Adrian of Poshekhonye


Venerable Adrian of Poshekhonye was a Russian Orthodox monk and iconographer, who was the founder and first hegumen of the Dormition monastery in Poshekhonye, north Yaroslavl region. He is commemorated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church.
Adrian was born at Rostov the Great near the end of the sixteenth century, of pious parents named Gregory and Irene. He received monastic tonsure at the monastery of the Venerable Cornelius of Komel. There he was ordained a hierodeacon. Three years after the death of his spiritual father, St. Cornelius, he received a blessing to go and found a new monastery, dedicated to the Theotokos. The monastery was built on the river Votkha in Poshekhonye. Saint Macarius the Metropolitan of Moscow blessed the foundation and gave them a charter to that effect. He ordained Adrian a hieromonk and elevated him to the rank of hegumen.
During Great Lent of 1550, in the evening on March 5, armed robbers burst into the monastery and murdered Adrian after torturing him mercilessly. He was buried by his brethren in the monastery's Temple of the prophet Elijah.
The relics of St. Adrian were uncovered on December 17, 1626, and found to be incorrupt. They were solemnly translated to the monastery church and placed in an open reliquary by the right kliros for veneration by the faithful. His feast day is celebrated on March 5. He is also commemorated, in common with other saints of the Yaroslavl region, on May 23, the "Synaxis of the Saints of Rostov and Yaroslavl", and on November 19, the feast of the Uncovering of his Relics.