Hierarch 16th century

Saint Joseph the New of Partos

1568 – 1656

Also known as Joseph of Timisoara · Jacob

A monk born in Dalmatia in 1568 who became Metropolitan of Timisoara, remembered for pastoral care, asceticism, and wonderworking.

Feast Day
September 15
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Joseph the New of Partos, Metropolitan of Timisoara

Life

Joseph the New of Partos was a monastic ascetic of Dalmatian birth who served as Metropolitan of Timisoara in the mid-seventeenth century and is venerated as a wonderworker in the Romanian Orthodox tradition. By the received account he was born in 1568 at Ragusa (modern Dubrovnik) in Dalmatia and given the baptismal name Jacob. After his father's death in his childhood, he was sent at the age of twelve to Ochrid to be schooled.

At fifteen he entered a monastery dedicated to the Mother of God, and after some five years he traveled to Mount Athos, where he was tonsured at the Pantokrator Monastery and received the name Joseph. On Athos he was known for his ascetic discipline and the prayer of the heart, and he acquired a reputation for healing fellow monks and working miracles. According to the tradition he later held positions of monastic authority, including service as a confessor and priest among the Athonite communities.

On July 20, 1650, at an advanced age, Joseph was elected Metropolitan of Timisoara. He governed the diocese for about three years, attending to the pastoral needs of his flock; the synaxarion relates that on one occasion he extinguished a fire in the western part of Timisoara through his prayers, when a heavy rainfall followed. Around 1653 he withdrew to the nearby Partos Monastery, an established church center, where he lived in retirement for three years.

Joseph died on August 15, 1656, and was buried in the monastery church at Partos. His relics were reported to remain incorrupt, and he was formally canonized by the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1956, his glorification being marked on October 7 of that year, after which his relics were transferred to the cathedral in Timisoara. His feast is kept on September 15.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. 1568 Birth in Dalmatia Born at Ragusa in Dalmatia and baptized Jacob.
  2. c. 1580 Sent to Ochrid At the age of twelve he was sent to Ochrid to be schooled.
  3. Mount Athos Tonsure as Joseph He was tonsured at the Pantokrator Monastery on Mount Athos, taking the name Joseph.
  4. July 20, 1650 Elected Metropolitan of Timisoara He was elected Metropolitan of Timisoara at an advanced age.
  5. c. 1653 Retirement to Partos After about three years he retired to the Partos Monastery.
  6. August 15, 1656 Repose He died and was buried in the monastery church at Partos.
  7. 1956 Canonization He was canonized by the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church, his glorification marked on October 7.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Monastic Life on Athos

The sources place the formative period of Joseph's life on Mount Athos, where he was tonsured at the Pantokrator Monastery and took the monastic name by which he is now known. He is described as having attained unceasing prayer of the heart and as living an austere ascetic life.

On the Holy Mountain he became known for the healing of monks and for other miracles, and the tradition records that he served as a confessor and priest to the Athonite communities before his elevation to the episcopate. Some accounts give him the byname "Joseph the Vlach."

Veneration and Patronage

Joseph was canonized by the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1956, and his relics were translated to the Orthodox cathedral in Timisoara. His feast day is observed on September 15.

In 1997 a decision of the Romanian Ministry of the Interior named him the patron of firefighters, a designation connected to the tradition that he once stayed a fire in Timisoara through prayer.

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