From Spanish Office to the Monastic Life
The earliest stratum of Daniel's life, as preserved in the synaxarion, presents him as a figure of secular standing in Spain who held the office of prefect or governor of the island of Niverta. The sources emphasize his deliberate rejection of that status: he is said to have forsaken the glory and riches attached to his office in order to embrace monasticism. His first step was to travel to Rome, where he became a monk.
From Rome his path led eastward through the principal centers of Christendom. He came to Constantinople and then to Jerusalem, a journey the tradition frames as a pilgrimage to the holy places. It was at Jerusalem that his monastic vocation reached its fullness with his reception of the Great Schema and the name Stephen, by which he is also styled in the liturgical commemoration.