November 2 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - November 4
All fixed commemorations below celebrated on November 16 by Eastern Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.
For November 3rd, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on October 21.
Saints
- Martyrs Dassios, Severus, Andronas, Theodotus and Theodoti, by the sword.
- Martyrs Atticus, Agapius, Eudoxius, Carterius, Istucarius (Styrax), Pactobius (Tobias), Nictopolion, and companions, at Sebaste (320) <small>(see also: November 2 )</small>
- The Holy 9 Martyrs, by the sword.
- The Holy 28 Martyrs, by fire.
- Hieromartyrs Acepsimas of Hnaita, Bishop (376), Joseph the Presbyter (377), and Aeithalas the Deacon (377), of Persia.
- Saint Snandulia of Persia (380)
- Saint Achaemonides (or Hormisdas), Confessor, of Persia (4th century)
- Venerable Acepsimas, hermit, of Cyrrhus in Syria (4th century)
- Venerable Elias of Egypt.
- Saint Theodore the Confessor, Bishop of Ancyra (8th-9th century)
Pre-Schism Western saints
- Saint Papulus (Papoul), a priest who worked with St Saturninus in France and like him was martyred under Diocletian (c. 300)
- The Innumerable Martyrs of Saragossa (304)
- Saint Valentine and Hilary, a priest and his deacon, beheaded at Viterbo near Rome under Diocletian (c. 304)
- Saint Florus of Lodève (Flour), first Bishop of Lodève in Languedoc in France (389)
- Saint Valentinian, Bishop of Salerno in the south of Italy (c. 500)
- Saint Gwenhael, born in Brittany, he became a monk at Landévennec Abbey with St Winwalöe, where he later became abbot (c. 550)
- Saint Sylvia, the mother of St Gregory the Great (c. 572) <small>(see also: November 4)</small>
- Saint Gaudiosus of Tarazona, a monk in Asan in the Pyrenees in Spain under St Victorian, later the Bishop of Tarazona (c. 585)
- Saint Clether (Clydawg, Cledog, Clodock), a hermit in Herefordshire (6th century)
- Saint Elerius, Abbot of a monastery in North Wales (6th century)
- Saint Winifred of Holywell (Winifred of Treffynon), Wales (630)
- Saint Domnus of Vienne (Domnolus), Bishop of Vienne, Confessor (657)
- Saint Rumwold of Buckingham (Rumwald of Brackley), infant Prince of Northumbria (662)
- Saint Cristiolus, brother of St Sulian and founder of churches, including one in Anglesey in Wales (7th century)
- Saint Vulganius, a Celt who went to France and enlightened the Atrebati, finally living as a hermit in Arras (c. 704)
- Saint Hubert, Bishop of Liege (727)
- Saint Pirmin, Bishop and monastic founder in Germany (753)
- Saint Wulgan, a holy man born in Canterbury in England, where his relics were later venerated (8th century)
- Saints Acheric and William, hermits at a monastery in the Vosges in France (c. 860)
- Saint Englatius (Englat, Tanglen), possibly a bishop, he lived in Tarves in Aberdeenshire in Scotland (966)
- Saint Hermengaudius (Ermengol, Armengol), Bishop of Urgell in Spain (1035)
Post-Schism Orthodox saints
- Saint Anna Vsevolodovna of Kiev, Princess, daughter of Prince Vsevolod I of Kiev (1112)
- Saint Nicholas of Iveron (Mt. Athos) and Georgia, hymnographer (1308)
- New Hieromartyr George, priest, of Neopolis, Asia Minor (1797)
New martyrs and confessors
- New Hieromartyr Nicholas Dinariev, Presbyter (1918)
- New Martyr Paul Parfenov (1918)
- New Hieromartyrs (1937):
* Basil Archangelsky; Peter Orlenkov; Basil Pokrovsky; Alexander Zverev; Vladimir Pisarev; Sergius Kedrov; Nicholas Pyatnitsky; Vicentius Smirnov; John Kesarisky; Peter Kosmenkov; Alexander Parusnikov; Paul Andreev; and Cosmas Petrychenko, Priests;
* Simeon Krechkov, Deacon.
- New Martyr Evdokia Safronova (1938)
- New Hieromartyr Sergius Stanislavlev, Deacon (1942)
Other commemorations
Icon gallery
Notes
References
Sources
Greek Sources
Russian Sources