translation of the relics of Simeon. The title of the story was "A Story Known and Witnessed on the Manifestation of the Sacred Relics and in Some Measure the Legend of the Holy and Righteous Simeon, the New Siberian Wondermaker".[3]

According to the hagiography, Simeon was born to a noble boyar family in the European part of Russia. After the death of his parents during the Time of Troubles, Simeon moved to the Ural Mountains and settled in the town of Verkhoturye. In 1620, he moved to the village Merkushino (about 53 kilometres (33 mi), from Verkhoturye), in and around which he spent most of the rest of his life, hiding his origin and living simply.(Russian: социальное опрощение).[3]

In Merkushino he visited the local wooden Archangel Michael church. In summer, Simeon cloistered himself for prayers along the bank of the Tura River ten verst (about 10.66 km, or 6.21 miles) from Merkushino, obtaining his living from fishing. In winter he sewed coats for the village peasants of the Verkhotursky Uyezd. He was known for his unselfishness; for example, to ensure he would not be paid for his sewing work, he would leave the garments he had worked on unfinished and then desert the village. Simeon preached humility, and even during his lifetime displayed the asceticism and honesty of a righteous person.

Simeon preached Christianity to the Voguls. He died in Merkushino in 1642 and was buried in a graveyard by the Archangel Michael church.

Translation of the relics edit

In 1692, the coffin of Simeon miraculously rose from his grave, so that his relics were seen. Local residents regarded it as an indication for sainthood, but they could not recall his name. After that, new cases of miraculous healing seemingly related to Simeon appeared, mainly the healing of skin diseases with earth from his grave. In 1693, the Siberian eparch sent a clerk named Matthew to study the reports of wonders. After contacting metropolitan Ignatius (Rimsky-Korsakov), he was instructed to build a small symbolic cover – a "golubets [ru]" – above the grave of Simeon.

On 18 December 1694, at the metropolitan's request, an examination of Simeon's relics and the apparent instances of healing were led by hegumen Isaac of the Dalmatian Monastery and other clerks. Merkushino was visited by the metropolitan a day later, but after listening to Isaac, who said that "an entire body was found at the grove, excluding decaying fingers on one hand and robe, and, according to witnesses, the body smelled pleasant", Ignatius was skeptical.[4] The hagiography tells how, after the metropolitan's eye suffered an injury, he took it as a judgement on his skepticism and himself examined the relics. In the coffin that had been raised from the grave were found bone remains, tightly covered with flesh, and decaying clothes. Ignatius pronounced them as incorruptible, and, according to the hagiography, received a revelation in a dream about the name of the saint, whom he ordered be called "righteous Saint Simeon". On 30 December 1694 Ignatius again visited Merkushino where he examined the relics for a second time. He had them moved to a church and the coffin covered with a silk podea, and ordered that information about Simeon's life be collected. After that, he wrote the hagiography and akathist of Simeon.

Sainthood edit

 
Shrine with relics of Simeon of Verkhoturye at the Nikolayevsky Monastery, 1910

On 12 September 1704, the relics of Simeon were translated to the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye with the blessings of metropolitan Philotheus, and brought to the right-sided kliros of the monastery church. According to a legend, the translation was related to a cross procession, after lame Fool Cosmas prayed and wished to take rest.[5] In 1716, the church was burnt down, but the shrine with the relics was unaffected and in 1838 was placed to the side-altar of Simeon the God-Receiver and Anna the Prophetess, which was renamed in honour of Simeon of Verkhoturye in 1863. The burial place of Simeon in Merkushino, where a spring gushed, was also honoured. The wooden chapel above it was replaced by a new stone chapel in 1808.

