Venerable-Martyr 19th century

New Martyr Demetrius of Samarina

late 18th century – 1808

Also known as Demetrios of Samarina

A Greek monk of Samarina in Epirus who endured torture and martyrdom under the rule of Ali Pasha.

Feast Day
August 17
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Monk-Martyr Demetrius of Samarina in Epirus

Life

Demetrius of Samarina was a Greek monk of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries who was put to death under Ali Pasha, the Ottoman ruler of Ioannina, in 1808. By tradition he was born in the village of Samarina, high in the Pindos mountains of the Epirus region, and entered monastic life in a monastery of his homeland, where the synaxarion relates that he wore down his body with fasting.

In 1808 Ali Pasha suppressed an insurrection associated with the priest Euthymios Vlakhavas. In its aftermath Demetrius left his monastery and traveled through the surrounding villages, preaching and consoling the Christian population. Ali Pasha suspected that the monk too had been inciting rebellion. Demetrius answered that he sought only to strengthen the Christians in their faith and to urge them to keep the law, but the Pasha did not believe him and ordered him tortured.

The accounts of his martyrdom describe prolonged and severe torture: nails driven through his arms and legs, slivers of wood or bamboo forced beneath the nails of his hands and feet, and, by tradition, an iron band tightened around his forehead and suspension over fire. Finally he was sealed into a wall with only his head left exposed, so as to prolong his suffering. He is said to have survived ten days in the wall before he died on August 17, 1808, the day on which he is commemorated.

Tradition relates that a Muslim onlooker, moved by the monk's endurance, came to faith in Christ and was himself put to death. The French traveler and historian François Pouqueville, who was present in the region during these years, is reported to have recorded words spoken by the saint during his torture.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. late 18th c. Born at Samarina By tradition Demetrius was born in the mountain village of Samarina in the Pindos range of Epirus and later became a monk in his homeland.
  2. 1808 Ali Pasha suppresses the Vlakhavas revolt After the rising associated with Euthymios Vlakhavas was crushed, Demetrius went out from his monastery to preach to the villages.
  3. August 17, 1808 Martyrdom at the hands of Ali Pasha Tortured and sealed into a wall, the monk died after ten days and is commemorated on this date.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Preaching after the Revolt of 1808

Demetrius's death is set against the suppression of the rising linked to Euthymios Vlakhavas, a clerical leader of resistance in Thessaly and Epirus crushed by Ali Pasha in 1808. According to the synaxarion, Demetrius emerged from his monastery in this charged period to go among the villages, where he preached and gave courage to the faithful. His insistence that his purpose was spiritual rather than seditious did not satisfy the Pasha, who treated his preaching as a political threat.

Confession and Martyrdom

One tradition relates that Demetrius wore an icon of the Mother of God on his chest and refused to dishonor it under interrogation, and that he met his torments with prayer. The same accounts report that as he died he repeated words attributed to the Martyr Babylas of Antioch, 'Soul, return to your rest, for the Lord will bless you.' His walled-up endurance over ten days became the defining image of his passion.

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