St Procopius of Sázava (Sv. Prokop) - Malešov, Czech Republic
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member vraatja
N 49° 54.649 E 015° 13.466
33U E 516113 N 5528738
Baroque sandstone statue of St Procopius of Sázava at St Wenceslaus Church (kostel sv. Václava) in Malešov near Kutná Hora.
Waymark Code: WM11Q0Q
Location: Středočeský kraj, Czechia
Date Posted: 11/30/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Alfouine
Views: 11

The Baroque statue of St Procopius of Sázavan stood until 1948 in the bridge in the village, but the bridge restoration it wšas removed to a church garden in nearby village Bykán. The statue was moved back to Malešov in 2016 and it was placed at St Wenceslaus Church (kostel sv. Václava) at the village center. t Procopius is depicted here with his typical attributes - wearing a bishop robe with a mitre on his head, and with his right foot laid on a devil's head.

St Procopius

The biographical features of St. Procopius appear only dimly in the mists of a distant age, in the dawn of the Christian history of central Europe. Few are the certain facts, and much must be conjecture.

St. Procopius seems to have been born into a Christian family in the newly-evangelized Bohemia of the late tenth century. With the encouragement of his parents, he prepared himself for priesthood in the Eastern Rite. He was ordained in or soon after the year 1003. Within a short time, though, he discovered that his thirst for God required a more intense form of discipleship, and so he entered the monastic life, possibly in Hungary.

So advanced was Procopius in the quest for perfection that his abbot granted his request to devote himself to God as a hermit. Sometime after 1029, he returned to his native land, still living as a hermit, but with the dream of being the means by which an Eastern Rite monastery might be established among the Czech people.

Living in the Sazava Valley, he soon became known and respected by the local population. One day he encountered a group of hunters, led by Duke Oldrich. The two men entered into a long conversation, and so impressed was the Duke by Procopius’ transparent sanctity that he decided to support the monk’s lofty desires.

An Eastern Rite monastery was therefore established, one governed by Procopius in accordance with the rules of St. Basil and St. Benedict. For the remainder of his life, Procopius served his community as abbot, and his fame apparently spread as far as Russia. Numerous stories of cures and other miracles are associated with the holy abbot. One famous account, symbolizing Christian triumph over sin and temptation, tells of Procopius hitching the devil to a plow and compelling that otherwise useless entity to dig a ditch along the river-bank.

St. Procopius died in 1053 and was formally recognized as a saint by Pope Innocent III in 1204. His monastery at Sazava survived until 1785, and the saint continues to be revered by the Czech nation.

Cited from (visit link)
Associated Religion(s): Roman Catholic Church

Statue Location: at St Wenceslaus Church (kostel sv. Václava) in Malešov

Entrance Fee: free

Artist: Not listed

Website: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Take a picture of the statue. A waymarker and/or GPSr is not required to be in the image but it doesn't hurt.
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