Venerable (Monastic) 5th century

Venerable Achilles the Confessor

5th century

A desert anchorite remembered among the fathers of the Egyptian wilderness.

Feast Day
January 17
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Achilles the Confessor, Anchorite of the Egyptian Desert

Life

Achilles was an anchorite of the Egyptian desert during the 5th century, remembered among the fathers of the wilderness. He is commemorated on January 17.

The principal record of his life comes from the OCA Synaxarion, which preserves two anecdotes drawn from the Evergetinós, a Byzantine patristic compilation. His name also appears in the alphabetical roster of the Apophthegmata Patrum (the Sayings of the Desert Fathers), the major collection of sayings attributed to the Egyptian and Palestinian fathers compiled from roughly the 4th-5th centuries, indicating that sayings were attributed to him and circulated in monastic communities. His section there is brief compared to major figures such as Anthony the Great, Moses the Black, or Poemen.

The synaxarion records that Saint Achilles reposed in peace. No specific burial location, relics, or shrine information is preserved.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 5th century An anchorite of the Egyptian desert Achilles lived as an anchorite in the Egyptian wilderness during the 5th century, amid the desert monastic communities centered on Scetis.
  2. 5th century Repose The synaxarion records that Saint Achilles reposed in peace; no further details of his death are preserved.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Teaching and Sayings

The synaxarion preserves two anecdotes attributed to Achilles. In the first, he encountered Abba Isaiah, who was consuming palm leaves mixed with salt and water on account of an intense, heat-induced thirst. Achilles used the occasion to instruct other monks on maintaining strict dietary discipline, warning them not to imitate such a lapse even under duress.

In the second, when Achilles was grieved by a brother's words, he prayed that God would remove from him the remembrance of that word, and ultimately attained interior peace through this practice. The synaxarion presents the episode as an illustration of his teaching on non-remembrance of wrongs.

These accounts follow the form of the chriae found throughout the Apophthegmata Patrum: brief teaching encounters between an elder and a visitor or disciple.

Historical Context

Scetis (Wadi El Natrun) in Egypt was the principal locus of 5th-century Egyptian desert monasticism, inhabited by major Desert Fathers including Anthony the Great, Macarius of Egypt, Arsenius, and John Cassian. The region suffered devastating raids by the Mazices in 407-408, causing many notable fathers to scatter, with further raids in 434, 444, and 570.

Saint Arsenius the Great is recorded as lamenting around 410: 'The world has lost Rome and the monks have lost Scetis.' Despite these disruptions, the communities regrouped, and Scetis became the most important center of Coptic monasticism in Egypt. A 5th-century anchorite such as Achilles would have been active amid this turbulent but spiritually formative period. No named reference to Achilles appears in the broader historiographical record of Scetis, consistent with his being a lesser-known figure whose name was preserved chiefly in the Apophthegmata.

Liturgical Commemoration

Achilles is named in the third Troparion of Ode One of the Canon for Saturday of Cheesefare Week, where he is mentioned together with Saint Ammoun: 'Achilles and Ammoun, the flowers of the desert.' This is evidence of his lasting liturgical commemoration alongside another Egyptian desert father.

Relics & Shrines

The synaxarion states simply that Saint Achilles reposed in peace and provides no burial location, relics, or shrine information.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 17