New Martyr20th century

New Hieromartyrs John Pavlovsky & Vsevolod Poteminsky

Also known as John Pavlovsky, Vsevolod Poteminsky, Priests

Two priests martyred in the Soviet persecution (1937)

Feast Day
September 6
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Commemorated as

Holy New Hieromartyrs John Pavlovsky and Vsevolod Poteminsky

Life

John Pavlovsky and Vsevolod Poteminsky were two Russian Orthodox priests martyred during the Soviet persecution of the Church in 1937. They are commemorated together on September 6 and are numbered among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia.

Both served in the Komi region of the Russian North and were executed on the same day, September 19, 1937 (the anchor record places their joint commemoration on September 6). They were among the many clergy condemned by an NKVD troika and shot during the height of the Great Terror.

Timeline2 momentsReadHide
  1. 1870 / 1876BirthsVsevolod Poteminsky born in 1870 to a clerical family; John Pavlovsky born in 1876.
  2. 1937Arrest and executionBoth priests were condemned during the Great Terror and shot on September 19, 1937, in the Komi region.

Contributions & Legacy

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Lives and martyrdom

John Petrovich Pavlovsky (born 1876) was a parish priest. According to the surviving record, he was arrested on June 30, 1937, and held in the prison at Izhma. On September 16, 1937, he was sentenced to death by a troika of the NKVD administration for the Komi ASSR, and he was shot on September 19, 1937, in the village of Izhma.

Vsevolod Ivanovich Poteminsky (born March 30, 1870) came from a clerical family; his father served at a church in the Vologda region. After studies at the Vologda Theological Seminary, he served as a deacon from 1890 and later as a priest. He was accused of conducting counter-revolutionary activity against Soviet measures, and was executed on September 19, 1937 — the same day as Father John.

Both priests are venerated among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia who suffered in the twentieth-century persecutions of the Russian Orthodox Church.

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Notes

Among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

Sources: Synaxarion