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Abraham of Bulgaria

Orthodox Christian saint (died 1229)


Orthodox Christian saint (died 1229)

FieldValue
nameAbraham of Bulgaria
birth_date12th century
death_date
feast_day1 April
9 March (translation of relics)
venerated_inEastern Orthodox Church
Roman Catholic Church
imageСв. муч. Авраамий Болгарский (современная икона).jpg
captionSaint Abraham of Bulgaria
birth_placeVolga Bulgaria
death_placeBolghar, Volga Bulgaria
titlesMartyr
honorifc_prefixhonorific_prefix=Saint

9 March (translation of relics) Roman Catholic Church

Abraham of Bulgaria (; died April 1, 1229) was a Christian convert from Islam later who was martyred for his faith and is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church.

Life

He was born in Volga Bulgaria, amongst the Muslim Volga Bulgars in what is now Tatarstan, Russia. He grew to become an Islamic merchant, and was good and kindly towards the destitute. He later converted to Christianity. Muslims persistently tried to persuade him to renounce Christ, but Abraham was unshakable in his faith and was truncated by the sword (quartered) for his conversion by his compatriots on 1 April 1229 at the Volga bank. Afterwards, they also decapitated him. The saint was buried by Russian merchants in the Christian cemetery in Bolghar, the capital of Volga Bulgaria. Georgy Vsevolodovich, the grand prince of Vladimir, ordered the transfer of the body of Abraham to Vladimir.

Soon, according to the chronicle testimony, the city of Bulgar (Bolgar) was burnt as a punishment "for the blood of the martyr of Christ". On the spot of execution of Abraham of Bulgaria a healing spring appeared. A local legend says that the first person to be healed by this source was a Muslim man.

His relics are venerated at Vladimir on the Klyazma. The Laurentian Chronicle contains the registry about this event that took place on 9 March 1230.

Origin and occupation

There is very little information about the life of Abraham of Bulgaria.

Basic information about him is contained in the chronicles and written histories of the 17th century. The oldest source reporting about Abraham of Bulgaria is the Laurentian Codex (14th century).

The Chronicler said that Abraham of Bulgaria was "of another language, not Russian" (the name before baptism is unknown). Probably, he came from the Bulgarians ("Volga Bulgarians", "Kama Bulgarians"), was growing up in the Muslim environment and originally professed Islam.

Abraham of Bulgaria was a rich and notable merchant; he traded in the cities of the Volga region.

Veneration

He was canonised as a saint and martyr by the Russian Orthodox Church. His feast day is celebrated on 1 April, and he is also commemorated on 9 March, the commemoration of the translation of his relics.

References

External sources

  • Holweck, F. G. A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints. St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co. 1924.

References

  1. "Saint Abraham le Bulgare".
  2. (April 2009). "Den hellige Abraham Bulgareren ( -1229)".
  3. [https://oca.org/saints/lives/2012/04/01/100965-martyr-abraham-of-bulgaria "Martyr Abraham of Bulgaria", Orthodox Church in America]
  4. "Martyr Abraham of Bulgaria".
  5. [http://www.pravenc.ru/text/62936.html/ АВРААМИЙ [АВРАМИЙ] БОЛГАРСКИЙ (in Russian)] Retrieved on 28 Feb 2018
  6. [http://svyato.info/2009/04/15/rodnik-svyatoi-istochnik-avraamija-bolgarskogo.html/ Святой источник (Saint spring)] {{Webarchive. link. (2018-01-09 Retrieved on 28 Feb 2018)
  7. Алексеев И. [http://ruskline.ru/analitika/2012/11/26/pochitanie_svyatogo_muchenika_avraamiya_avramiya_bolgarskogo_v_kazanskoj_eparhii_vo_vtoroj_polovine_xix_nachale_xx_vv/ Почитание святого мученика Авраамия (Аврамия) Болгарского в Казанской епархии во второй половине XIX — начале XX вв.]
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