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THE CHURCH HISTORY OF EUSEBIUS
BOOK VIII
(INCLUDING
THE MARTYRS OF PALESTINE)
BOOK VIII
INTRODUCTION
As we have described in seven books the events from the time of the apostles,
(1) we think it proper in this eighth book to record for the information of
posterity a few of the most important occurrences of our own times, which are
worthy of permanent record. Our account will begin at this point.
CHAPTER I.
The Events which preceded the Persecution
1 It is beyond our ability to describe in a suitable manner the extent and
nature of the glory and freedom with which the word of piety toward the God
of the universe, proclaimed to the world through Christ, was honored among
all men, both Greeks and barbarians, before the persecution in our day. The
favor shown our people by the rulers might be adduced as evidence; as they
committed to them the government of provinces, (1) and on account of the great
friendship which they entertained toward their doctrine, released them 3 from
anxiety in regard to sacrificing. Why need I speak of those in the royal palaces,
and of the rulers over all, who allowed the members of their households, wives
(2) and children and servants, to speak openly before them for the Divine word
and life, and suffered them almost to boast of the freedom of their faith?
Indeed they esteemed them highly, and 4 preferred them to their fellow-servants.
Such an one was that Dorotheus, (3) the most devoted and faithful to them of
all, and on this account especially honored by them among those who held the
most honorable offices and governments. With him was the celebrated Gorgonius,
(4) and as many as had been esteemed worthy of the same distinction on account
of the word of God. And one could see the 5 rulers in every church accorded
the greatest favor (5) by all officers and governors.
But how
can any one describe those vast assemblies, and the multitude that crowded
together in every city,
and
the famous gatherings in the houses of
prayer; on whose account not being satisfied with the ancient buildings they
erected from the foundation large churches in all the cities? No envy 6 hindered
the progress of these affairs which advanced gradually, and grew and increased
day by day. Nor could any evil demon slander them or hinder them through human
counsels, so long as the divine and heavenly hand watched over and guarded
his own people as worthy. But when on account of the abundant 7 freedom, we
fell into laxity and sloth, and envied and reviled each other, and were almost,
as it were, taking up arms against one another, rulers assailing rulers with
words like spears, and people forming parties against people, and monstrous
hypocrisy and dissimulation rising to the greatest height of wickedness, the
divine judgment with forbearance, as is its pleasure, while the multitudes
yet continued to assemble, gently and moderately harassed the episcopacy. This
persecution began with the brethren 8 in the army. But as if without sensibility,
we were not eager to make the Deity favorable and propitious; and some, like
atheists, thought that our affairs were unheeded and ungoverned; and thus we
added one wickedness to another. And those esteemed our shepherds, casting
aside the bond of piety, were excited to conflicts with one another, and did
nothing else than heap up strifes and threats and jealousy and enmity and hatred
toward each other, like tyrants eagerly endeavoring to assert their power.
Then, truly, according to the word of Jeremiah, "The Lord in his wrath
darkened the daughter of Zion, and cast down the glory of Israel from heaven
to earth, and remembered not his foot- stool in the day of his anger. The Lord
also overwhelmed all the beautiful things of Israel, and threw down all his
strongholds." (6) And according to what was foretold in the Psalms: "He
has made void the covenant of his servant, and profaned his sanctuary to the
earth, --in the destruction of the churches, -and has thrown down all his strongholds,
and has made his fortresses cowardice. All that pass by have plundered the
multitude of the people; and he has become besides a reproach to his neighbors.
For he has exalted the right hand of his enemies, and has turned back the help
of his sword, and has not taken his part in the war. But he has deprived him
of purification, and has cast his throne to the ground. He has shortened the
days of his time, and besides all, has poured out shame upon him." (7)
CHAPTER II.
The Destruction of the Churches.
1 All
these things were fulfilled in us, when we saw with our own eyes the houses
of prayer thrown
down to
the very foundations, and the Divine and Sacred
Scriptures committed to the flames in the midst of the market-places, and the
shepherds of the churches basely hidden here and there, and some of them captured
ignominiously, and mocked by their enemies. When also, according to another
prophetic word, "Contempt was poured out upon rulers, and he caused them
to wander in an untrodden and pathless way." (1)
2. But it is not our place to describe the sad misfortunes which finally came
upon them, as we do not think it proper, moreover, to record their divisions
and unnatural conduct to each other before the persecution. Wherefore we have
decided to relate nothing concerning them except the things in which we can
vindicate 3 the Divine judgment. Hence we shall not mention those who were
shaken by the persecution, nor those who in everything pertaining to salvation
were shipwrecked, and by their own will were sunk in the depths of the flood.
