Basil of Caesarea
Doctor of the Church
Sanctified Life
330 — 379
Province of Cappadocia, Roman Empire
Patronage
"When someone steals another’s clothes, we call them a thief. Should we not give the same name to one who could clothe the naked and does not?"
Basil of Caesarea (330–379) defended the Nicene Creed against heresies while establishing guidelines for communal monasticism emphasizing community, liturgical prayer, and manual labor. He is remembered as a father of Eastern Christian monasticism and a saint in both Eastern and Western traditions.

Historical Journey
Historical Depiction

Wikimedia Commons Source
Titles & Roles
Gallery

Basil of Caesarea
Unknown authorUnknown author • 11th century
St. Basil the Great. Mosaic, Kiev Hagia Sophia, XI century.
Sacred Symbols
vested as_bishop
Vested as bishop
wearing omophorion
wearing omophorion
tapering black_beard.
tapering black beard.
Life Journey
Early Life
Born around 330 to a wealthy Cappadocian family, Basil trained in Athens alongside Gregory of Nazianzus. He renounced his rhetorical career around 356 to study ascetic life in Syria and Egypt.
Turning Point
Elected Archbishop of Caesarea in 370, Basil defended the Nicene Creed against imperial Arianism and coordinated with Gregory of Nazianzus to define Trinitarian doctrine.
Legacy
Built the Basiliad outside Caesarea — the ancient world's first hospital complex. Died in 379, leaving a monastic rule that shaped Eastern Orthodox monasticism for centuries.
Related Saints
Connections in the communion of saints
Athanasius of Alexandria
Basil's trinitarian theology built directly on Athanasius's Nicene settlement.
Cyril of Alexandria
Basil's Cappadocian synthesis became the theological framework Cyril defended at Ephesus.
Thomas Aquinas
Aquinas drew extensively on Basil's writings in constructing his synthesis of Eastern and Western theology.
Reflections & Commentary
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