The Brotherhood of the Righteous St. Simeon, Wonderworker of Verkhoturye, was founded in Ekaterinburg in 1886 for the enlightenment of people.[6] Members of the brotherhood on the money of the Eparchy, the Synod and volunteers opened schools and supported missionaries. 300 schools, where over 10 thousand pupils learned grammar and God's Law, were maintained by the brotherhood.[7] A missionary foundation was created in 1901 for the support of the disadvantaged and people returning from a schism or a sect.[8]

 
Cross procession with the relics of St. Simeon, 27 May 1914

The relics of Simeon draw many pilgrims to the monastery; in the early 20th century the number of visitors reached 60,000 people in a year.[9] Incidentally, the Exaltation Cathedral was built in the Nikolayevsky Monastery in 1913 to hold eight to ten thousand people. The dedication and the translation of the relics of Simeon took place on 11 September 1913, when the 300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty was celebrated. That day, a telegram from the Tsar's family arrived from Livadiya: "Verkhoturye. Nikolayevsky Monastery. To the abbot Father Xenophon. I wholeheartedly greet you and the community with this solemn day of dedication of the new church, the cherished monastery and tomorrow's great feast. I seek for your prayers in front of the righteous' shrine. Nicholas. Anastasia". In 1914, the Tsar family donated a silver baldachin for the shrine. It was solemnly moved from Ekaterinburg to Verkhoturye during a cross procession that lasted 20 days. Several thousand pilgrims walked over 350 kilometres (220 mi).[9] On 27 May, the relics of Simeon were translated from the Nikolayevsky church to the Exaltation Cathedral of the Nikolayevsky Monastery.

Opening, withdrawal and return of the relics edit

After the October Revolution, the authority of Verkhoturye passed to the Bolsheviks. On 17 August 1918, at the request of the head of the Extraordinary Board of Inquiry, A. V. Saburov, the first public opening of the relics of Simeon took place. Archimandrit Xenophon (Medvedev), abbot of the Nikolayevsky Monastery, conciliated his parish about this sacrilege, and explained that the opening was limited to the removal of the shroud.[10][11] In September 1918, the town was taken over by Kolchak's army.

 
The Exaltation Cathedral of the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye

In June 1919, the White Army began to retreat from Verkhoturye. Archimandrit Xenophon made the decision to evacuate the monks together with the White Guards. The church property and relics, including the one of St. Simeon, were hidden in the monastery and its skete; the monks took only the silver shrine from under the relics.[10] Archmandrite Xenophon could not get far away from the monastery, as he later wrote: "some hooligans of white guards, in spite of my order as archimandrite, took away my horses and left their nags, on which nobody could ride".[12] A group of seven monks headed by hegumen Abercius continued their movement with the shrine, but on the border of the Irbitsky Uyezd they paused at the Krasnoselsky nunnery, as the white guards did not really care about them. In February 1920 they returned with the shrine to Verkhoturye, now under control of the Soviets.

On 25 September 1920, on the feast day of Saint Simeon with over fifteen thousand pilgrims gathered at the monastery, the Soviets opened the shrine with the relics of Simeon as a part of their anti-religious campaign. Archimandrite Xenophon conciliated the outraged believers, explaining that the opening of the relics did not affect their sacredness, and together with the community carried the shrine from the church, opened it and placed the relics on a table.[10] After two hours, the Soviets agreed to return the relics back to the monastery, but the costly shrine was allegedly seized for the hungry.[13] On 2 June 1924, the relics were examined by the Public Health Administration commission, which found the result of the rite unsanitary, so they sealed the shrine and heavily restricted access to it.[13] On 30 May 1929, the relics were seized from the monastery and given to a museum in Nizhny Tagil for anti-religious works.[14] According to the survey, the museum should "reveal the exploitative nature of the Church Fathers by giving a demonstrative insight into the methods of priestlings and monks who spread their religious narcotic into people's mind".[13] The journal Soviet Local Studies reacted in 1935 to the state of the museum exposition:

Poorly formalized is the anti-religious aspect of the museum. When going to the room with the bone fragments of the 'incorruptible' Simeon of Verkhoturye, one involuntarily feels, that he went to some preaching house. Here one can find every church utensil, chandeliers, a huge Evangelium. There is nothing anti-religious about that exhibition.

