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Equal-to-the-Apostles · 10th century

Saint Clement of Ochrid and his Companions

Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Clement, Equal-to-the-Apostles, Bishop of Ohrid and Enlightener of Bulgaria

c. 830/840 – 916 (Clement of Ohrid)

Also known as Clement · Nahum · Savva · Gorazd · Angelar · the Five Holy Confessors

Clement, bishop of Ochrid, and his fellow-disciples of Sts Cyril and Methodios — Nahum, Savva, Gorazd, and Angelar — who, driven from Moravia, carried the Slavonic letters and the Gospel to the Bulgarians, founding schools and enlightening the Slavic lands.

Life

Saint Clement of Ohrid and his Companions — Nahum (Naum), Savva (Sava), Gorazd, and Angelar — were Slavic disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodios who, driven out of Great Moravia after the death of their teacher, carried the Slavonic letters and the Gospel into the Bulgarian lands. Together with Cyril and Methodios they are honored as the Seven (the Seven Apostles of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church).

Clement himself was born around 830–840, probably in the Kutmichevitsa region of southwestern Bulgaria, in the Byzantine–Bulgarian border zone of Macedonia. He took a full part in the Cyrillo-Methodian mission and twice defended the Slavonic liturgy before the popes in Rome against accusations of heresy raised by German clergy.

After Methodios died in 885 and the Slavonic disciples were expelled from Moravia, Clement was welcomed into Bulgaria by Prince Boris I, who commissioned him to build up theological education in Old Church Slavonic. He taught some 3,500 disciples over seven years, became the first Bulgarian hierarch to serve, preach, and write in Slavonic, founded the Ohrid Literary School, and died at Ohrid on July 27, 916. He is venerated as Equal-to-the-Apostles.

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Timeline

  1. c. 830–840 Birth of Clement Clement is born, probably in the Kutmichevitsa region of southwestern Bulgaria, within the Byzantine–Bulgarian border zone around Macedonia.
  2. 867/868 Ordination in Rome Clement and Naum are ordained as priests in Rome by bishops Formosus and Gauderic; Angelar and Sava are ordained as deacons in the same period.
  3. 880 Defense of the Slavonic liturgy The disciples defend the Slavonic liturgy before Pope Adrian II and Pope John VIII against charges of heresy brought by German clergy.
  4. 885 Death of Methodios and expulsion After Methodios dies, Pope Stephen V forbids the Slavonic liturgy and Bishop Wiching, Methodios's successor, expels the disciples from Great Moravia.
  5. 885/886 Arrival in Bulgaria Clement reaches Bulgaria at Belgrade, welcomed by its governor, together with Naum, Angelar, and possibly Gorazd. Boris I commissions theological education in Old Church Slavonic. Angelar dies shortly after arriving, probably in 886.
  6. 886–893 Teaching in Kutmichevitsa Clement teaches some 3,500 disciples over seven years in Kutmichevitsa, running separate schools for children and adults and a court school that flourished under Prince Simeon.
  7. 893 Made bishop Clement is made Bishop of Dremvitsa/Velitsa (Greater Macedonia), becoming the first Bulgarian hierarch to serve, preach, and write in the Slavonic language. Naum follows him to Ohrid to continue the work there.
  8. 905 Monastery of Saint Naum founded Naum founds a monastery on the shores of Lake Ohrid, where he would die and where his relics are still housed.
  9. December 23, 910 Repose of Naum Naum dies at his monastery near Lake Ohrid, venerated as one of the Seven and considered the first native saint of Bulgaria.
  10. July 27, 916 Repose of Clement Clement dies at Ohrid and is buried at the Monastery of St. Panteleimon, which he had founded.

Contributions & Legacy

The Moravian Mission

Clement, Naum, Angelar, Gorazd, and Sava were among the foremost disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodios and took a full part in the Cyrillo-Methodian mission in Great Moravia. They labored to translate Scripture and the liturgical books into Old Church Slavonic, and the group is associated with the development of the Glagolitic alphabet and with the first Slavic civil code used in Great Moravia.

Twice the disciples defended the Slavonic liturgy in Rome — before Pope Adrian II and Pope John VIII in 880 — against the accusations of heresy raised by German clergy who opposed worship in the Slavonic tongue. When Methodios died in 885, Pope Stephen V forbade the Slavonic liturgy, and Bishop Wiching, who succeeded Methodios, expelled the disciples from Moravia.

Mission to Bulgaria and the Ohrid School

Driven from Moravia, Clement arrived in Bulgaria in 885/886 at Belgrade, where he was welcomed by the local governor along with Naum and Angelar. Prince Boris I commissioned Clement to establish theological education in Old Church Slavonic, entrusting the future of Slavonic letters to the disciples.

Over seven years (886–893) Clement taught approximately 3,500 disciples in Kutmichevitsa, running separate schools for children and adults as well as a court school that later flourished under Prince Simeon. In 893 he was made Bishop of Dremvitsa/Velitsa, also called Greater Macedonia, becoming the first Bulgarian hierarch to serve, preach, and write in the Slavonic language. He founded the Ohrid Literary School and a monastery at Ohrid dedicated to St. Panteleimon.

When Clement was raised to the episcopate and moved to Ohrid, Naum followed and continued the work at the Ohrid Literary School as his successor there. Earlier Naum had founded the Pliska Literary School (886–893), one of two academies established by Boris I, before joining Clement at Ohrid.

Literary Work

Clement is credited with composing original spiritual literature and sermons, with authoring a biography of Cyril and Methodios, and with translating the Pentecostarion (the Flower Triode). He is also credited with writing the oldest known service dedicated to Saints Cyril and Methodios.

He is sometimes credited with the invention of the Cyrillic alphabet, though modern scholarship places the development of that script at the Preslav Literary School rather than with Clement himself.

The Companions

Gorazd, fluent in Slavonic, Greek, and Latin, succeeded Methodios as bishop in Moravia before the expulsion; the OCA synaxarion notes that the disciples first lived as ascetics in Moravia.

Naum (c. 830–910) was born in Moesia in the First Bulgarian Empire and took part in the Moravian mission for roughly twenty-two years. He is venerated as one of the Seven and is considered the first native saint of Bulgaria, canonized through Clement's own initiative.

Angelar, ordained a deacon in Rome in 868 alongside Sava, fled to Bulgaria with Clement and Naum but died shortly after arriving, probably in 886.

Relics & Shrines

Clement was buried at the Monastery of St. Panteleimon at Ohrid, which he had founded. In 2008 the Macedonian Orthodox Church donated a portion of his relics to the Bulgarian Orthodox Church.

Naum's relics are housed in the Monastery of Saint Naum near Lake Ohrid, which he founded in 905. The relics of Gorazd and Angelar rest near Berat, in present-day Albania.

Miracles & Traditions

Historically Documented: A signed stone plate dated April 24, 889 was identified in 2018 at Ravna Monastery, confirming the early presence of the Cyrillo-Methodian disciples in Bulgaria.

Notes

Named group; with Sts Cyril and Methodios they are honored as the Seven. Nahum is also commemorated Jun 20 (OS-1397). Also commemorated Nov 25.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints