Library

263 saints match

  • Saint Vladimir Lozina-lozinsky
    Saint Vladimir Lozina-lozinsky

    1885–1937 · Contemporary

    Vladimir Konstantinovich Lyubich-Yarmolovich-Lozina-Lozinsky (May 26, 1885, Dukhovshchina, Smolensk Governorate — December 26, 1937, Novgorod) was a protopresbyter of the Russian Orthodox Church. He was canonized as a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 2000.

  • Saint Vladimir Vasilevsky

    1892–1938 · Contemporary

    Vladimir Vasilevsky was an Eastern Orthodox priest born in Tashkent in 1892 and a citizen of the Soviet Union. He died in Kharkiv in 1938 and is recognized as a saint within the Eastern Orthodox Church.

  • Saint Vladimir Vorobyov
    Saint Vladimir Vorobyov

    1876–1940 · Contemporary

    Vladimir Mikhailovich Vorobyov (Russian: Владимир Михайлович Воробьёв; born 6 January 1969) is an officer of the Russian Navy. He currently holds the rank of Admiral, and is a deputy commander in chief of the Russian Navy since 2024.

  • Saint Vladimir Vvedenski

    1869–1931 · Contemporary

    Vladimir Fyodorovich Vvedensky (1869–April 3, 1931) was a Russian Orthodox priest, martyr, and saint, born in Shuya (Vladimir Governorate) and who died on Anzer Island (one of the Solovetsky Islands). He was canonized in 2002.

  • Saint Vladimir Vvedensky

    1881–1937 · Contemporary

    Vladimir Dmitrievich Vvedensky (July 14, 1881, Kalyazinsky Uyezd, Tver Governorate — November 3, 1937, Kashin, Kalinin Oblast) was a saint of the Russian Orthodox Church, venerated as a hieromartyr.

  • Saint Vyacheslav Lukanin
    Saint Vyacheslav Lukanin

    1882–1918 · Contemporary

    Vyacheslav Georgiyevich Lukanin (March 4, 1882, Perm — August 3, 1918, Nevyansk) was a deacon of the Perm and Yekaterinburg dioceses of the Russian Orthodox Church.

  • Saint Wassian (Piatnicki)
    Saint Wassian (Piatnicki)

    1879–1941 · Contemporary

    Vassian, born Vladimir Vasilyevich Pyatnitsky (26 February/10 March 1879 in Moscow – 9 January 1941 in the Komi Autonomous Republic or 27 December 1938 in Sverdlovsk), was a Russian Orthodox bishop and a holy new martyr.

  • Saint Yekaterina Arskaya
    Saint Yekaterina Arskaya

    1875–1937 · Contemporary

    Ekaterina Andreyevna Arskaya (born April 1, 1875, in Saint Petersburg; died December 17, 1937, in Novgorod) was a Russian Orthodox saint and new martyr. She came from a merchant family.

  • Saint Yekaterina Konstantinova
    Saint Yekaterina Konstantinova

    1887–1938 · Contemporary

    Ekaterina Grigoryevna Konstantinova (November 11 [23], 1887 – March 20, 1938) was a novice at the Moscow Convent of the Sorrowful Mother of God. She is venerated as a venerable martyr in the Russian Orthodox Church.

  • Saint Zacharias (Lobov)
    Saint Zacharias (Lobov)

    1865–1937 · Contemporary

    Zechariah was a Jewish priest mentioned in the New Testament and as a prophet in Quran, and venerated in Christianity and Islam. In the Bible, he is the father of John the Baptist, a priest of the sons of Aaron in the Gospel of Luke (Luke 1:67–79), and the husband of Elizabeth wh…

  • Saint Zinobi

    1896–1985 · Contemporary

    Zinobi was an Eastern Orthodox priest and metropolitan who was born in Hlukhiv in 1896 and died in Tbilisi in 1985. A citizen of the Russian Empire, Ukraine, and the Soviet Union, he served as a religious leader and prelate. He is buried at the Alexander Nevsky Church in Tbilisi.

  • Venerable Zosima of Ennatsky
    Venerable Zosima of Ennatsky

    1820–1935 · Contemporary

    Zosima of Ennat (secular name Evdokia Yakovlevna Sukhanova; March 1, 1820, Sentsovka village, Orenburg Uyezd, Orenburg Governorate — March 1, 1935, Sentsovka village, Sharlyksky District, Orenburg Oblast) was a Russian Orthodox saint and venerable nun.

  • Saint Đorđe Bogić
    Saint Đorđe Bogić

    1911–1941 · Contemporary

    Georgije Bogić was a Serbian Orthodox protopresbyter and the parish priest of the Orthodox church in Našice; who was martyred by the Ustaše during the Second World War, for which he was canonized as Saint George of Slavonia (Serbian: Георгије Славонски, romanized: Georgije Slavon…