— Remembers Nina Goncharova, senior staff scientist of the Museum of Local Studies, and the last keeper of the relics of Simeon of Verkhoturye, [15]

After the publication of that material, the director of the museum was arrested to ten years exile, and the relics were given to a Uralian anti-religious museum in Ekaterinburg, located in the Ipatiev House, in late 1935. After the dissolution of the museum funds, the relics were handed over to the store-room of the Regional Museum of Local Studies on 7 October 1946. On 29 September 1947, Tobias (Ostroumov), episcope of Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk, sent a letter to the director of the Council for Religious Affairs of the Sverdlovsk Oblast, V. N. Smirnov, requesting the return to the church of the relics of Simeon, but the letter was not answered.[16]

On 11 April 1989, the relics were eventually returned to the Russian Orthodox Church and placed in the Spassky church of Ekaterinburg. On 25 September 1992, most of the relics were transferred to the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye in the restored and newly dedicated Exaltation Cathedral.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Екатеринбургская епархия торжественно празднует память небесного покровителя Урала – святого праведного Симеона Верхотурского" [The Ekaterinburg Eparchy Solemnly Commemorates Patron Saint of Ural, Righteous St. Simeon Verkhotursky] (in Russian). Pravoslavie.ru. 25 September 2007. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  2. ^ Святой праведный Симеон Верхотурский [St. Righteous Simeon of Verkhoturye] (in Russian). Pravoslavie.ru. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  3. ^ a b I. L. Mankov; A. V. Medvedev (2000). "Симеон Верхотурский (конец XVI – сер. XVII, с. Меркушино, Верхотурского у.)" [Simeon of Verkhoturye (late 16th – mid-17th century, village Merkushino, Verkhotursky uyezd)]. Ekaterinburg: Uralic Historic Encyclopedia.
  4. ^ "Митрополит Сибирский и Тобольский Игнатий (Римский-Корсаков) и Симеон Верхотурский" [Metropolitan Ignatius (Rimsky-Korsakov) of Siberia and Tobolsk, and Simeon of Verkhoturye]. Siberian Orthodox Journal. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  5. ^ На Урале появился ещё один монастырь, связанный с памятью Симеона Верхотурского Archived 2012-09-11 at archive.today
  6. ^ Ekaterinburg Eparchial Journal, 1886, No. 48, p. 1090
  7. ^ Мирского мятежа бегая...
  8. ^ Ekaterinburg Eparchial Journal, 1901, No. 12, p. 218
  9. ^ a b Паломничество к святому Симеону
  10. ^ a b c Нечаева М. Ю. Верхотурские монастыри в XX веке // Ежегодная Богословская Конференция Православного Свято-Тихоновского Богословского Института
  11. ^ Новомученики Екатеринбургской епархии
  12. ^
  13. ^ a b c Богданова Е. Груз «специального назначения» (Посмертные мытарства Симеона Верхотурского Праведного)
  14. ^ Краткая история Свято-Николаевского монастыря 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ «Сопричастность». Вспоминает Нина Александровна Гончарова, старший научный сотрудник областного краеведческого музея, последняя хранительница мощей святого Симеона Верхотурского
  16. ^ Семененко-Басин И. Возвращение мощей святых Русской Православной церкви в 1940-х годах

References edit

  • Житие Святого праведного Симеона Верхотурского [Hagiography of Righteous St. Simeon of Verkhoturye] (in Russian). Moscow. 1885. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Жития Сибирских святых [Hagiographies of Siberian Saints]. Novosibirsk. 2007. pp. 13–32. ISBN 978-5-88013-010-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Предания и легенды Урала [Stories and Legends of the Ural] (in Russian). Sverdlovsk, 1991.
  • Святые Древней Руси [Saints of the Ancient Rus' ] (in Russian). G. P. Fedotov. Paris, 1931.

External links edit

  Media related to Simeon of Verkhoturye at Wikimedia Commons

  • Righteous Simeon the Wonderworker of Verkhoturye
  • (in Russian) Righteous Simeon, Wondermaker of Verkhoturye
  • (in Russian) Hagiography and wonders of the Holy Righteous Simeon of Verkhoturye

