Martyr 18th century

Martyrs of Năsăud

died 1763

Also known as Athanasius Todoran of Bichigiu · Atanasie Todoran · Basil of Mocod · Vasile of Mocod · Gregory of Zagra · Grigore of Zagra · Basil of Telciu · Vasile of Telciu

Four Orthodox Romanians of the Năsăud border region — Athanasius Todoran of Bichigiu, Basil of Mocod, Gregory of Zagra, and Basil of Telciu — executed at Salva in 1763 for resisting forced union with Rome and the militarization of their villages.

Feast Day
November 12
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs and Confessors of Năsăud: Athanasius, Basil, Gregory and Basil

Life

The Holy Martyrs and Confessors of Năsăud were four Orthodox Romanians of the Năsăud border region of Transylvania who were executed in 1763 for resisting pressure to abandon the Orthodox faith for union with Rome. They are commemorated together on November 12. The four are Athanasius Todoran of Bichigiu, Basil of Mocod, Gregory of Zagra, and Basil of Telciu.

Their deaths fell within the wider Habsburg effort to bring the Orthodox Romanians of Transylvania into the Uniate (Greek Catholic) Church. According to the tradition, the authorities — among them General Bukov, dispatched by the court at Vienna — pressed the population toward Catholicism while organizing the frontier villages into a militarized border guard, with promises of religious liberty and improved conditions that the government did not keep.

The most prominent of the four is Athanasius Todoran, remembered as an elderly man of the village of Bichigiu in the Sălăuța valley who is said to have been 104 years old at the time of the events. The tradition describes him as an educated man who had taken part in negotiations with Vienna in 1761–1762 over the militarization of the frontier communes. On May 10, 1763, at a swearing-in of the frontier guards held at Salva, he is said to have ridden forward and urged the recruits not to take the oath, protesting that the promised confirmation of their freedoms had never arrived and that they would not bear arms while their faith was mocked.

By tradition the four were put to death on November 12, 1763, at Salva. The synaxarion relates that Athanasius was broken on the wheel and his head fastened to it for having turned the people away from union, and that the others were executed in like manner; alongside them many more Orthodox Christians were said to have been scourged, some fatally. The Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church glorified them as saints by a synodal act of 2007.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 1761–1762 Negotiations with Vienna By tradition Athanasius Todoran took part in negotiations with the court at Vienna over the militarization of the Năsăud frontier communes.
  2. May 10, 1763 Resistance at the swearing-in At Salva, Athanasius Todoran is said to have urged the assembled frontier guards not to take the oath, protesting broken promises and the pressure against the Orthodox faith.
  3. November 12, 1763 Martyrdom at Salva The four were put to death at Salva; Athanasius was broken on the wheel, and the others executed in like manner.
  4. 2007 Glorification The Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church glorified the four as saints.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Historical Background

In the eighteenth century the Orthodox Romanians of Transylvania, then under Habsburg rule, faced sustained pressure to enter the Uniate Church, which preserved the Eastern rite while accepting the authority of Rome. The synaxarion places the Năsăud martyrs within this pressure, associating it with General Bukov, sent from Vienna, who is connected in the tradition both with the campaign for union and with the reorganization of the border villages into a military frontier guard.

According to the tradition, the frontier-guard arrangement was presented to the Romanian villagers with assurances that they would remain free and would not be compelled to give up their faith. When the promised guarantees were not delivered, resentment grew among the communes of the Năsăud district, and it was at the public swearing-in of the guard that the resistance associated with Athanasius Todoran came to a head.

Glorification

The four were glorified by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 2007, the formal synodal act being dated to that year. They are numbered among the confessors and martyrs of the Transylvanian Romanians who suffered for remaining in the Orthodox Church, and are kept as a single commemoration on November 12.

Notes

Executed 1763 at Salva, Transylvania. One commemoration of four named martyrs kept as a single row. Glorified by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 2007.

Sources: Synaxar of the Romanian Saints (sfintiromani.ro); Doxologia (doxologia.ro); Romanian Orthodox Church canonization (2007)