Anna of Kashin
Russian princess and saint / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Anna of Kashin (Russian: Анна Кашинская; c. 1280 – 2 October 1368) was a princess consort of Mikhail of Tver. She is revered as a saint Right-Believing princess, patroness of Kashin and Tver.
Anna of Kashin | |
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Right-Believing and Venerable | |
Born | c. 1280 Rostov |
Died | 2 October 1368 (aged 87–88) Kashin |
Venerated in | Eastern Orthodox Church |
Canonized | 1650 by Russian Orthodox Church |
Major shrine | Cathedral of Christ's Resurrection, Kashin, Russia |
Feast | 24 June (opening of her relics) |
Patronage | Kashin |
Catholic cult suppressed | 1677 by Patriarch Joachim of Moscow 12 June 1909 cultus reestablished |
She is known both for her dramatic lifetime fate (the death of almost all relatives during internecine strife) and for no less complicated posthumous vicissitudes: she was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1650, but the struggle of the times of the schism of the Russian Church in the 17th century led to the decanonization in 1677 — a precedent in the history of the Russian Church. In 1908, her sainthood was officially restored by Nicholas II. On next year, crowded celebrations in Kashin were held on the occasion of the restoration of the veneration.