Right-believing (Ruler) 14th century

Saint Stephen of Decani

c. 1285 – 1331

Also known as Stefan Uros III of Serbia

A Serbian king who endured blinding, exile, and betrayal; he founded Dečani Monastery and was later killed amid dynastic conflict.

Feast Day
November 11
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Right-believing King Stephen of Dečani (Stefan Uroš III)

Life

Stephen of Dečani, known in Serbian as Stefan Uroš III Dečanski, was King of Serbia from 1321 to 1331 and a member of the Nemanjić dynasty. He was the son of King Stephen Milutin (Stephen Uroš II) and is remembered above all for the suffering that marked his life — a blinding ordered by his own father, a long exile, and a death at the hands of partisans of his son. He takes his epithet from the monastery of Visoki Dečani, which he founded and which became one of the great monuments of medieval Serbian church architecture.

By tradition Stephen was blinded after being falsely accused of seeking to depose his father prematurely from the throne, and was imprisoned at the Monastery of Christ the Pantocrator in Constantinople. The synaxarion relates that his sight was afterward restored, an event the tradition attributes to the intercession of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker; according to the account, St. Nicholas appeared to him holding a pair of eyes, and his vision returned. Reconciled with his father through the mediation of Serbian and Greek bishops, Stephen succeeded to the throne after Milutin's death in 1321.

As king he is remembered for philanthropic works and the building and endowment of churches, and his reign included a major military victory over the Bulgarians at Velbužd in 1330. His foundation of Dečani — whose cornerstone he laid and whose charter he issued — remains his most enduring legacy, though the monastery's construction continued after his death. In 1331 he was deposed amid a dynastic conflict surrounding his son, the future Emperor Dušan, imprisoned in the fortress of Zvečan, and there put to death. His body was later found incorrupt, and he is venerated as a martyr and as a healer of those who suffer afflictions of sight.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1285 Birth Born the son of King Stephen Milutin of Serbia.
  2. 1321 Crowned King of Serbia Succeeded his father Milutin as Uroš III after the latter's death.
  3. 1330 Battle of Velbužd His forces won a major victory over the Bulgarians.
  4. c. 1327–1330 Founded Dečani Monastery Laid the cornerstone and issued the founding charter of Visoki Dečani.
  5. 1331 Deposed and martyred Imprisoned in the fortress of Zvečan amid a dynastic conflict and put to death.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Blinding, Exile, and Restoration of Sight

The defining episode of Stephen's life in the tradition is his blinding. By the account preserved in the synaxarion he was falsely accused of plotting to take his father King Milutin's throne before its time; the deceived king ordered him captured and blinded, and he was sent as a prisoner to the Monastery of Christ the Pantocrator in Constantinople. One account places the blinding on the road through Ovče Polje.

The tradition relates that his sight was miraculously restored through the intercession of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, who appeared to him bearing a pair of eyes. After a period of exile — given as some seven years — he was reconciled with his father through the mediation of Serbian and Greek bishops. The tradition holds that he kept his restored sight concealed beneath bandages until his coronation, when he revealed that he had been healed. For this reason he is invoked particularly by those who suffer with their eyes.

Reign and the Foundation of Dečani

Stephen was crowned king after the death of Milutin in 1321, taking the name Uroš III. His reign is remembered for works of charity and church-building within his realm. In 1330 his forces won a major victory over the Bulgarians at the Battle of Velbužd.

His best-known undertaking is the monastery of Visoki Dečani, from which he takes his epithet Dečanski. He laid its cornerstone and issued its founding charter; the great church was completed only after his death. The monastery became one of the foremost monuments of medieval Serbian sacred architecture and the place of his own burial.

Death and Veneration

In 1331 a rebellion arose among the nobles supporting Stephen's son, the future Emperor Dušan. Stephen was deposed, imprisoned in the fortress of Zvečan, and there put to death. He is commemorated as a martyr-king.

He was buried at Dečani, and the tradition relates that his relics were found incorrupt when his tomb was opened some years after his death. His incorrupt remains are venerated at the monastery, and he is honored as a protector and healer, especially of those afflicted in their sight.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints