Great Martyr 5th century

Greatmartyr James the Persian

died 27 November 420

Also known as James the Sawn-Asunder

A noble Persian Christian who lapsed under royal pressure but repented after his family's rebuke, then confessed Christ and was tortured to death.

Feast Day
November 27
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Commemorated as

The Holy Great Martyr James the Persian (the Sawn-Asunder)

Life

James the Persian, called Intercisus from the Latin word for one who is cut into pieces, was a fifth-century martyr of the Sasanian Empire. Born into a wealthy and illustrious Christian family in Persia, he rose to a high position at the royal court, where he was honored and favored by the king Yazdegerd I (reigned 399-420). According to the synaxarion, his standing at court and his close friendship with the king led him to deny his faith in Christ and to take part in the worship of the king.

When James's mother and wife, both Christians, learned of his apostasy, they sent him a letter in which they rebuked him and declared that, by preferring the favor of an earthly king to the love of Christ, he had made himself a stranger to them. Wounded by their words, James came to himself, wept bitterly over his fall, and repented, renouncing the idolatry he had embraced. His prayers to Christ were overheard, and he was reported to the authorities under Yazdegerd's successor, Bahram V, who heavily persecuted Christians.

Brought before the king, James confessed his faith openly and refused to renounce Christ. The king condemned him to a prolonged and bitter death by dismemberment: his fingers and toes were cut off one by one, then his hands and feet, then his arms and legs, the tradition relating that he was severed into twenty-eight pieces, after which he was beheaded. Throughout the torture he is said to have offered prayers of thanksgiving. He died on 27 November 420 in Beth Lapat (Gundishapur, near present-day Dezful, Iran), and is venerated as a Great Martyr, commemorated on November 27.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 399-420 At the court of Yazdegerd I James holds a high and honored position at the court of the Persian king Yazdegerd I.
  2. c. 420 Apostasy and repentance James denies Christ under royal influence, then repents after a rebuking letter from his mother and wife.
  3. 27 November 420 Martyrdom Condemned under Bahram V, James is dismembered limb by limb and beheaded at Beth Lapat (Gundishapur).

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Apostasy and Repentance

The synaxarion presents James's fall not as a sudden renunciation but as a gradual compromise born of his nearness to power. As one of the most honored figures at the court of Yazdegerd I, he was, by tradition, drawn by the king's friendship and flatteries into the worship of the king and away from the faith of his upbringing.

The turning point in the account is the letter from his mother and wife. By declaring that they would regard him as a stranger and foreigner for valuing the love of a king above the love of Christ, they confronted him with the cost of his choice. Their rebuke moved him to repentance, and he openly repudiated the idolatry he had embraced, prepared thereafter to confess Christ before the king at the cost of his life.

Martyrdom

James was condemned under Bahram V (Varahran V), the successor of Yazdegerd I, during a period of intensified persecution of Christians in Persia. His execution was carried out by progressive dismemberment, beginning with the smallest members and proceeding inward, a manner of death that gave rise to his epithets Intercisus in Latin and Pasqo, the sawn-asunder, in Syriac.

By the tradition recorded in his life, he was cut into twenty-eight pieces and finally beheaded, surviving the loss of his limbs until the last. His witness is counted among the many martyrs of the Church of Persia under Sasanian rule.

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