But we shall introduce into this history in general only those events which
may be use-fill first to ourselves and afterwards to posterity. (2) Let us
therefore proceed to describe briefly the sacred conflicts of the witnesses
of the Divine Word.
It was in the nineteenth year of the reign (4) of Diocletian, (3) in the month
Dystrus, (4) called March by the Romans, when the feast of the Saviour's passion
was near at hand, (5) that royal edicts were published everywhere, commanding
that the churches be leveled to the ground and the Scriptures be destroyed
by fire, and ordering that those who held places of honor be degraded, and
that the household servants, if they persisted in the profession of Christianity,
be deprived of freedom. (6)
5 Such was the first edict against us. But not long after, other decrees were
issued, commanding that all the rulers of the churches in every place be first
thrown into prison, (7) and afterwards by every artifice be compelled to sacrifices.
(8)
CHAPTER III.
The Nature of the Conflicts endured in the Persecution.
Then truly a great many rulers of the 1 churches eagerly endured terrible
sufferings, and furnished examples of noble conflicts. But a multitude of others,
(1) benumbed in spirit by fear., were easily weakened at the first onset. Of
the rest each one endured different forms of torture. (2) The body of one was
scourged with rods. Another was punished with insupportable rackings and scrapings,
in which some suffered a miserable death. Others passed 2 through different
conflicts. Thus one, while those around pressed him on by force and dragged
him to the abominable and impure sacrifices, was dismissed as if he had sacrificed,
though he had not. (3) Another, though he had not approached at all, nor touched
any polluted thing, when others said that he had sacrificed, went away, bearing
the accusation in silence. Another being taken up half dead, was cast aside
as if already dead, and again a certain 3 one lying upon the ground was dragged
a long distance by his feet and counted among those who had sacrificed. One
cried out and with a loud voice testified his rejection of the sacrifice; another
shouted that he was a Christian, being resplendent in the confession of the
saving Name. Another protested that he had not sacrificed and never would.
But they were struck in the mouth and silenced by a large band of soldiers
who were drawn 4 up for this purpose; and they were smitten on the face and
cheeks and driven away by force; so important did the enemies of piety regard
it, by any means, to seem to have accomplished their purpose. But these things
did no+ avail them against the holy martyrs; for an accurate description of
whom, what word of ours could suffice?
CHAPTER IV.
The Famous Martyrs of God, who filled Every Place with their Memory and won
Various Crowns in behalf of Religion.
1 For we might tell of many who showed admirable zeal for the religion of
the God of the universe, not only from the beginning of the general persecution,
but long before that time, while yet peace prevailed. For though he who had
received power was seemingly aroused now as from a deep sleep, yet from the
time after Decius and Valerian, he had been plotting secretly and without notice
against the churches. He did not wage war against all of us at once, but made
trial at first only of those in the army. For he supposed that the others could
be taken easily if he should first attack and subdue these. Thereupon many
of the soldiers were seen most cheerfully embracing private life, so that they
might not deny their piety toward the Creator of the universe. For when the
commander, (1) whoever he was, (2) began to persecute the soldiers, separating
onto tribes an purging those who were enrolled in the army, giving them the
choice either by obeying to receive the honor which belonged to them, or on
the other hand to be deprived of it if they disobeyed the command, a great
many soldiers of Christ's kingdom, without hesitation, instantly preferred
the confession of him to the seeming glory and prosperity which they were enjoying.
And 4 one and another of them occasionally received in exchange, for their
pious constancy, (3) not only the loss of position, but death. But as yet the
instigator of this plot proceeded with moderation, and ventured so far as blood
only in some instances; for the multitude of believers, as it is likely, made
him afraid, and deterred him from waging war at once against all. But when
he made the attack more boldly, 5 it is impossible to relate how many and what
sort of martyrs of God could be seen, among the inhabitants of all the cities
and countries. (4)
CHAPTER V.
