Venerable (Monastic) 11th century

Venerable Nikon the Dry of the Kiev Caves

died c. 1101

Also known as Nikon of the Near Caves

A wealthy man who became a monk and was taken captive during a raid, enduring harsh treatment and becoming known for miraculous endurance.

Feast Day
December 11
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Nikon the Dry, of the Kiev Near Caves

Life

Nikon the Dry was an eleventh-century monk of the Kiev Caves Monastery (the Kiev Pechersk Lavra) in Kievan Rus'. According to the tradition recorded in the synaxarion, he was the son of wealthy and illustrious parents but gave up his possessions to embrace the monastic life. He is commemorated on December 11, and his relics rest in the Near Caves of the Lavra.

The central episode of his life is his captivity. In 1096, during the incursions of Khan Bonyak, he was seized together with several other monks and enslaved by the Polovtsians, enduring harsh treatment for about three years. When he refused to be ransomed, his captors tormented him with hunger, exposed him to the summer heat and winter cold, and beat him; the tradition relates that they severed the tendons of his knees and ankles to prevent his escape.

By tradition his deliverance came through a vision: Saint Eustratius appeared to him and foretold his release, and Nikon told his captors that, through the prayers of Saints Anthony and Theodosius, the Lord would return him to his monastery within three days. On the third day, the synaxarion relates, he became invisible to his guards and was carried to Kiev, appearing among the brethren in the Dormition church during the Divine Liturgy. He was called "the Dry" on account of his severe fasting, by which his body was withered.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 1096 Taken captive Seized during the incursions of Khan Bonyak and enslaved by the Polovtsians along with other monks.
  2. c. 1099 Miraculous deliverance By tradition, after about three years of captivity he was carried unseen to Kiev, appearing in the Dormition church during the Liturgy.
  3. c. 1101 Repose He reposed at the Kiev Caves and was buried in the Near Caves, where his relics were glorified by incorruption.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

The Conversion of His Captor

The tradition relates that Nikon's former master afterward came to the Kiev Caves Monastery and recognized his escaped captive among the monks. Moved by what he found, he came to believe in Christ and accepted Baptism. According to the account, he then received monastic tonsure and became a novice under the direction of the very man he had once held in bondage, so that captor became disciple.

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