List of Russian saints
This list of Russian saints includes the saints canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church.
Saints are sorted by their first names.
See also the category Category:Russian saints.
Alphabetical list
A
- Abraham and Coprius of Gryazovets, founders of the monastery in Gryazovets
- Abraham and Onesimus of Kiev, monks from the Kiev Pechersk Lavra
- Abraham of Bulgaria, Muslim-born convert from Volga Bulgaria, killed for his conversion, martyr
- Abraham of Rostov, founder of the Abraham Epiphany Monastery in Rostov
- Abraham of Smolensk, 12th-century monk and icon-painter, justified by a miracle and acquitted against the charges leveled against him
- Adrian of Poshekhonye, monk and iconographer, the founder and first hegumen of the Dormition Monastery in Poshekhonye
- Agapetus of the Kiev Caves, 11th century monk and doctor from the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, who healed Prince Vladimir Monomach
- Alexander Hotovitzky, Orthodox missionary in the United States, martyr executed by Bolsheviks
- Alexander Nevsky, Prince of Novgorod and Grand Prince of Vladimir, military hero famous for the Battle of Neva and the Battle of the Ice, patron saint and considered by a poll to be the greatest person in Russian history
- Alexander Svirsky, monk in the Valaam Monastery and the founder of Alexander-Svirsky Monastery
- Alexis of Wilkes-Barre, a missionary in the American Midwest who converted approximately 20,000 Eastern Rite Catholics to the Russian Orthodox Church
- Alexius, Metropolitan of Moscow, Metropolitan of Kiev, Moscow and all Russia, regent during Prince Dmitry Donskoy's minority, spiritual tutor of Dmitry Donskoy and Vladimir the Bold, saved the country from a Tatar raid by miraculous curing of Taydulla, wife of Khan Jani Beg the Golden Horde
- Alipy of the Caves, 11th century monk from the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, one of the first Russian icon painters
- Ambrose of Optina, starets of the Optina Monastery, founder of the Shamordino Convent
- Ambrosius Gudko, bishop of Sarapul and Yelabuga before the Russian Revolution of 1917
- Andrei Rublev, most famous Russian icon-painter, author of the Trinity
- Andronic Nikolsky, bishop, hieromartyr killed during the Russian Revolution of 1917
- Anna of Kashin, medieval princess, wife of Mikhail of Tver, was twice canonized as a holy protectress of women who suffer the loss of relatives, having lost all her relatives due to wars with the Golden Horde
- Anthony, John, and Eustathios, martyrs executed by pagan Lithuanian Grand Duke Algirdas
- Anthony of Kiev, co-founder of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, the first monastery in Russia
- Antony of Siya, founder of the Antonievo-Siysky Monastery
- Arseny Matseyevich, archbishop of Rostov who protested against the confiscation of the church's land by Empress Catherine II in 1764, was deprived of his office and imprisoned in a fortress until his death
- Artemy of Verkola, 16th-century child saint whose body showed no sign of decay
- Athanasius of Brest-Litovsk, martyr killed by Catholics for opposition to the Union of Brest in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- Avraamy of Galich, founder of four monasteries on Lake Chukhloma in Kostroma Oblast
- Avraamy Mirozhsky, a 12th-century abbot of the Mirozhsky Monastery at Pskov
B
C
D
- Daniel of Moscow, the first Grand Prince of Moscow, founder of the first Moscow monasteries (Epiphany Monastery and Danilov Monastery)
- Daumantas of Pskov, ruler of Pskov who made the city independent from Novgorod Republic, defender of Russia from the Livonian Order
- Tsarevich Dmitry, son of Ivan the Terrible, mysteriously died or killed, later impersonated by the impostors False Dmitry I and False Dmitry II during the Time of Troubles
- Dmitry Donskoy, war hero, the first Prince of Moscow to openly challenge Mongol authority in Russia, famous for the Battle of Kulikovo
