He was born in the ancient Roman province of Pannonia Valeria (now Hungary), then part of the Hunnic Empire.
Upon the death of Severinus in 482, Anthony was sent to Germany and put in the care of his uncle, Constantius, an early Bishop of Lorsch.
[2] In 488, at about 20 years of age, Anthony moved to Italy to take up an eremitical life with a small group of hermits living on an island in Lake Como.
He lived in various solitary places until two years before his death he became a monk at the Abbey of Lérins,[3] where he became well known locally for the holiness of his life and the miracles he had performed.
Anthony is commemorated on 28 December by the Catholic Roman Martyrology,[4] and also on that same day by the Eastern Orthodox Church.