On 12 September 1704, the relics of Simeon were
translated to the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye with the blessings of metropolitan
Philotheus, and brought to the right-sided
kliros of the monastery church. According to a legend, the translation was related to a
cross procession, after lame
Fool Cosmas prayed and wished to take rest. In 1716, the church was burnt down, but the shrine with the relics was unaffected and in 1838 was placed to the side-altar of
Simeon the God-Receiver and
Anna the Prophetess, which was renamed in honour of Simeon of Verkhoturye in 1863. The burial place of Simeon in Merkushino, where a spring gushed, was also honoured. The wooden chapel above it was replaced by a new stone chapel in 1808. The
Brotherhood of the Righteous St. Simeon, Wonderworker of Verkhoturye, was founded in Ekaterinburg in 1886 for the enlightenment of people. Members of the brotherhood on the money of the Eparchy, the
Synod and volunteers opened schools and supported missionaries. 300 schools, where over 10 thousand pupils learned grammar and God's Law, were maintained by the brotherhood. A missionary foundation was created in 1901 for the support of the disadvantaged and people returning from a
schism or a
sect. The relics of Simeon draw many
pilgrims to the monastery; in the early 20th century the number of visitors reached 60,000 people in a year. Incidentally, the Exaltation Cathedral was built in the Nikolayevsky Monastery in 1913 to hold eight to ten thousand people. The
dedication and the translation of the relics of Simeon took place on 11 September 1913, when the
300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty was celebrated. That day, a
telegram from the Tsar's family arrived from
Livadiya: "Verkhoturye. Nikolayevsky Monastery. To the abbot Father Xenophon. I wholeheartedly greet you and the community with this solemn day of dedication of the new church, the cherished monastery and tomorrow's great feast. I seek for your prayers in front of the righteous' shrine. Nicholas. Anastasia". In 1914, the Tsar family donated a silver
baldachin for the shrine. It was solemnly moved from Ekaterinburg to Verkhoturye during a cross procession that lasted 20 days. Several thousand pilgrims walked over . In September 1918, the town was taken over by
Kolchak's army. In June 1919, the
White Army began to retreat from Verkhoturye. Archimandrit Xenophon made the decision to evacuate the monks together with the White Guards. The church property and relics, including the one of St. Simeon, were hidden in the monastery and its
skete; the monks took only the silver shrine from under the relics. Archmandrite Xenophon could not get far away from the monastery, as he later wrote: "some hooligans of white guards, in spite of my order as archimandrite, took away my horses and left their nags, on which nobody could ride". A group of seven monks headed by hegumen Abercius continued their movement with the shrine, but on the border of the
Irbitsky Uyezd they paused at the Krasnoselsky nunnery, as the white guards did not really care about them. In February 1920 they returned with the shrine to Verkhoturye, now under control of the Soviets. On 25 September 1920, on the feast day of Saint Simeon with over fifteen thousand pilgrims gathered at the monastery, the Soviets opened the shrine with the relics of Simeon as a part of their anti-religious campaign. Archimandrite Xenophon conciliated the outraged believers, explaining that the opening of the relics did not affect their sacredness, and together with the community carried the shrine from the church, opened it and placed the relics on a table. On 2 June 1924, the relics were examined by the Public Health Administration commission, which found the result of the rite unsanitary, so they sealed the shrine and heavily restricted access to it. According to the survey, the museum should "reveal the exploitative nature of the Church Fathers by giving a demonstrative insight into the methods of priestlings and monks who spread their religious narcotic into people's mind". On 11 April 1989, the relics were eventually returned to the Russian Orthodox Church and placed in the Spassky church of Ekaterinburg. On 25 September 1992, most of the relics were transferred to the Nikolayevsky Monastery of Verkhoturye in the restored and newly dedicated Exaltation Cathedral. == Notes ==