Venerable (Monastic) 20th century

Gerasimos Mikragiannanitis

1905 - 1991

Also known as Gerasimos the Hymnographer · Gerasimos of Little St Anne's Skete

An Athonite monk of the Little Saint Anne's Skete and the foremost Greek hymnographer of the twentieth century, who as Great Hymnographer of the Great Church of Christ composed over two thousand liturgical services and hymns. He reposed on Mount Athos in 1991.

Feast Day
December 7
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Gerasimos Mikragiannanitis, the Hymnographer of the Great Church of Christ

Life

Gerasimos Mikragiannanitis was an Athonite monk and the foremost Greek hymnographer of the twentieth century. Born in 1905 at Droviani in Northern Epirus, he came to Mount Athos as a young man and settled at the Skete of Little Saint Anne (Mikra Agia Anna), where he spent the remainder of his life. Over the course of his monastic career he composed an immense body of liturgical poetry, estimated at more than two thousand services and hymns, and he held the office of Great Hymnographer of the Great Church of Christ. He reposed on Mount Athos in 1991.

He arrived on Mount Athos in 1923 and entered the hermitage of Saint Anna at Little Saint Anne, where he was placed under the spiritual guidance of the hieromonk Meletios Ioannidis, a monk of Asia Minor origin. He received the monastic tonsure in 1924, taking the name Gerasimos. Largely self-taught in the art of hymnography, he devoted himself to composing liturgical texts that, by many accounts, were taken up almost immediately into the worship of the Church.

His compositions honored the Holy Trinity, Christ, the Mother of God, and a great number of saints, and his facility earned him the popular epithet of the 'nightingale of the Church.' He was recognized as a hymnographer of the Great Church of Christ in 1959, and in 1968 the Academy of Athens conferred upon him a silver medal in acknowledgment of his work. In 2023 the Holy and Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate registered him in the Diptychs of the Orthodox Church, and his commemoration is kept on December 7.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. 1905 Born in Droviani Born in Droviani in the region of Northern Epirus.
  2. 1923 Came to Mount Athos Arrived at the Skete of Little Saint Anne as a novice under the hieromonk Meletios Ioannidis.
  3. 1924 Monastic tonsure Received the monastic tonsure, taking the name Gerasimos.
  4. 1959 Hymnographer of the Great Church Recognized as a hymnographer of the Great Church of Christ.
  5. 1968 Honored by the Academy of Athens Awarded a silver medal by the Academy of Athens for his hymnographic work.
  6. 1991 Repose Reposed at the Skete of Little Saint Anne on Mount Athos.
  7. 2023 Glorification Registered in the Diptychs of the Orthodox Church by the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Life on Mount Athos

Gerasimos spent his entire monastic life at the Skete of Little Saint Anne, a dependency on the southwestern slope of Mount Athos known for its ascetic and craftsman tradition. He was tonsured in 1924 in the cell of the Holy Forerunner under the elder Meletios Ioannidis. By tradition he later gathered a small brotherhood, and he continued his work of composition into old age, reposing at the skete in 1991.

Hymnographic Work

The defining feature of Gerasimos's life was his prolific output as a hymnographer. Sources estimate his work at more than two thousand liturgical services, encompassing hymns to the Holy Trinity, to Christ, to the Theotokos, and to numerous saints, including many newly glorified figures of his own era. His role as Great Hymnographer of the Great Church of Christ placed him within the official hymnographic service of the Ecumenical Patriarchate; he was recognized in this capacity in 1959. The Academy of Athens honored him with a silver medal in 1968.

Notes

Born 1905 in Droviani, Northern Epirus; reposed at Little St Anne's Skete, Mount Athos, in 1991. Glorified by the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 2023.

Sources: OrthoChristian (orthochristian.com); Ecumenical Patriarchate glorification (2023)