Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Bulgarian Orthodox Church marks feast day of Sts. Constantine and Helen

Photo: Gallery

On May 21 each year, Orthodox Christians pay homage to two of the most venerated saints – the equal-to-the-apostles Constantine and Helen. The rule of Constantine I was a turning point in the advancement of the Christian Church. He was the first Roman emperor to adopt Christianity. Due to his huge contribution to Christianity, he was later called Emperor Constantine the Great.

In AD 313, Emperor Constantine issued the famous Edict of Milan that recognizes Christianity as an allowed religion. The greatest deed of Saint Constantine’s mother, Saint Helen, was that during her pilgrimage to the Holy Lands, she found the relics of the True Cross which was buried on the Golgotha hill. The mission of the Holy Saints Constantine and Helen is of huge importance to all Christians since it put an end to the bloody persecutions against Christians within the Empire and enabled the spread of Christianity in Europe.

Emperor Constantine very much liked the ancient town of Serdica, present-day Sofia. He came here often and lived for months in his residence that took a whole quarter in downtown present-day Sofia. He loved to say: “Serdica is my Rome”.

There are also many churches in Bulgaria named after the Holy Saints Constantine and Helen whose feast day is marked every year on May 21. 

In some parts of the Standja Mountain, the day of Saints Constantine and Helen is connected to the folk ritual of nestinarstvo (dancing on burning embers) as the dancers hold an icon of Saints Constantine and Helen. The ritual has never been recognized by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church but in 2009 it was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List.




Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Priest Lyubomir Bratoev

Priest Lyubomir Bratoev in Berlin: The first liturgies in Bulgarian were served at the embassy building

Priest Lyubomir Bratoev is a direct participant in the events of t he founding of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church community in Berlin . He came to the capital of East Germany in the late 1980s as a doctoral student. And, like a typical Orthodox Christian..

published on 2/26/25 8:15 AM

The Church of St. John of Rila – a piece of Bulgaria in London

After nearly 35 years, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church Community in London has its own church in the central part of the British capital, in close proximity to the Bulgarian Embassy. There, in the prestigious Kensington district, next to Hyde Park and..

published on 2/24/25 3:05 PM
Patriarch Daniil

The new Orthodox Church "St. John of Rila" in London opens doors

Meatfare Sunday in 2025 will be remembered as a major celebration for the Bulgarian Orthodox Church and the entire Bulgarian community in the United Kingdom. The "St. John of Rila" Orthodox Church, built with funds from the Bulgarian state and with..

published on 2/23/25 5:13 PM