Those in Nicomedia. (1)
Immediately on the publication of the 1 decree against the churches in Nicomedia,
(2) a certain man, not obscure but very highly honored with distinguished temporal
dignities, moved with zeal toward God, and incited with ardent faith, seized
the edict as it was posted openly and publicly, and tore it to pieces as a
profane and impious thing; (3) and this was done while two of the sovereigns
were in the same city, -- the oldest of all, and the one who held the fourth
place in the government after him. (4) But this man, first in that place, after
distinguishing himself in such a manner suffered those things which were likely
to follow such daring, and kept his spirit cheerful and undisturbed till death.
CHAPTER VI.
Those in the Palace.
1 This period produced divine and illustrious martyrs, above all whose praises
have ever been sung and who have been celebrated for courage, whether among
Greeks or barbarians, in the person of Dorotheus (1) and the servants that
were with him in the palace. Although they received the highest honors from
their masters, and were treated by them as their own children, they esteemed
reproaches and trials for religion, and the many forms of death that were invented
against them, as, in truth, greater riches than the glory and luxury of this
life.
We will describe the manner in which one of them ended his life, and leave
our readers to infer from his case the sufferings of the others. A certain
man was brought forward in the above-mentioned city, before the rulers of whom
we have spoken. (2) He was then commanded to sacrifice, but as he refused,
he was ordered to be stripped and raised on high and beaten with rods over
his entire body, until, being conquered, he should, even against 3 his will,
do what was commanded. But as he was unmoved by these sufferings, and his bones
were already appearing, they mixed vinegar with salt and poured it upon the
mangled parts of his body. As he scorned these agonies, a gridiron and fire
were brought forward. And the remnants of his body, like flesh intended for
eating, were placed on the fire, not at once, lest he should expire instantly,
but a little at a time. And those who placed him on the pyre were not permitted
to desist until, after such sufferings, he should assent to the 4 things commanded.
But he held his purpose firmly, and victoriously gave up his life while the
tortures were still going on. Such was the martyrdom of one of the servants
of the palace, who was indeed well worthy of his name, for he was called Peter.
(3) The martyrdoms 5 of the rest, though they were not inferior to his, we
will pass by for the sake of brevity, recording only that Dorotheus and Gorgonius,
(4) with many others of the royal household, after varied sufferings, ended
their lives by strangling, and bore away the trophies of God-given victory.
At this time Anthimus, (5) who then pro- 6 sided over the church in Nicomedia,
was beheaded for his testimony to Christ. A great multitude of martyrs were
added to him, a conflagration having broken out in those very days in the palace
at Nicomedia, I know not how, which through a false suspicion was laid to our
people. (6) Entire families of the pious in that place were put to death in
masses at the royal command, some by the sword, and others by fire. It is reported
that with a certain divine and indescribable eagerness men and women rushed
into the fire. And the executioners bound a large number of others and put
them on boats (7) and threw them into the depths of 7 the sea. And those who
had been esteemed their masters considered it necessary to dig up the bodies
of the imperial servants, who had been committed to the earth with suitable
burial (7) and cast them into the sea, lest any, as they thought, regarding
them as gods, might worship them lying in their sepulchers. (8)
Such things occurred in Nicomedia at the 8 beginning of the persecution. (9)
But not long after, as persons in the country called Melitene, (10) and others
throughout Syria, (11) attempted to usurp the government, a royal edict directed
that the rulers of the churches everywhere (12) should lye thrown into prison
and bonds. What was to be seen after this 9 exceeds all description. A vast
multitude were imprisoned in every place; and the prisons everywhere, which
had long before been prepared for murderers and robbers of graves, were filled
with bishops, presbyters and deacons, readers and exorcists, (13) so that room
was no longer left in them for those condemned for crimes. And as other decrees
followed 10 the first, directing that those in prison if they would sacrifice
should be permitted to depart in freedom, but that those who refused should
be harassed with many tortures, (14) how could any one, again, number the multitude
of martyrs in every province, (15) and especially of those in Africa, and Mauritania,
and Thebais, and Egypt? From this last country many went into other cities
and provinces, and became illustrious through martyrdom.
CHAPTER VII.
The Egyptians in Phoenicia.
