Nilus of Sora, a great ascetic of the
Russian Church, was born in 1433, and descended from the
Maikov nobility. Before becoming a
monk, Nilus of Sora worked as a
scribe and was engaged in book copying. He also journeyed to
Palestine and Greece early in his life and was acquainted there with the
Hesychast movement. Later in his life, he took monastic vows at the
Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery, which had been known for its hostile stance towards monastic landownership. The founder of the
monastery,
Cyril of Beloozero, was himself known for rejecting villages that had been offered to him by devout nobles. Kirill's followers adopted his ways and would later become known as the
startsy from out the Volga with Nilus of Sora as their leader. Soon, he went on a journey to the
Holy Land and visited
Palestine,
Constantinople, and
Mount Athos, acquainting himself with a mystical doctrine of
Hesychasm and reading
patristic literature. Upon his return to Russia sometime between 1473 and 1489, Nilus of Sora founded a
cloister on the
Sora River not far from the Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery, where he would settle down with his followers. He wrote extensively. This travelling to the holy places made a great impression upon him and changed all his individuality. Solitude, isolation, oblivion of the world became the main features of his character. ==The Novgorod heresy affair==