- Dimitry of Rostov, a leading opponent of the Caesaropapist reform of the Russian Orthodox church promoted by Feofan Prokopovich and Peter I, major religious writer
E
- Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna, senior sister of the last Russian Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, became a prominent nun after her husband was murdered by revolutionary terrorists, founded the Marfo-Mariinsky Convent
- Ephraim of Pereyaslavl, Metropolitan of Kiev and All-Rus' in the late 11th century
- Epiphanius the Wise, a monk from Rostov, disciple of Saint Sergius of Radonezh, hagiographer of Saint Sergius and Saint Stephen of Perm
- Eudoxia of Moscow, wife of Dmitry Donskoy, healer, founded the Ascension Monastery and the Church of the Nativity of the Theotokos, the oldest surviving building in Moscow
- Euphrosyne of Polatsk, granddaughter of a prince of Polotsk, Vseslav, owner of Cross of Saint Euphrosyne
- Euphrosynus of Pskov, 15th century monk from Snetogorsky Monastery who founded a monastic community near Pskov
- Evfimy II of Novgorod, Archbishop of Novgorod in the 15th century, major patron of arts
F
G
H
I
- Igor II of Kiev, Grand Prince of Kiev turned monk, martyr
- Prince Igor Constantinovich of Russia, a member of the Romanov family, killed by Bolsheviks
- Innocent of Irkutsk, a missionary to Siberia and the first bishop of Irkutsk
- Ioakim Korsunianin, the first bishop of Novgorod the Great and builder of the original wooden Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod
- Irenarch, a 16th century hermit of Rostov, mystic and visionary, a companion of John the Hairy
- Isaiah of Rostov, 11th century missionary, the second bishop of Rostov
J
- Jacob Netsvetov, a Russian native of the Aleutian Islands who became a priest and missionary among Alaskan peoples
- Job of Maniava, defender of Russian Orthodoxy in Ukraine, the founder of Maniava Skit
- Job of Pochayiv, defender of Russian Orthodoxy in Ukraine, a prominent hegumen and builder of Pochayiv Lavra
- John the Hairy, 16th century yurodivy (Fool-for-Christ), a companion of Irenarch of Rostov
- John Kochurov, early 20th century Orthodox missionary to the United States, later hieromartyr killed by Bolsheviks during the October Revolution
- John of Kronstadt, patron saint of St Petersburg, mystic and religious writer
- John of Moscow, Fool-for-Christ and wonderworker of Moscow during the reign of Boris Godunov
- John of Novgorod, highly venerated 12th century Archbishop of Novgorod
- John of Pskov, a hermit living in Pskov at the turn of the 16th to 17th centuries
- John the Russian, one of the most renowned saints in the Greek Orthodox Church, 18th century Russian prisoner of war in the Ottoman Empire, wonderworker respected even by Muslims
- John of Shanghai and San Francisco, a leader of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia
- John of Tobolsk, founder of Chernigov Collegium, missionary in Siberia and metropolitan bishop of Tobolsk
- Jonah of Manchuria, diocesan bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia who served in Northern China in the years immediately following the Bolshevik Revolution
- Jonah of Moscow, the first independent Metropolitan of Moscow and all Russia appointed without the approval of the Patriarch of Constantinople
- Joseph Volotsky, prominent caesaropapist ideologist, founder of Joseph-Volokolamsk Monastery
- Juliana of Lazarevo, 16th sentury saint, famous for helping poor and needy people, a hero of the book written by her son
- Juvenaly of Alaska, Protomartyr of America, a member of the first group of Orthodox missionaries to Alaska killed by Yupik natives
K
L
M
- Macarius of Unzha, founder of several monasteries, including the Makaryev Monastery
- Maria Skobtsova, noblewoman, poet, nun, and member of the French Resistance during World War II
- Mark of the Caves, a famous cave-digger in the Kiev Pechersk Monastery
