[1] He died in Moscow and was buried in the Church of Saint Nicholas the Hospitable.
Here he served under Hegumen Guriy, who would become the first archbishop of Kazan, and was engaged in copying books.
Upon organizing his congregation in Kazan, Guriy called for Herman and appointed him as the head of the Bogoroditsky Monastery in Sviyazhsk.
The Russian Orthodox Church attached great importance to this monastery in terms of spreading Christianity among the non-Russians in the Kazan region.
His relics were then transported to Sviyazhsk, where they are resting to this day in Bogoroditsky Monastery The Russian Church celebrates his memory on 6 November and 23 July, the day his relics were transferred from Moscow to Sviyazhsk.