simeon, verkhoturye, russian, Симеон, Верхотурский, 1607, 1642, also, known, simeon, merkushino, russian, Симеон, Меркушинский, russian, orthodox, righteous, saint, patron, saint, ural, region, main, feast, saint, simeon, december, december, saint, righteous, . Simeon of Verkhoturye Russian Simeon Verhoturskij 1607 1642 also known as Simeon of Merkushino Russian Simeon Merkushinskij is a Russian Orthodox righteous saint He is the patron saint of the Ural region 1 The main feast day of Saint Simeon is 18 December OS or 31 December NS Simeon of VerkhoturyeSaint Righteous WonderworkerBornca 1607Died1642Venerated inRussian Orthodox ChurchCanonized1694Major shrinerelics at the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturyepart of relics at the Ascension Church of Ekaterinburg and the Assumption cathedral of EkaterinburgFeastFirst translation of relics 12 25 May Synaxis of All Saints of Siberia 10 23 June Second translation of relics 12 25 September Glorification 18 31 December Synaxis of All Saints of Ekaterinburg 29 January 11 February PatronageUral Believers pray to God asking for Simeon for help consolation strengthening correction treatment of the soul and body and delivering from evil Needy people pray to Simeon to escape from death Often believers with eye diseases or palsy refer to Simeon for help 2 Contents 1 Biography 2 Translation of the relics 3 Sainthood 3 1 Opening withdrawal and return of the relics 4 Notes 4 1 References 5 External linksBiography edit nbsp Simeon of Verkhoturye with hagiography The facts of the life of Simeon are very short and only known through the hagiography compiled by metropolitan Ignatius Rimsky Korsakov of Tobolsk and Siberia in the late 17th century from stories by his contemporaries after the priest had examined the translation of the relics of Simeon The title of the story was A Story Known and Witnessed on the Manifestation of the Sacred Relics and in Some Measure the Legend of the Holy and Righteous Simeon the New Siberian Wondermaker 3 According to the hagiography Simeon was born to a noble boyar family in the European part of Russia After the death of his parents during the Time of Troubles Simeon moved to the Ural Mountains and settled in the town of Verkhoturye In 1620 he moved to the village Merkushino about 53 kilometres 33 mi from Verkhoturye in and around which he spent most of the rest of his life hiding his origin and living simply Russian socialnoe oproshenie 3 In Merkushino he visited the local wooden Archangel Michael church In summer Simeon cloistered himself for prayers along the bank of the Tura River ten verst about 10 66 km or 6 21 miles from Merkushino obtaining his living from fishing In winter he sewed coats for the village peasants of the Verkhotursky Uyezd He was known for his unselfishness for example to ensure he would not be paid for his sewing work he would leave the garments he had worked on unfinished and then desert the village Simeon preached humility and even during his lifetime displayed the asceticism and honesty of a righteous person Simeon preached Christianity to the Voguls He died in Merkushino in 1642 and was buried in a graveyard by the Archangel Michael church Translation of the relics editIn 1692 the coffin of Simeon miraculously rose from his grave so that his relics were seen Local residents regarded it as an indication for sainthood but they could not recall his name After that new cases of miraculous healing seemingly related to Simeon appeared mainly the healing of skin diseases with earth from his grave In 1693 the Siberian eparch sent a clerk named Matthew to study the reports of wonders After contacting metropolitan Ignatius Rimsky Korsakov he was instructed to build a small symbolic cover a golubets ru above the grave of Simeon On 18 December 1694 at the metropolitan s request an examination of Simeon s relics and the apparent instances of healing were led by hegumen Isaac of the Dalmatian Monastery and other clerks Merkushino was visited by the metropolitan a day later but after listening to Isaac who said that an entire body was found at the grove excluding decaying fingers on one hand and robe and according to witnesses the body smelled pleasant Ignatius was skeptical 4 The hagiography tells how after the metropolitan s eye suffered an injury he took it as a judgement on his skepticism and himself examined the relics In the coffin that had been raised from the grave were found bone remains tightly covered with flesh and decaying clothes Ignatius pronounced them as incorruptible and according to the hagiography received a revelation in a dream about the name of the saint whom he ordered be called righteous Saint Simeon On 30 December 1694 Ignatius again visited Merkushino where he examined the relics for a second time He had them moved to a church