Venerable (Monastic) Byzantine

Venerable Copres of Palestine

Also known as Kopres

Found as an abandoned infant by the monks of Saint Theodosius' monastery, he was raised in monastic life and became known for holiness.

Feast Day
September 24
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Copres of Palestine

Life

Copres of Palestine was a monk of the monastery of Saint Theodosius the Cenobiarch in the Judean desert. The synaxarion relates that he was found as an abandoned newborn at the monastery, was raised there by the monks, and remained within its community for the whole of his life. He is commemorated on September 24.

According to the account preserved by the synaxarion, the infant was left during an invasion of the Hagarenes and was discovered by the monks lying upon a dung-hill, called in Greek kopria, from which he received the name Copres. The monks took the child in, fed him with goat's milk, and brought him up in the monastery. In time he accepted the monastic tonsure and embraced the ascetic life of the community.

The tradition records that Copres advanced to a high degree of virtue and received the gift of wonderworking. He is said to have lived to about ninety years of age and to have reposed peacefully. Beyond the circumstances of his discovery and the report of his sanctity and longevity, the surviving account preserves little detail of his individual life.

Contributions & Legacy

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Name and Discovery

The saint's name derives from the Greek word kopria, meaning a dung-hill or refuse heap, the place where, according to the synaxarion, he was found as a newborn. The tradition associates his abandonment with an invasion of the Hagarenes, during which his mother left him near the monastery of Saint Theodosius.

The monks of the monastery took the infant into their care, naming him after the circumstance of his discovery, and raised him within the community on goat's milk. He grew up in monastic surroundings and later entered formally upon the monastic life through tonsure.

Monastic Setting

The monastery of Saint Theodosius, where Copres was raised, was the great cenobitic community founded in the Judean desert in 476 by Theodosius the Cenobiarch. Situated east of Bethlehem on the road toward Mar Saba, it was among the foremost coenobia of Palestinian monasticism and maintained hospices for the poor and the sick.

Copres is described as having spent his entire life within this monastery rather than withdrawing to solitary eremitic life, reflecting the communal pattern that the monastery's founder had established in the region.

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