Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Dorotheus Bishop of Tyre

c. 255 - c. 362

Also known as Dorotheos of Tyre

A learned bishop of Tyre who endured the persecution of Diocletian and returned to shepherd his flock in peace, but in great old age was seized and martyred under Julian the Apostate.

Feast Day
June 5
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Dorotheus, Bishop of Tyre

Life

Dorotheus was a learned bishop of the Phoenician city of Tyre whose long episcopate spanned the final wave of pagan persecution under Diocletian, the peace of the Church under Constantine the Great, and the renewed hostility of Julian the Apostate, under whom he was martyred in extreme old age. He is commemorated on June 5, the same day as the unrelated Venerable Abba Dorotheus of Gaza, from whom the tradition is careful to distinguish him.

According to the synaxarion, Dorotheus held the see of Tyre during the reign of Diocletian (284-305) and, following the Gospel counsel to flee from danger, withdrew from Tyre and hid from the persecutors. When Constantine the Great (306-337) secured peace for the Church, he returned and again occupied the episcopal throne, guiding his flock for more than fifty years and converting many of the pagans to Christianity.

When Julian the Apostate (361-363) began openly to persecute Christians, Dorotheus was already over one hundred years old. He withdrew to Udum, also called Odyssopolis, a town identified in the tradition with present-day Varna in Bulgaria on the Black Sea, where imperial delegates arrested him for refusing to offer sacrifice to the idols. Under torture the aged bishop gave up his soul, reportedly at the age of one hundred and seven, around the year 362.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 255 Birth Dorotheus is born, according to tradition around the year 255, by one account at Antioch.
  2. 284-305 Bishop during the Diocletianic persecution Dorotheus holds the see of Tyre under Diocletian and withdraws into hiding to escape the persecution.
  3. 306-337 Return under Constantine the Great With peace restored to the Church, he resumes the episcopal throne of Tyre and shepherds his flock for more than fifty years.
  4. c. 362 Martyrdom under Julian the Apostate Arrested at Udum (Odyssopolis, modern Varna) for refusing to sacrifice to idols, the aged bishop dies under torture, reportedly aged 107.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Episcopate and Witness

The tradition presents Dorotheus as a learned shepherd whose long life bridged the eras of persecution and imperial favor. Having survived the Diocletianic persecution by withdrawal rather than confrontation, he returned to a Church newly at peace and devoted decades to the instruction and expansion of his flock, the sources crediting him with the conversion of many pagans during his more than fifty years on the throne of Tyre.

Some accounts add further detail to his career: that he had earlier been a learned priest of Antioch and a teacher of the church historian Eusebius of Caesarea, that he attended the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea in 325, and that he was a eunuch. His martyrdom came at the very end of a life of extreme length; too old to be a public threat, he was nonetheless sought out under Julian, and his refusal to sacrifice brought him the death he had earlier evaded. Because he was both a bishop and put to death for the faith, he is reckoned a hieromartyr.

Attributed Writings

Dorotheus is remembered as a learned man, and several works circulated under his name in later centuries. Orthodox sources associate him with a compilation sometimes called 'The Synopsis,' described as a collection of sayings together with lives of the holy prophets and apostles, and he is traditionally credited with an 'Acts of the Seventy Apostles,' a work that has been thought possibly identical to a lost 'Gospel of the Seventy' concerning the seventy disciples commissioned in the Gospel of Luke.

Modern scholarship treats these attributions with caution: a number of texts bearing his name are regarded as pseudepigraphic and are conventionally assigned to a 'Pseudo-Dorotheus,' so that the precise extent of his own literary output remains uncertain.

Veneration

Dorotheus is venerated as a hieromartyr, a bishop who died for the faith, and is commemorated on June 5 by the Gregorian reckoning, corresponding to June 18 on the Julian calendar. Because his repose preceded the Council of Chalcedon, he belongs to the undivided Church and is honored in both the Eastern Orthodox and the Roman Catholic traditions.

Notes

Distinct from Venerable Abba Dorotheus of Gaza (same day).

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