Early Life and Confession
Chariton was born in the mid-3rd century in Iconium, the chief city of Lycaonia in Asia Minor (modern Konya, Turkey). By tradition he drew spiritual inspiration from the holy Protomartyr Thekla, who was also from his city.
During a persecution of Christians under the emperor Aurelian (270–275), Chariton boldly rejected the pagan deities and affirmed his faith in Christ. He underwent fierce tortures but survived, and so is honored as a Confessor rather than a Martyr. He was imprisoned and released only after Aurelian's death around 275. According to the accounts, he afterward grieved that he had not attained martyrdom.
Journey to the Holy Land and the Cave at Pharan
Chariton set out on pilgrimage to Jerusalem. On the way he was abducted by bandits and taken to a cave in the Pharan Valley, in the upper Wadi Qelt, where his captors intended to kill him. By tradition, the robbers died after drinking wine in the cave that had been poisoned by the venom of a snake.
Surviving this ordeal, Chariton distributed the criminals' stolen gold to churches, monasteries, and the poor. At this cave he built a church and established the first lavra-type monastic settlement, the Pharan Lavra.
Monastic Foundations
From Pharan, Chariton went on to found two further monasteries. He relocated to the area of the Mount of Temptation near Jericho, where he established the lavra of Douka on the ruins of the Hasmonean and Herodian Dok fortress.
Around 345 he founded a third monastery in the Valley of Tekoa, named Souka and later known as the Old Lavra. Through his preaching he brought many Jews and pagans to the Christian faith.
Monastic Rule and Legacy
Chariton compiled a strict monastic rule whose approach emphasized asceticism and solitude. Its principles included silence, a restricted and controlled diet, manual labor, nighttime psalmody alternating with sleep, fixed hours of prayer, cell-based living, and the discipline of controlling one's thoughts.
These principles became foundational for monastic life throughout the Judean desert, and Chariton is counted among the earliest organizers of desert monasticism in the Holy Land. Tradition also credits him with compiling the Office of the Monastic Tonsure. He is venerated by both the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches on September 28.
Relics & Shrines
Chariton reposed peacefully at an advanced age around 350 and was buried at the Pharan monastery. Following the Muslim conquest of the Levant, his remains were transferred from Pharan to the Old Lavra at Souka.
His memory is preserved in the landscape itself: the Arabic designation 'Wadi Khureitun' carries his name.