Life and Ascetic Practice
The surviving accounts present Patapius as a figure of the desert tradition who carried its discipline into the heart of the Byzantine capital. After establishing himself as a hermit in the Egyptian desert, he is said to have left Egypt in pursuit of deeper solitude, eventually reaching Constantinople.
In Constantinople he secured a cell in the wall of the city near the Monastery of Blachernae. There he is remembered for keeping his anonymity and continuing a severe ascetic regimen of fasting, vigil, and prayer, and for the healings associated with him.
The external sources do not agree on the saint's exact century or dates: one tradition places his origin in the fourth century, while another assigns specific fifth-century dates. The dates here are therefore left open.
Relics & Shrines
After his death his relic was preserved at Constantinople and, according to the accounts, transferred between monastic houses in the city. Following the fall of Constantinople in 1453 the relic was carried to the Geraneia mountains of southern Greece, near the town of Thermai (modern Loutraki), where it was concealed in a cave.
The cave containing the relic was rediscovered in the early twentieth century — by tradition in 1904 — and the remains were reported to be incorrupt, with the saint holding a large wooden cross and a parchment scroll bearing his identity.
A monastery dedicated to Saint Patapios was established at the site at Loutraki in 1952, and the relic is kept within the cave there. The community is a women's monastery, and the shrine has become a place of pilgrimage.
Veneration
Patapius is commemorated on December 8. A second commemoration is kept on the Tuesday after Pascha, marking the discovery of his relic.
His intercession is particularly associated with healing, and the shrine at Loutraki continues to draw pilgrims who seek his help in illness.