Background
Alexius, whose name at birth was Elephtherios, was a son of Fyodor (Theodore) Biakont, a boyar from Chernigov who settled in Moscow and founded the great Pleshcheev boyar family.
Alexius, whose name at birth was Elephtherios, was a son of Fyodor (Theodore) Biakont, a boyar from Chernigov who settled in Moscow and founded the great Pleshcheev boyar family.
He took monastic vows at the Epiphany Monastery of Moscow around 1313, at which time he was given the religious name of Alexius. In 1333 or so, he joined the household of Metropolitan Theognostus. In 1340, Alexius was appointed the Metropolitan"s deputy in Vladimir and twelve years later was consecrated as Bishop of Vladimir.
After visiting Constantinople, he was chosen to become the Metropolitan of Moscow and all Russia in 1354.
When Dmitrii Donskoi and Vladimir the Bold were young, Alexius was their spiritual tutor and served as regent at the same time. He took the side of Dmitrii Donskoi in his struggle against Tver and Nizhny Novgorod, where he once sent Saint Sergius of Radonezh to suspend divine service in churches and monasteries, until the political strife was over.
In 1357, Alexius was summoned by Jani Beg, the Khan of the Golden Horde, to cure his mother Taidula Khatun from blindness. The metropolitan"s success is held to have prevented a Tatar raid on Moscow.
In 1360s, Alexius founded the Andronikov, Chudov, and Alekseyevsky monasteries.
Shortly before his death, Alexius fruitlessly tried to convince Sergius of Radonezh to become his successor. Alexius was also an author of a number of sermons and epistles. February 12, (the day of his repose), May 20, (the day of the uncovering of his relics) and October 5, (Synaxis of the Hierarchs of Moscow).
His relics are venerated in Ephiphany Cathedral in Elokhovo.
2012 film The Horde is a highly fictionalised narrative of how Alexius healed Taidula from blindness.