John of Thasos was a young Greek Christian of the Ottoman period who was martyred at Constantinople in 1652 for refusing to renounce his faith and accept Islam. He is numbered among the New Martyrs who suffered under Turkish rule, and is commemorated on December 20.
According to the synaxarion, John came from the village of Marias on the island of Thasos in the northern Aegean. While still a youth he was brought to Constantinople and apprenticed to a tailor. There he was seized by the Turks and accused of having insulted the Muslim religion. Pressed to convert to Islam, he refused to renounce the Christian faith, and for this he was beheaded at the age of eighteen.
Contributions & Legacy
1 contributions
ReadHide
Martyrdom
The tradition relates that John was accused before the Turkish authorities of insulting Islam, a charge that under Ottoman law could carry the death penalty unless the accused embraced the Muslim faith. He was urged to convert and so save his life, but he would not deny Christ. He was put to death by beheading in 1652, at the age of eighteen, and was thereafter venerated as a New Martyr.