His Background
According to his saint's lives, Evfimy's baptismal name was Ioann or Ivan and he was the son of a priest Fedor, and his wife, Anna, although some saint's lives give his father's name as Mikheia, and say he was the priest of the Church of St. Fedor the Great Martyr on the Market side of the city (today it is just east of the Aleksandr Nevsky Bridge on the main road running east out of the city.His Monastic and Archiepiscopal Life
He was shorn a monk at the Listitsa Hill Monastery (Listitsky) and later transferred to the Vyazhishchsky Monastery 12 miles (7 km) northwest of Novgorod (he is known as Evfimy Viazhishchskii for this reason). He was elected archbishop by theCultural Patronage
Evfimy was one of the greatest cultural patrons builders in Novgorod's history. Much of his cultural patronage looked back on Novgorodian history and his building projects were often reconstructions of old churches on their old foundations and in the old architectural styles. He built or rebuilt more than a dozen churches according to the chronicles, several of which still stand in Novgorod today, including the Church of the Twelve Apostles, The Church of John the Forerunner at Opoky (originally built by Prince Vsevolod Mstislavich in 1127), the Church of the Assumption (also originally built by Vsevolod Mstislavich, the Church of St. George at the Market (again, also originally built by Vsevolod Mstislavich) (the three are right next to one another in the northern part of the Market). He also built a number of secular buildings. The Palace of Facets, built in 1433, still stands northwest of the Cathedral of Holy Wisdom. He also built the belfry to the east of the cathedral and a clocktower west of it. The clocktower collapsed and was rebuilt in 1673. Evfimy also canonized a number of his predecessors and promoted the veneration of other Novgorodian saints. He discovered the relics of Archbishop Ilya (Ioann) in 1439 and commemorated him as well as 8 other bishops and archbishops who appeared in a vision earlier that year. Legends pertaining to the city in general and the archbishops specifically were compiled under his auspices such as the legends surrounding Archbishop Ilya and others. He brought inThe Decline of the Republic
Evfimy's archiepiscopate was in some ways one of the high points of the archiepiscopal office in Novgorod.Joel Raba, “Evfimii II Erzbischof von Gross-Nowgorod und Pskov: Ein Kirchenfürst als Leiter einer weltlichen Republic.” ''Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas'' 25 (1977): 161-73; Michael C. Paul, ''"A Man Chosen by God": The Office of Archbishop in Novgorod Russia 1165-1478''. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Miami, 2003; V. A. Nikitin, “Zhitie i trudy sviatitelia Evfimiia arkhiepiskopa Novgorodskogo (k. 525 letiiu s dnia prestavleniia).” ''Bogoskovskie trudy'' (1983) Sb. 24, pp. 260-306. But in spite of this, and in spite of a flourishing of culture, Novgorod suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of Grand PrinceSainthood
Evfimy's Life appeared in a mention (monthly books of saint's lives and services) as early as 1494 and he was formally canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church's Moscow Council of 1549. His feast day is March 11 OS/March 24 in the Gregorian Calendar. Upon disinterring his remains, they were said to have been incorrupt. His body now lies in a glass-covered sarcophagus in the Church of St. Evfimy in the Viazhishchskii Monastery after the church was dedicated to him by Metropolitan Aleksei of Leningrad and Novgorod (now Patriarch of Moscow) on March 31, 1990. A new church dedicated to Evfimy and ArchbishopReferences