Our Venerable Father Basil of Kamen, Fool-for-Christ
Life
Blessed Basil of Kamen was a monk and fool-for-Christ associated with the Savior-Kamen Monastery, situated on a small island in Lake Kubenskoye (Lake Kuben) near Vologda in the Russian North. The surviving record places him in the second half of the seventeenth and the first half of the eighteenth century, though the dating is uncertain and the documentation of his life is sparse.
He is distinct from the more famous Basil the Blessed, fool-for-Christ of Moscow, with whom he shares the August 2 commemoration. Basil of Kamen is remembered for the extreme ascetic discipline characteristic of the holy fools: the icon set above the shrine of his relics depicts him bearing heavy iron chains and a cap fashioned from strips of iron.
Contributions & Legacy
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The Monastery of the Savior on Stone
The Savior-Kamen (Spaso-Kamenny) Monastery, with which Basil is associated, stood on a small island in Lake Kubenskoye in the Vologda region and is regarded as the first stone monastery of the Russian North. By tradition it was established around 1260, after a prince of the region vowed during a storm to build a church at the place where his vessel came ashore; the vessel was driven to the island, where a small community of hermits already lived.
Over the medieval centuries the monastery grew into an ecclesiastical and economic center of the region, and a stone cathedral was raised in 1481 by masters from Rostov. It was within this northern monastic setting that Basil pursued the path of folly for Christ.
Relics & Shrine
Basil's relics were enshrined in a church dedicated to Saint Basil of Moscow at the monastery. A wooden reliquary holding his relics survived a fire of 1774 that destroyed surrounding structures.
He is commemorated on August 2, and also among the Synaxis of the Vologda Saints kept on the third Sunday after Pentecost.