and the coffin covered with a silk podea and ordered that information about Simeon s life be collected After that he wrote the hagiography and akathist of Simeon Sainthood edit nbsp Shrine with relics of Simeon of Verkhoturye at the Nikolayevsky Monastery 1910 On 12 September 1704 the relics of Simeon were translated to the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye with the blessings of metropolitan Philotheus and brought to the right sided kliros of the monastery church According to a legend the translation was related to a cross procession after lame Fool Cosmas prayed and wished to take rest 5 In 1716 the church was burnt down but the shrine with the relics was unaffected and in 1838 was placed to the side altar of Simeon the God Receiver and Anna the Prophetess which was renamed in honour of Simeon of Verkhoturye in 1863 The burial place of Simeon in Merkushino where a spring gushed was also honoured The wooden chapel above it was replaced by a new stone chapel in 1808 The Brotherhood of the Righteous St Simeon Wonderworker of Verkhoturye was founded in Ekaterinburg in 1886 for the enlightenment of people 6 Members of the brotherhood on the money of the Eparchy the Synod and volunteers opened schools and supported missionaries 300 schools where over 10 thousand pupils learned grammar and God s Law were maintained by the brotherhood 7 A missionary foundation was created in 1901 for the support of the disadvantaged and people returning from a schism or a sect 8 nbsp Cross procession with the relics of St Simeon 27 May 1914 The relics of Simeon draw many pilgrims to the monastery in the early 20th century the number of visitors reached 60 000 people in a year 9 Incidentally the Exaltation Cathedral was built in the Nikolayevsky Monastery in 1913 to hold eight to ten thousand people The dedication and the translation of the relics of Simeon took place on 11 September 1913 when the 300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty was celebrated That day a telegram from the Tsar s family arrived from Livadiya Verkhoturye Nikolayevsky Monastery To the abbot Father Xenophon I wholeheartedly greet you and the community with this solemn day of dedication of the new church the cherished monastery and tomorrow s great feast I seek for your prayers in front of the righteous shrine Nicholas Anastasia In 1914 the Tsar family donated a silver baldachin for the shrine It was solemnly moved from Ekaterinburg to Verkhoturye during a cross procession that lasted 20 days Several thousand pilgrims walked over 350 kilometres 220 mi 9 On 27 May the relics of Simeon were translated from the Nikolayevsky church to the Exaltation Cathedral of the Nikolayevsky Monastery Opening withdrawal and return of the relics edit After the October Revolution the authority of Verkhoturye passed to the Bolsheviks On 17 August 1918 at the request of the head of the Extraordinary Board of Inquiry A V Saburov the first public opening of the relics of Simeon took place Archimandrit Xenophon Medvedev abbot of the Nikolayevsky Monastery conciliated his parish about this sacrilege and explained that the opening was limited to the removal of the shroud 10 11 In September 1918 the town was taken over by Kolchak s army nbsp The Exaltation Cathedral of the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye In June 1919 the White Army began to retreat from Verkhoturye Archimandrit Xenophon made the decision to evacuate the monks together with the White Guards The church property and relics including the one of St Simeon were hidden in the monastery and its skete the monks took only the silver shrine from under the relics 10 Archmandrite Xenophon could not get far away from the monastery as he later wrote some hooligans of white guards in spite of my order as archimandrite took away my horses and left their nags on which nobody could ride 12 A group of seven monks headed by hegumen Abercius continued their movement with the shrine but on the border of the Irbitsky Uyezd they paused at the Krasnoselsky nunnery as the white guards did not really care about them In February 1920 they returned with the shrine to Verkhoturye now under control of the Soviets On 25 September 1920 on the feast day of Saint Simeon with over fifteen thousand pilgrims gathered at the monastery the Soviets opened the shrine with the relics of Simeon as a part of their anti religious campaign Archimandrite Xenophon conciliated the outraged believers explaining that the opening of the relics did not affect their sacredness and together with the community carried the shrine from the church opened it and placed the relics on a table 10 After two hours the Soviets agreed to return the relics back to the monastery but the costly shrine was allegedly seized for the hungry 13 On 2 June 1924 the relics were