November 24 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

November 23 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - November 25

All fixed commemorations below are observed on December 7 by Eastern Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.

For November 24, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on November 11.

Feasts

 * Afterfeast of the Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple.

Saints

 * Hieromartyr Clement, Pope of Rome (101) (see also:  November 23 - Western Orthodox use. And: November 25 - Russian use)
 * Great-martyr Mercurius of Caesarea in Cappadocia (259)   (see also: November 25 - Greek)
 * Saint Hermogenes, Bishop of Agrigentum (c. 260)   or (c.824)
 * Martyrs Procopius and Christopher, by the sword (274)
 * Great-martyr Catherine of Alexandria (305)   (Russia only. See also: November 25 - rest of Orthodox Church)
 * Martyrs Augusta (Faustina) the Empress, Porphyrius Stratelates, and 200 soldiers at Alexandria with Great-martyr Catherine (305)   (Russia only - see also: November 25 - rest of Orthodox Church)
 * Martyrs Philoumenos and Christopher, by the sword.
 * Martyr Eugene (Eugenios), buried alive inside a wall.
 * Martyr Chrysogenes (Chrysogonos), in Aquileia in Italy, under Diocletian (4th century)
 * Hieromartyr Peter, Archbishop of Alexandria (311)
 * Martyr Alexander at Corinth (360)
 * Martyr Theodore, at Antioch, by beheading (361)
 * Venerable Karion of Scetis (4th century) (see also: December 5)
 * Venerable Malchus of Chalcis in Syria (5th century)    (see also: March 26)
 * Venerable Mark of Triglia.
 * Venerable Gregory, monk of the monastery of the Golden Rock (Chryse Petra) in Pontus.

Pre-Schism Western saints

 * Saint Felicissimus, a martyr who suffered in Perugia in Italy, probably under Diocletian (c. 303)
 * Saint Firmina, a virgin-martyr in Amelia (America) in Umbria under Diocletian (c. 303)
 * Saint Crescentian, a martyr in Rome with Sts Cyriacus, Largus and Smaragdus, under Maxentius (309)
 * Saint Protasius, Bishop of Milan (352)
 * Saint Romanus of Le Mans (Romanus of Bordeaux), a Gallo-Roman priest who converted the pagans living at the mouth of the Gironde (385)
 * Saint Minver (Menefrida), Virgin of Cornwall (5th century).
 * Saint Kenan (Cianan), first bishop in Ireland to build his Cathedral, at Damleag or Duleek in Meath, of stone (c. 500)
 * Venerable Portianus of Arthone, a slave who became a monk and then Abbot of Miranda in Auvergne in France (527 or 533)
 * Saint Colmán of Cloyne, first Bishop of Cloyne (c. 600)
 * Saint Leopardinus, monk and Abbot of St Symphorian of Vivarais in Berry in France, murdered and venerated as a martyr (7th century)
 * Saint Bieuzy, born in Britain, he followed St Gildas to Brittany and was martyred there (7th century)
 * Saint Eanflæd (Eanfleda), daughter of the holy King Edwin of Northumbria and St Æthelburh of Kent, Abbess at Whitby Abbey jointly with her daughter Ælfflæd (c. 700)
 * Saint Marinus, a monk at Maurienne in Savoy, and afterwards a hermit near the monastery of Chandor where he was martyred by the Saracens (731)
 * Saints Flora and Maria, two virgin-martyrs in Cordoba in Spain who gave themselves up to the Moors and were beheaded by order of Abderrahman II (851)

Post-Schism Orthodox saints

 * Venerable Mastridia of Alexandria (1060)
 * Martyr Philothea of Romania (1060) (see also: December 7)
 * Hieromartyr Mercurius of Smolensk (1238)
 * Venerable Luke, steward of the Kiev Caves (13th century)  (see also: November 6)
 * St. Nicodemus the Younger of Philokalos monastery in Thessaloniki (c. 1305)
 * Venerable Mercurius, the Faster of the Kievan Caves, far caves (14th century)
 * Venerable Simon, Abbot of Soiga Monastery, Vologda (1562)

New martyrs and confessors

 * New Hieromartyr Eugraphus Evarestov, Archpriest (1919)
 * New Hieromartyrs Eugene Yakovlev and Michael Bogoroditsky, Priests (1937)
 * New Hieromartyrs Alexander Levitsky, Alexis Tyutyunov, John Nikolsky, Cornelius Udilovich, and Metrophanes Kornitsky, Priests (1937)
 * Virgin-martyr Anysia (1937)

Other commemorations

 * Repose of Elder Ephraim of Philotheou and Arizona (2019)