- Maxim Sandovich, protomartyr of the Lemko people, an Orthodox priest was executed by the Austro-Hungarian Empire as a russophile
- Maximus the Greek, 16th century scholar, humanist and translator
- Michael of Chernigov, powerful Kievan Prince killed by Mongol-Tatars for his adherence to the Christian faith
- Mikhail of Tver, Grand Prince of Vladimir killed by Mongol-Tatars
- Moses the Hungarian, 11th century monk in the Kiev Cave Monastery, who spent 7 years as Polish prisoner after the 1018 Kiev Expedition
N
- Nicetas of Novgorod, an 11th century monk from the Kiev Pechersk Lavra who became wonderworker and bishop of Novgorod
- Nicholas Salos of Pskov, 16th century Fool-for-Christ who reprimanded Tsar Ivan the Terrible and saved the city of Pskov from Tsar's atrocity
- Nestor the Chronicler, author of the Primary Chronicle (the earliest East Slavic chronicle) and several hagiographies
- Nicholas II of Russia, the last Russian Emperor, killed during the Russian Civil War with all his family; recently the whole family were beatified as new-martyrs
- Nicholas of Japan, introduced the Eastern Orthodox Church to Japan
- Nikita Stylites, 12th century hermit and healer who bound himself in chains and enclosed himself within a pillar, thus the title 'stylites'
- Nikon the Dry, 11th century monk from the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, captured and enslaved by nomads and released by miracle
- Nil Sorsky, leader of Non-possessors movement
O
P
- 'Paisiy Yaroslavov, 15th century monk, starets and the author of the Take of the Kamenny Monastery
- Pavel Florensky, theologian, philosopher, mathematician, electrical engineer, inventor and new-martyr
- Pavel of Taganrog, 19th century pilgrime and wonderworker
- Peter and Fevronia, saint married couple, an ideal of the family love and fidelity
- Peter Mogila, 17th century Metropolitan of Kiev, theologician, educator and printer
- Peter the Aleut, 19th century martyr in Russian America, allegedly a baptized native of the Kodiak Island (one of the Aleutian Islands), killed by Spanish Catholics
- Procopius of Ustyug, 13th century fool for Christ and miracle worker
R
S
- Sabbas of Storozhev, founder of Savvino-Storozhevsky Monastery
- Savvatiy, co-founder of the Solovetsky Monastery
- Seraphim of Sarov, mystic and patron saint of Russia, the greatest of the 19th century startsy
- Serapion of Novgorod, Archbishop of Novgorod in the 16th century, known for his conflict with Joseph Volotsky
- Sergius of Radonezh, patron saint of Russia, spiritual and monastic reformer, founder of the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius, blessed Dmitry Donskoy for the Battle of Kulikovo
- Sergius of Valaam, brought Christianity to Karelians and Finns, co-founder of the Valaam Monastery
- Silouan the Athonite, “the most authentic monk of the twentieth century”
- Sofia of Suzdal, the first wife of Grand Prince of Moscow Vasily III
- Stephan of Perm, 14th century missionary, credited with the conversion of the Komi Permyaks to Christianity and the invention of Old Permic script
- Sylvester of the River Obnora, 15th century hermit who lived on the banks of the Obnora River
T
- Theodore the Black, 13th century Prince of Yaroslavl, Smolensk and Mozhaysk, who ended his life as a monk and deeply repented his alliance with Mongol invaders
- Theodosius of Kiev, co-founder of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, the first monastery in Russia
- Theophan the Recluse, major 19th century theologian who played an important role in translating the Philokalia from Church Slavonic into Russian
- Therapont of White Lake, founder of Ferapontov Monastery
- Tikhon of Kaluga, founder of the Dormition of the Mother of God Monastery in Kaluga
- Tikhon of Zadonsk, bishop and spiritual writer, the most important 18th century religious educator in Russia
- Tryphon of Pechenga, founder of the Pechenga Monastery on the Kola Peninsula
V
X
Y
Z
See also