Righteous · 6th century
Saint Sampson the Hospitable of Constantinople
Commemorated as
Our Venerable Father Sampson the Hospitable, the Host of Strangers, Priest of Constantinople
d. c. 530
Also known as Sampson the Hospitable · the Host of strangers
A wealthy Roman skilled in medicine who gave away his inheritance, healed the sick freely, and was ordained priest at Constantinople, where he founded a great hospital and home for strangers that bore his name.
Life
Saint Sampson the Hospitable was a sixth-century physician and priest of Constantinople, remembered as an unmercenary healer who gave away a large inheritance to treat the sick without charge. Born in Rome to a wealthy and devout family, he trained in medicine and devoted both his skill and his fortune to the relief of the poor, the sick, and strangers.
After converting his family residence in Rome into a free clinic, he settled in Constantinople, where he was ordained to the priesthood and became renowned for healings regarded as miraculous. According to his life, he cured the Emperor Justinian when other physicians had failed, and in return asked only that the emperor build a hospital and hospice for the destitute. The institution that bore his name became one of the great charitable foundations of the Byzantine capital.
He reposed around the year 530 and was buried at the Church of Saint Mokios in Constantinople, where many healings were reported at his tomb. His feast is kept on June 27.