Hierarch 19th century

Saint Meletius Archbishop of Kharkov

6 November 1784 – 29 February 1840

Also known as Meletius Leontovich · Meletius of Kharkov and Akhtyrsk · the Unmercenary Bishop

A nineteenth-century archbishop of Kharkov and Akhtyrsk, called "the Unmercenary Bishop" for giving all he had to the poor; a man of unceasing prayer and night vigils, he reposed in 1840.

Feast Day
February 12
Also Feb 29
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Meletius, Archbishop of Kharkov and Akhtyrsk

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Life

Meletius, Archbishop of Kharkov and Akhtyrsk, was a Russian hierarch of the first half of the nineteenth century who rose through the academic schools of the Church before serving as a missionary bishop in Siberia and a diocesan archbishop in Ukraine. Born Michael Ivanovich Leontovich in the Poltava district in 1784, he was educated at Ekaterinoslav and at the Saint Alexander Nevsky Spiritual Academy in Petersburg, where he taught Greek before entering monastic life in 1820.

He is remembered in the synaxarion for his personal asceticism and for charity that earned him the reputation of an unmercenary bishop. After missionary labors in the vast Irkutsk diocese, he ended his life as Archbishop of Kharkov, where he reposed in 1840 and was deeply venerated by his former flock. The Russian Orthodox Church approved a liturgical service and akathist in his honor in 1978.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. 6 November 1784 Birth in Poltava district Born Michael Ivanovich Leontovich in the village of Stara Stanzhara in the Poltava district.
  2. 1808–1814 Seminary and academy Completed the Ekaterinoslav religious Seminary in 1808 and graduated from the Saint Alexander Nevsky Spiritual Academy in Petersburg in 1814 with a Master's Degree, becoming adjunct professor of Greek.
  3. 11 February 1820 Monastic tonsure Tonsured a monk at the Kiev-Bratsk Monastery with the name Meletios; ordained deacon on February 22 and hieromonk on February 25, 1820.
  4. 21 October 1826 Consecration as bishop Consecrated Bishop of Chigirin, vicar of the Kiev Diocese.
  5. 1828–1835 Successive sees Transferred as Bishop of Perm in 1828, raised to Archbishop of Irkutsk in 1831, and appointed Archbishop of Kharkov and Akhtyrsk in 1835.
  6. 29 February 1840 Repose at Kharkov Reposed during the night of February 29, 1840, and was buried on March 4 in a crypt beneath the Church of the Cross at the Protection Monastery in Kharkov.
  7. 21 February 1978 Liturgical service approved The Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church approved a Church Service and Akathist in his honor.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Academic and Monastic Career

Before his episcopate Meletius spent much of his life in the theological schools of the Russian Church. After graduating from the Saint Alexander Nevsky Spiritual Academy he taught Greek there, and in 1817 he moved to Kiev as Inspector and Professor of Church History and Greek at the Kiev religious Seminary. When the Kiev Spiritual Academy opened in 1819 he became its first Inspector.

He was tonsured a monk at the Kiev-Bratsk Monastery in February 1820 and was quickly ordained deacon and hieromonk. Over the following years he held a succession of rectorships — at the Mogilevsk Seminary and Khutynsk Orshansk Monastery, at the Pskov religious Seminary, and finally at the Kiev Spiritual Academy, to which he was appointed rector in 1824.

Missionary Episcopate in Siberia

Consecrated Bishop of Chigirin in 1826, Meletius served briefly as a vicar of the Kiev diocese before being sent to Perm and then, in 1831, to the far eastern see of Irkutsk with the rank of archbishop. The Irkutsk diocese embraced an immense Siberian territory, and there he gave himself to missionary work.

He is recorded as founding churches in Kamchatka, in the northeastern part of the Irkutsk diocese, and along the Aldan River, and as ministering to the indigenous peoples of the region, among them the Tungus, the Buryats, the Kamchadali, and the inhabitants of the Kurile and Aleutian Islands.

Archbishop of Kharkov and Repose

In 1835 Meletius was translated to the see of Kharkov and Akhtyrsk in Ukraine, where he spent the last years of his life. The synaxarion remembers him for unceasing prayer and personal austerity, and for the generosity to the poor that gave him the name of an unmercenary bishop.

He reposed during the night of February 29, 1840, and was buried beneath the Church of the Cross at the Protection Monastery in Kharkov. He was deeply respected and honored by his former flock, and his grave at the Protection Monastery continued to be visited. His relics were transferred to the Annunciation Cathedral in Kharkov in 1948.

Relics & Shrines

Meletius was first buried in a crypt beneath the Church of the Cross at the Protection Monastery in Kharkov, where his grave remained a place of veneration. In 1948 his relics were transferred to the Annunciation Cathedral in the same city.

Notes

His repose fell on Feb 29; in non-leap years the leap-day commemoration transfers to Feb 28.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Feb 12 & Feb 29