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Martyr · 4th century

40 Holy Martyrs of Sebaste

Commemorated as

The Holy, Glorious Forty Martyrs of Sebaste

d. c. 320

Also known as Kyrion · Candidus · Domnos · Hesychius · Heraclius · Smaragdus · Eunoicus · Valens · Vivianus · Claudius · Priscus · Theodulus · Eutyches · John · Xanthias · Helianus · Sisinius · Cyril · Aglaius · Aetius · Flavius · Acacius · Ekdikios · Lysimachus · Alexander · Elias · Gorgonius · Theophilus · Dometian · Gaius · Leontius · Athanasius · Cyril · Sacerdon · Nicholas · Valerius · Philoctimon · Severian · Chudion · Meliton

Forty Roman soldiers of the Twelfth Legion at Sebaste in Lesser Armenia who refused to renounce Christ and were condemned to freeze to death overnight on a frozen lake. When one fell away and a guard named Aglaius took his place, the number of forty was restored, and they are honored among the Church's most beloved martyrs.

Life

The Forty Holy Martyrs of Sebaste were a group of Roman soldiers of the Twelfth Legion (Legio XII Fulminata, "Armed with Lightning") who were martyred for their Christian faith at Sebaste in Lesser Armenia (modern Sivas, Turkey) around 320, during the persecution carried out by the Eastern emperor Licinius. Although Constantine the Great had granted Christians religious freedom by edict in 313, his pagan co-ruler Licinius continued to persecute Christians in the East and moved to purge them from the army.

Condemned for refusing to renounce Christ, the forty soldiers were stripped and exposed overnight on a frozen pond near Sebaste on a bitterly cold night, with warm baths set nearby to tempt them to apostasy. One soldier abandoned his companions for the baths and died, while a guard named Aglaius, witnessing a supernatural radiance over the remaining thirty-nine, professed Christ, cast off his own garments, and joined them — restoring the number to forty. At dawn the martyrs' bodies were burned and their remains scattered in a river. They are honored among the most beloved martyrs of the Church, with their feast kept on March 9.

The cluster is commemorated as a single feast; the individual martyrs are remembered by name in the liturgical menaion.

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Timeline

  1. 313 Edict of religious freedom Constantine the Great issues an edict granting Christians religious freedom, though his co-ruler Licinius continues to persecute Christians in the East.
  2. c. 320 Martyrdom at Sebaste Forty soldiers of the Twelfth Legion, condemned for professing Christ, are exposed naked on a frozen pond near Sebaste on a freezing night. One falls away to the warm baths and dies; the guard Aglaius joins the martyrs, restoring their number to forty. At dawn their bodies are burned and the ashes scattered in a river.
  3. c. 370–379 Homily of Basil the Great Basil of Caesarea delivers the earliest preserved homily on the martyrs' feast, roughly fifty to sixty years after their deaths.
  4. 5th century Discovery of relics in Constantinople The historian Sozomen records the discovery of the martyrs' relics in Constantinople within the shrine of Saint Thyrsus, an event facilitated by the Empress Pulcheria.

Contributions & Legacy

Historical Context

The martyrs belonged to the Twelfth Legion, Legio XII Fulminata, stationed in Lesser Armenia. The persecution under Licinius, who had removed Christians from his army, formed the immediate backdrop to their condemnation around 320. According to the synaxarion, a prefect at Sebaste sentenced the forty professing soldiers to die of exposure on a frozen pond on an extremely cold night.

Warm baths were placed beside the pond so that any who relented might find relief. The synaxarion relates that one soldier broke and ran to the baths, where he died upon immersion; a guard named Aglaius, seeing a supernatural brilliance overshadowing the remaining thirty-nine, declared himself a Christian, removed his garments, and joined them, so that the number of forty was preserved. At daybreak the bodies — still showing signs of life — were burned and the remains cast into a river.

The Forty Named Martyrs

The Eastern Orthodox menaion preserves the full list of the forty names: Hesychius, Meliton, Heraclius, Smaragdus, Domnus, Eunoicus, Valens, Vivianus, Claudius, Priscus, Theodulus, Euthychius, John, Xanthias, Helianus, Sisinius, Cyrion, Angius, Aetius, Flavius, Acacius, Ecdicius, Lysimachus, Alexander, Elias, Candidus, Theophilus, Dometian, Gaius, Gorgonius, Eutyches, Athanasius, Cyril, Sacerdon, Nicholas, Valerius, Philoctemon, Severian, Chudion, and Aglaius — the converted guard who joined the company to complete the forty. A variant listing by Antonio Borrelli differs slightly in ordering and spelling but names essentially the same individuals.

Veneration and Legacy

The Forty Martyrs were celebrated by major Church Fathers within a few generations of their deaths. Basil the Great preached the earliest known homily on their feast around 370–379; Gregory of Nyssa delivered two preserved discourses praising them and buried his parents near their relics; and Ephrem the Syrian composed eulogies in their honor. Acts of their martyrdom survive in Greek, Syriac, and Latin, together with a 'Testament' attributed to the Forty Martyrs.

By tradition, three days after the martyrdom the saints appeared to Saint Peter, Bishop of Sebaste, directing him to gather their remains. Their relics were distributed among many cities, prompting widespread veneration and the building of churches, including one at Caesarea in Cappadocia. Veneration reached Western Europe through bishops such as Gaudentius of Brescia (died c. 410–427), who received particles of the martyrs' ashes during travels in the East and placed them in the altar of his basilica.

Relics & Shrines

The historian Sozomen gives an account of the discovery of the martyrs' relics in Constantinople, kept within the shrine of Saint Thyrsus, an event facilitated by the Empress Pulcheria. Relics were widely dispersed: Saint Peter, Bishop of Sebaste, is said to have collected the remains, and portions reached churches across the East and, through Gaudentius of Brescia, the West.

Customs & Traditions

The feast of March 9 falls within the forty days of Great Lent, and tradition draws a deliberate symbolic connection between the endurance of the forty martyrs and the spiritual discipline of those who fast. The Orthodox wedding service includes prayers that mention these saints, reminding the couple that spiritual crowns await them in Heaven.

In Orthodox tradition the custom exists of baking 'skylarks,' bird-shaped pastries, on March 9, connected to the belief that birds announce the coming of spring at this time of year.

Notes

One row for the named cluster per grouping rules; representative individual names in Also Known As.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints; en.wikipedia.org