Neophytos was born in the mountain village of
Kato Drys near
Pano Lefkara,
Cyprus, to farming parents Athanasios and Eudoxia, one of eight children. An arranged marriage planned by his parents ended with him fleeing to the Monastery of Saint John Chrysostomos in
Koutsovendis. After much ado, the marriage contracts were broken and Neophytos went back to the monastery as a novice, becoming a tonsured monk in 1152. During this time he learned to read and write and was eventually appointed as assistant
sacristan. Although Neophytos wanted to be a hermit, his
abbot declined to let him go, citing his youth. He was soon released from prison, but the guards had stolen his travel funds, so, in June 1159, he went to the hilly area above Paphos, where he found a cave that had been used by a previous hermit. He enlarged the space, eventually creating three caves known today as the Cell, the Bema and the Naos. Neophytos's life as a hermit attracted the religious in the area who brought him food and gifts. His air of sanctity brought many to visit him, and in 1170 Vasilios (Basil) Kinnamos, the Bishop of Paphos, ordained him as a priest and required him to take a disciple, which started the monastery which now bears his name. Neophytos wrote a chronicle titled Περὶ τῶν κατὰ χώραν Κύπρον σκαιῶν (
On the calamities against the country of Cyprus) dated to 1196, which is one of the few Greek primary sources that record the events of the
Third Crusade in Cyprus and the pursuit of the Byzantine ruler of Cyprus,
Isaakios Komninos by the English king
Richard the Lionheart. Neophytos took a judgmental stance against the crusaders and his chronicle is anti-Latin. ==Legacy==