Jan. 20 - Eastern Orthodox Church calendar - Jan. 22
All fixed commemorations below are observed on February 3 by Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.
For January 21st, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on January 8.
Martyrs Eugenios, Candidus, Valerianus, and Aquilas, at Trebizond (303)
Virgin-martyr Agnes of Rome (ca. 304)
Martyr Neophytus of Nicaea (305)
The Holy Four Martyrs of Tyre, by the sword.
Venerable Apollonios of the Thebaid, ascetic (4th century) (see also: March 31)
Venerable Maximus the Confessor (662)
Martyr Anastasius (662), disciple of St. Maximus the Confessor.
Saint Zosimas, Bishop of Syracuse (662)
Martyrs Gabriel and Zionios, and companions, under the Bulgarian ruler Omurtag (ca. 814-831)
Saint Publius, first Bishop of Malta and later Bishop of Athens, martyred under Trajan (ca. 112, or, ca. 161-180) (see also: March 13 in the East)
Saint Fructuosus, Bishop of Tarragoña in Spain, and Deacons Augurius and Eulogius (259)
Martyr Patroclus of Troyes, under Aurelian (ca. 270-275)
Saint Epiphanius of Pavia, Bishop of Pavia (496)
Saint Brigid (Briga), known as St Brigid of Kilbride, venerated around Lismore in Ireland (6th century)
Saint Lawdog (6th century)
Saint Vimin (Wynnin, Gwynnin), a Bishop in Scotland, said to have founded the monastery of Holywood (6th century)
Saint Meinrad of Einsiedeln, hermit, martyred by robbers (861)
Saint Maccallin (Macallan), Abbot of Saint-Michel-en-Thiérache Abbey and Waulsort (978)
Saint Neophytus of Vatopedi monastery, Mt. Athos (14th century)(see also: January 20).
Venerable Maximus the Greek of Russia (1556)
Venerable Timon, monk (desert-dweller) of Nadeyev and Kostroma (1840)
Saint George-John (Mkheidze) of Georgia (1960)
New Martyrs and Confessors
New Hieromartyr Elias Berezovsky, Priest of Alma-Ata (1938)
Synaxis of All the Martyred Saints, from Protomartyr Stephen up to the present.
Synaxis of the Church of Holy Peace (Saint Irene), by the Sea in Constantinople.
"Paramythia" Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos (Vatopedi Mother of Consolation, Mother of God of Vatopedi), at Vatopedi monastery, Mt. Athos (807)
Icon of the Mother of God "Stabbed" (Greek: "Esphagmeni." Slavonic: "Zaklannaya"), at Vatopedi monastery (14th century)
Icon of the Mother of God "Xenophon Hodigitria" (1730)
January 21 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics) Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA