The monk Paul of Xeropotamou, born Procopius, allegedly was the son of a Byzantine Emperor, which some sources anachronistically name as
Michael I Rangabe.
Xeropotamou Monastery Leaving everything worldly, replacing his rich clothes with beggar's rags, he went to
Mount Athos, the Holy Mountain. In the place called Xeropotamou (, dry river), he built himself a cell in the ruins of a monastery once founded by the empress
Pulcheria in honour of the Forty Martyrs. Procopius was tonsured monk by a hermit named Cosmas and he took the name Paul. The first rector of the new monastery was the venerable Paul himself, who also brought particles of the True Cross to this new monastery. The saint who had been informed in advance of his death, called to himself the fathers of Xeropotamou and the new St. George's monastery and gave them their last instruction. On the day of his death, St. Paul put on his mantle, read the prayer of
St. Ioannikios the Great, which he constantly said: "My hope is the Father, my refuge is the Son, my protection is the Holy Spirit: O Holy Trinity, glory to Thee," and communed of the
Holy Mysteries of Christ. St. Paul was the leading figure of the group of hermits at Mount Athos and he mobilized these ascetics to counter organized monasticism. Particularly, he was the primary opponent of Athanasius and his monastic proposals, accusing him of bringing worldly ways at Athos while also highlighting his exploitation of the hermits. St. Paul had instructed that his body should be buried on the peninsula of
Longos opposite the Holy Mountain. However, by the will of God, the waves pushed the ship all the way to the shores of
Constantinople, where the Emperor and the
Patriarch of Constantinople reverently accepted the body of the saint and solemnly laid him in the
Hagia Sophia. After the
sack of Constantinople by the Crusaders, the
relics of St. Paul were transferred to
Venice. ==References==