Hierarch 5th century

Hieromartyr Niketas of Remesiana

c. 335 – c. 414

Also known as Nicetas of Remesiana

A bishop of Remesiana who preached the Gospel to the peoples of the Balkans; few details are preserved on the page.

Feast Day
June 22
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Niketas, Bishop of Remesiana

Come to them for
Missionary Work

Life

Niketas of Remesiana was a bishop and missionary of the late fourth and early fifth centuries who served the see of Remesiana in the Roman province of Dacia Mediterranea, on the site of the modern town of Bela Palanka in Serbia. He is best remembered as an evangelist among the peoples of the central Balkans and the Danube and as a writer on Christian doctrine and worship. The OCA synaxarion titles him Hieromartyr, though he is more generally remembered as a missionary bishop. He is commemorated on June 22.

Niketas labored to bring the Gospel to the tribes of the central Balkans, and the sources associate his preaching especially with the Thracian people called the Bessi. His missionary reputation was already established among his contemporaries: Saint Jerome praised him for evangelizing barbarian peoples through, in the tradition's phrase, his sweet songs of the cross. He gave particular attention to the use of sacred song in worship and composed liturgical hymns, promoting the singing of the faithful as part of Christian instruction.

A notable feature of Niketas's life is his friendship with Saint Paulinus of Nola, who honored him in verse for converting barbarian groups and teaching them to sing of Christ. Niketas made a journey to Nola, by tradition in the year 398, to venerate the grave of Saint Felix of Nola. His principal surviving writing is a catechetical work in six books, the Instructions for Candidates for Baptism, which sets out orthodox Trinitarian teaching and contains one of the earliest known uses of the phrase communion of saints.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 335 Birth Niketas is born, by tradition into a Balkan population of the Dacian region.
  2. c. 370 Bishop of Remesiana By one account Niketas is made bishop of Remesiana around this time, beginning his episcopate and missionary work in Dacia Mediterranea.
  3. 398 Pilgrimage to Nola By tradition, Niketas travels to Nola in Italy to venerate the grave of Saint Felix, visiting his friend Saint Paulinus of Nola.
  4. c. 414 Repose Niketas dies after a long episcopate at Remesiana; sources place his repose around 414, some between 414 and 420.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Missionary Work in the Balkans

As bishop of Remesiana, Niketas worked among the peoples of Dacia and the surrounding Balkan regions at a time when Christianity was still spreading among the tribes north of the older Roman heartland. The sources connect his preaching particularly with the Bessi, a Thracian people, and present him as one who carried the faith to populations on the frontiers of the Christian world. His contemporaries regarded this missionary labor as the defining achievement of his episcopate.

By one account his activity extended across territories on both sides of the Danube, spanning regions corresponding to modern Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova and Ukraine, where he is reported to have founded new communities and ecclesiastical centers; for this work he came to be remembered as an Apostle to the Danube. His contemporary Paulinus of Nola, in praising this mission, called him father of the whole north.

Niketas paired his preaching with the cultivation of liturgical song. He promoted Latin sacred music in worship and is reported to have composed several hymns, treating congregational singing as a means of teaching and confirming converts in the faith. It is in this connection that Saint Jerome and Saint Paulinus of Nola both acknowledged his poetical gifts.

Writings and the Te Deum

Niketas's chief work is the Instructions for Candidates for Baptism, a catechetical treatise in six books that expounds orthodox Trinitarian doctrine for those preparing for the sacrament. The work is noted for containing one of the earliest attestations of the phrase communion of saints in Christian literature. Several further treatises are also ascribed to him, among them works on the names of Christ, on the vigils of the servants of God, on the benefits of psalmody, on the power of the Holy Spirit, and an explanation of the Creed.

From the nineteenth and twentieth centuries onward, some scholars have proposed Niketas as the author of the Te Deum, the great Latin hymn of praise that is more traditionally ascribed to Ambrose and Augustine. The attribution to Niketas is supported by a number of medieval manuscripts, the earliest dating from the tenth century and largely of Irish provenance, but it remains debated and is generally regarded as controversial.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • Instructions for Candidates for Baptism — Principal surviving work; a catechetical treatise in six books on orthodox Trinitarian doctrine, containing one of the earliest uses of the phrase communion of saints.
  • An Explanation of the Creed — A treatise expounding the articles of the Christian Creed, among the writings ascribed to him.
  • On the Power of the Holy Spirit — A doctrinal treatise on the Holy Spirit attributed to Niketas.
  • On the Benefits of Psalmody — A work on the spiritual value of psalm-singing, reflecting his concern for sacred song in worship.
Notes

Honest stub; OCA titles him 'Hieromartyr,' though he is generally remembered as a missionary bishop. Flagged for review.

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