Martyr 3rd century

Ten Holy Martyrs of Crete

died c. 250

Also known as Theodulus · Saturninus · Euporus · Gelasius · Eunician · Zoticus · Pompius · Agathopus · Basilides · Evaristus

Ten Cretan Christians who confessed Christ under Decius and endured torture before martyrdom.

Feast Day
December 23
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Ten Martyrs of Crete

Life

The Ten Holy Martyrs of Crete were a group of Cretan Christians put to death during the persecution under the emperor Decius (249–251). The synaxarion names them as Theodulus, Saturninus, Euporus, Gelasius, Eunician, Zoticus, Pompius, Agathopus, Basilides, and Evaristus. Drawn from several cities across Crete, they were arrested, tried together, and beheaded for refusing to renounce Christ. They are commemorated together on December 23.

According to the tradition, the governor of the island—who, the sources note, was also named Decius—pursued a fierce persecution of the Church, arresting those who professed faith in Christ. The ten were brought before him and, at their trial, steadfastly confessed Christ and refused to worship the idols and the imperial cult. For about a month they were subjected to severe tortures, which, the synaxarion relates, they endured without yielding.

Before their execution the martyrs are said to have prayed that their persecutors might be enlightened with the knowledge of the true faith. As the tortures had not broken their resolve, the sentence was carried out by beheading. By one tradition recorded in the sources, the executions took place at Alonion, the principal amphitheater of Gortyna. About a century later, Saint Paul of Constantinople is said to have visited Crete and translated their relics to Constantinople, where they were honored as a protection for the city.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Martyrs and Their Cities

The sources associate the ten with several cities of Crete, though the precise assignments vary somewhat between accounts. By the most common tradition, Theodulus, Saturninus, Euporus, Gelasius, and Eunician came from Gortyna, then the capital of the island; Zoticus from Knossos; Agathopus from the port of Panormus; Basilides from Cydonia (Kydonia); and the remaining two, Pompius and Evaristus, are variously associated with Heraklion (Iraklion) and, in one account, Lebena. Their shared origin across the island has led to their veneration as patrons especially connected with Crete.

Relics and Later Tradition

The principal tradition holds that the relics of the ten martyrs were carried from Crete to Constantinople by Saint Paul of Constantinople roughly a hundred years after their death, to serve as a safeguard for the city and a source of blessing for the faithful. A separate strand of tradition, noted in modern accounts, connects them with sarcophagi reported during twentieth-century excavations at Alonion in Gortyna.

Notes

Named group kept as one row.

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