examined by the Public Health Administration commission which found the result of the rite unsanitary so they sealed the shrine and heavily restricted access to it 13 On 30 May 1929 the relics were seized from the monastery and given to a museum in Nizhny Tagil for anti religious works 14 According to the survey the museum should reveal the exploitative nature of the Church Fathers by giving a demonstrative insight into the methods of priestlings and monks who spread their religious narcotic into people s mind 13 The journal Soviet Local Studies reacted in 1935 to the state of the museum exposition Poorly formalized is the anti religious aspect of the museum When going to the room with the bone fragments of the incorruptible Simeon of Verkhoturye one involuntarily feels that he went to some preaching house Here one can find every church utensil chandeliers a huge Evangelium There is nothing anti religious about that exhibition Remembers Nina Goncharova senior staff scientist of the Museum of Local Studies and the last keeper of the relics of Simeon of Verkhoturye 15 After the publication of that material the director of the museum was arrested to ten years exile and the relics were given to a Uralian anti religious museum in Ekaterinburg located in the Ipatiev House in late 1935 After the dissolution of the museum funds the relics were handed over to the store room of the Regional Museum of Local Studies on 7 October 1946 On 29 September 1947 Tobias Ostroumov episcope of Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk sent a letter to the director of the Council for Religious Affairs of the Sverdlovsk Oblast V N Smirnov requesting the return to the church of the relics of Simeon but the letter was not answered 16 On 11 April 1989 the relics were eventually returned to the Russian Orthodox Church and placed in the Spassky church of Ekaterinburg On 25 September 1992 most of the relics were transferred to the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye in the restored and newly dedicated Exaltation Cathedral Notes edit Ekaterinburgskaya eparhiya torzhestvenno prazdnuet pamyat nebesnogo pokrovitelya Urala svyatogo pravednogo Simeona Verhoturskogo The Ekaterinburg Eparchy Solemnly Commemorates Patron Saint of Ural Righteous St Simeon Verkhotursky in Russian Pravoslavie ru 25 September 2007 Retrieved 16 July 2015 Svyatoj pravednyj Simeon Verhoturskij St Righteous Simeon of Verkhoturye in Russian Pravoslavie ru Retrieved 14 August 2015 a b I L Mankov A V Medvedev 2000 Simeon Verhoturskij konec XVI ser XVII s Merkushino Verhoturskogo u Simeon of Verkhoturye late 16th mid 17th century village Merkushino Verkhotursky uyezd Ekaterinburg Uralic Historic Encyclopedia Mitropolit Sibirskij i Tobolskij Ignatij Rimskij Korsakov i Simeon Verhoturskij Metropolitan Ignatius Rimsky Korsakov of Siberia and Tobolsk and Simeon of Verkhoturye Siberian Orthodox Journal Retrieved 20 July 2015 Na Urale poyavilsya eshyo odin monastyr svyazannyj s pamyatyu Simeona Verhoturskogo Archived 2012 09 11 at archive today Ekaterinburg Eparchial Journal 1886 No 48 p 1090 Mirskogo myatezha begaya Ekaterinburg Eparchial Journal 1901 No 12 p 218 a b Palomnichestvo k svyatomu Simeonu a b c Nechaeva M Yu Verhoturskie monastyri v XX veke Ezhegodnaya Bogoslovskaya Konferenciya Pravoslavnogo Svyato Tihonovskogo Bogoslovskogo Instituta Novomucheniki Ekaterinburgskoj eparhii Gorod bez korony i mantry a b c Bogdanova E Gruz specialnogo naznacheniya Posmertnye mytarstva Simeona Verhoturskogo Pravednogo Kratkaya istoriya Svyato Nikolaevskogo monastyrya Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Soprichastnost Vspominaet Nina Aleksandrovna Goncharova starshij nauchnyj sotrudnik oblastnogo kraevedcheskogo muzeya poslednyaya hranitelnica moshej svyatogo Simeona Verhoturskogo Semenenko Basin I Vozvrashenie moshej svyatyh Russkoj Pravoslavnoj cerkvi v 1940 h godah References edit Zhitie Svyatogo pravednogo Simeona Verhoturskogo Hagiography of Righteous St Simeon of Verkhoturye in Russian Moscow 1885 p 36 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zhitiya Sibirskih svyatyh Hagiographies of Siberian Saints Novosibirsk 2007 pp 13 32 ISBN 978 5 88013 010 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Predaniya i legendy Urala Stories and Legends of the Ural in Russian Sverdlovsk 1991 Svyatye Drevnej Rusi Saints of the Ancient Rus in Russian G P Fedotov Paris 1931 External links edit nbsp Media related to Simeon of Verkhoturye at Wikimedia Commons Righteous Simeon the Wonderworker of Verkhoturye in Russian Righteous Simeon Wondermaker of Verkhoturye in Russian Hagiography and wonders of the Holy Righteous Simeon of Verkhoturye Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simeon of Verkhoturye amp oldid 1189373801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.