Martyr 4th century

Saint Alban Protomartyr of Britain

died early 3rd or early 4th century

Also known as Alban of Verulamium

A citizen of Verulamium in Britain who sheltered a fleeing priest, was converted by him, and gave himself up in the priest's place; the first to shed his blood for Christ in the British Isles.

Feast Day
June 22
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Alban, Protomartyr of Britain

Life

Alban was a citizen of the Roman town of Verulamium in Britain, a few miles northwest of London at the site of the modern city of St Albans, and is venerated as the protomartyr of Britain, the first to shed his blood for Christ in the British Isles. By tradition he was a pagan who, during a time of persecution, gave shelter in his home to a fleeing Christian priest, named Amphibalus in the later tradition. Moved by the priest's constant prayer and vigil, Alban questioned him about the faith, came to believe in Christ, and received baptism.

When soldiers came searching for the fugitive priest, Alban exchanged clothes with him so that the priest could escape, and was arrested in his place. Brought before the magistrate and unmasked, he confessed himself a Christian and a worshipper of the true God. After he refused to sacrifice to the pagan gods he was tortured and condemned to be beheaded on a hill above the town.

The precise date of Alban's martyrdom is uncertain and much debated. Some traditions and scholars place it during the persecution under Decius (c. 251) or Valerian (c. 257); the Venerable Bede set it within the Diocletianic persecution at the start of the fourth century, while one manuscript tradition dates it as early as 209 under Septimius Severus. The earliest surviving witnesses to his cult include the writings of Gildas (sixth century), the account of Bede's Ecclesiastical History (c. 730), and the Passio Albani, whose oldest manuscript dates to the eighth century. He is commemorated on June 22.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 429 Germanus of Auxerre visits the tomb By tradition Germanus of Auxerre venerated Alban's tomb during his mission against Pelagianism in Britain.
  2. c. 547 Recorded by Gildas Gildas gave an early recognisable account of Alban's martyrdom, calling him Alban of Verulamium.
  3. c. 730 Bede's account Bede recorded the fullest early narrative of the martyrdom in his Ecclesiastical History.
  4. c. 793 Abbey founded Offa of Mercia is reported to have established a Benedictine abbey at the site of the martyrdom.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Martyrdom and Recorded Miracles

Bede's narrative, the fullest early account, relates several miracles attending the saint's death. On the way to the place of execution Alban came to a river, identified by tradition as the Ver, which the crowd made difficult to cross; by tradition he prayed and the waters parted, allowing him and his captors to pass over on dry land. On the hill, when Alban grew thirsty, a spring is said to have risen at his feet.

According to the same tradition, the first appointed executioner was so moved that he cast down his sword and refused to carry out the sentence, declaring himself a Christian; a second executioner then beheaded Alban. The priest whom Alban had sheltered was, by tradition, captured and put to death afterward at Redbourn.

Cult and Shrine

A church was raised at the site of the martyrdom, and the saint's tomb became an early centre of veneration. According to the Life of Germanus, Germanus of Auxerre visited Alban's tomb around 429, during his mission against the Pelagian heresy in Britain, and is said to have taken away earth reddened by the martyr's blood.

Offa of Mercia is reported to have established a Benedictine abbey at the site about 793. The monastery was rebuilt by the Normans from 1077, and the abbey church survives as the cathedral of the Diocese of St Albans, established in 1877. The town that grew around the shrine took its name from the martyr.

Notes

Pre-schism Western saint; protomartyr of Britain.

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