Hieromartyr 3rd century

Martyrs Cyriacus Faustus the Priest, Abibus the Deacon & Companions

died c. 250

Also known as the martyrs of Alexandria

A priest, a deacon, and eleven others beheaded for Christ at Alexandria under Decius (250)

Feast Day
September 6
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Cyriacus, Faustus the Presbyter, Abibus the Deacon, and Eleven Companions, at Alexandria

Life

Cyriacus, Faustus the Presbyter, Abibus the Deacon, and a company of further martyrs are commemorated together as Christians who suffered at Alexandria in Egypt during the persecution under the emperor Decius (249-251). Among the group, Faustus is identified as a priest and Abibus (also rendered Habib) as a deacon, so the commemoration is reckoned by the Church as a hieromartyric one. They are observed on September 6.

By the account preserved in the synaxarion, the martyrs were brought before the governor Valerius and steadfastly confessed themselves to be Christians. For this confession they were condemned and beheaded by the sword, about the year 250. The tradition relates that their bodies were afterward buried by fellow Christians at Alexandria.

The Orthodox commemoration of September 6 numbers the company as a priest, a deacon, and eleven others, fourteen in all. A related Western and Coptic tradition surrounding Faustus, Abibus, and a lector named Dionysius names a wider circle of companions said to have suffered with them, including a soldier, an acolyte, a sea captain, and several others; the lists differ between recensions, and the synaxarion that anchors this commemoration enumerates the priest, deacon, and eleven companions without naming each.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 249-251 Persecution of Decius The emperor Decius requires sacrifice to the Roman gods throughout the empire, exposing confessing Christians to arrest and execution.
  2. c. 250 Martyrdom at Alexandria Faustus, Abibus, Cyriacus, and their companions confess Christ before the governor Valerius and are beheaded; their bodies are buried by Christians at Alexandria.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

The Decian persecution at Alexandria

The persecution under Decius, begun in 249-250, required inhabitants of the empire to perform sacrifice to the Roman gods and obtain a certificate attesting that they had done so. Refusal exposed Christians to arrest, examination by the civil authorities, and execution. Alexandria, one of the great cities of the Christian East, produced numerous martyrs in these years.

Within this setting the company commemorated on September 6 is recorded as having been examined by the governor Valerius and put to death by beheading for refusing to renounce Christ. The brevity of the surviving notice, which preserves the names of the priest Faustus, the deacon Abibus, and Cyriacus while counting the remainder, is characteristic of the synaxarion entries for the many who suffered in this period.

Sources: Synaxarion; Roman Martyrology