November 26 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - November 28
All fixed commemorations below are observed on December 10 by Eastern Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.
For November 27, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on November 14.
Saints
- Venerable Moses
- 17 Monk-martyrs in India (4th century)
- Venerable Pinuphrius of Egypt (4th century)
- Great-Martyr James Intercisus the Persian (421)
- Saint Palladius of Galatia, Bishop of Helenopolis (Elenopolis), Bithynia, author of the Lausaic History (c. 430)
- Venerable Romanus the Wonderworker of Cilicia (5th century) <small>(see also: February 9)</small>
- Venerable Nathaniel of Nitria (6th century)
- Venerable Palladius of Thessalonica (6thâÂÂ7th century)
Pre-Schism Western saints
- Saints Facundus and Primitivus (c. 300)
- Saint Valerian, Bishop of Aquileia in the north of Italy (389)
- Saint John Angeloptes, Bishop of Ravenna in Italy 430-433 (433)
- Saint Seachnall (Sechnall), first Bishop of Dunsauglin in Meath in Ireland and later served in Armagh (457)
- Saint Maximus of Riez, Abbot of Lérins Abbey in France in 426, he became Bishop of Riez (460)
- Saint Congar of Congresbury, Bishop of Somerset (520)
- Saint Siffred of Carpentras (Siffrein, Syffroy, Suffredus), a monk at Lérins Abbey and later Bishop of Carpentras in the south of France (c. 540)
- Saint Severinus, a hermit who lived near Paris in France (c. 540)
- Saint Gallgo, founder of Llanallgo in Anglesey in Wales (6th century)
- Saint Acharius, Bishop of Noyon-Tournai in Belgium (640)
- Saint Bilihildis, foundress of the convent of Altenmünster in Mainz (c. 710)
- Saint Fergus of Glamis, born in Ireland, he was a bishop who preached among the Picts in Perthshire, Caithness, Buchan and Forfarshire in Scotland (c. 721)
- Saint Virgil (Vergilius, Fergal), Abbot of St Peter's in Salzburg and Bishop, the Apostle of Carinthia (784)
- Saint Apollinaris, fourteenth Abbot of Montecassino Abbey in Italy, abbot for eleven years (828)
Post-Schism Orthodox saints
New martyrs and confessors
- New Hieromartyr Nicholas Dobronravov, Archbishop of Vladimir (1937)
- New Hieromartyrs Nicholas Andreyev, Boris Ivanosky and Basil Sokolov of Moscow, Protopresbyters (1937)
- New Hieromartyrs Theodore Dorofiev of Moscow, Alexei Speransky of Moscow, John Glazkov of Alma-Ata, Sergius Amanov, John Khrustalev, Sergius Brednikov, Nicholas Pokrovsky, Priests (1937)
- New Hieromartyr Cronides Lyubimov of Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra, Archimandrite, and with him Seraphim Krestianinov, Abbot, and Xenophont Bondarenko, Hieromonk, all of St. Sergius Lavra (1937)
- New Hieromartyrs Joasaph (Ioasaf) Boyev, Archimandrite of Nikolskoye Monastery, Moscow; and Nicholas (Nikolay) Saltykov, Hieromonk of the St. Nicholas-Peshnosha Monastery, Moscow (1937)
- New Hieromartyrs Alexei Gavrin; Apollos Fedoseyev, Hieromonk of Moscow; and Nikon Belyaev, Archimandrite of the Staro-Golutvin Monastery, Kolomna (1937)
- New Martyr John Emelyanov (1937)
Icons
- Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos "of the Sign" at Novgorod (1170)
- Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos "Kursk Root" (1295)
- Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos "of Abalek" in Siberia (1637)
- Icon of the Mother of God of Tsarskoe Selo (1753)
- Icon of the Mother of God "Zlatoustovskaya" (1848) <small>(see also: March 3)</small>
- Icon of the Mother of God "Seraphim-Ponetaevka" (1879)
Other commemorations
- Uncovering of the relics (1192) of St. Vsevolod (Gabriel) of Pskov (1138)
- Synaxis of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Radonezh.
- Repose of Hieromonk Athanasius of Iveron Monastery, Mt. Athos (1973)
Icon gallery
Notes
References
Sources
Greek Sources
Russian Sources