THOSE of them that were conspicuous in 1 Palestine we know, as also those
that were at Tyre in Phoenicia. (1) Who that saw them was not astonished at
the numberless stripes, and at the firmness which these truly wonderful athletes
of religion exhibited under them? and at their contest, immediately after the
scourging, with bloodthirsty wild beasts, as they were cast before leopards
and different kinds of bears and wild boars and bulls goaded with fire and
red-hot iron? and at the marvelous endurance of these noble men in the face
of all sorts of wild beasts?
We were present ourselves when these things occurred, and have put on record
the divine power of our martyred Saviour Jesus Christ, which was present and
manifested itself mightily in the martyrs. For a long time the man-devouring
beasts did not dare to touch or draw near the bodies of those dear to God,
but rushed upon the others who from the outside irritated and urged them on.
And they would not in the least touch the holy athletes, as they stood alone
and naked and shook their hands at them to draw them toward themselves,--for
they were commanded to do this. But whenever they rushed at them, they were
restrained as if by some diviner power and retreated 3 again. This continued
for a long time, and occasioned no little wonder to the spectators. And as
the first wild beast did nothing, a second and a third were let loose 4 against
one and the same martyr. One could not but be astonished at the invincible
firmness of these holy men, and the enduring and immovable constancy of those
whose bodies were young. You could have seen a youth not twenty years of age
standing unbound and stretching out his hands in the form of a cross, with
unterrified and untrembling mind, engaged earnestly in prayer to God, and not
in the least going back or retreating from the place where he stood, while
bears and leopards, breathing rage and death, almost touched his flesh. And
yet their mouths were restrained, I know not how, by a divine and incomprehensible
power, and they ran back again to their place. Such an one was he.
5 Again you might have seen others, for they were five in all, cast before
a wild bull, who tossed into the air with his horns those who approached from
the outside, and mangled them, leaving them to be token up half dead; but when
he rushed with rage and threatening upon the holy martyrs, who were standing
alone, he was unable to come near them; but though he stamped with his feet,
and pushed in all directions with his horns, and breathed rage and threatening
on account of the irritation of the burning irons, he was, nevertheless, held
back by the sacred Providence. And as he in nowise harmed them, they let loose
other wild beasts upon them. Finally, after these 6 terrible and various attacks
upon them, they were all slain with the sword; and instead of being buried
in the earth they were committed to the waves of the sea.
CHAPTER VIII.
These in Egypt. (1)
Such was the conflict of those Egyptians 1 who contended nobly for religion
in Tyre. But we must admire those also who suffered martyrdom in their native
land; where thousands of men, women, and children, despising the present life
for the sake of the teaching of our Saviour, endured various deaths. Some of
them, after scrapings and rackings and severest scourgings, and numberless
other kinds of tortures, terrible even to hear of, were committed to the flames;
some were drowned in the sea; some offered their heads bravely to those who
cut them off; some died under their tortures, and others perished with hunger.
And yet others were crucified; some according to the method commonly employed
for malefactors; others yet more cruelly, being nailed to the cross with their
heads downward, and being kept alive until they perished on the cross with
hunger.
CHAPTER IX.
Those in Thebais. (1)
It would be impossible to describe the 1 outrages and tortures which the martyrs
in Thebais endured. They were scraped over the entire body with shells instead
of hooks until they died. Women were bound by one foot and raised aloft in
the air by machines, and with their bodies altogether bare and uncovered, presented
to all beholders this most shameful, cruel, and inhuman spectacle. Others being
2 bound to the branches and trunks of trees perished. For they drew the stoutest
branches together with machines, and bound the limbs of the martyrs to them;
and then, allowing the branches to assume their natural position, they tore
asunder instantly the limbs of those 3 for whom they contrived this. All these
things were done, not for a few days or a short time, but for a long series
of years. Sometimes more than ten, at other times above twenty were put to
death. Again not less than thirty, then about sixty, and yet again a hundred
men with young children and women, were slain in one day, being condemned to
various and diverse torments.
4 We, also being on the spot ourselves, have observed large crowds in one
day; some suffering decapitation, others torture by fire; so that the murderous
sword was blunted, and becoming weak, was broken, and the very executioners
grew weary and relieved each other. And we beheld the most wonderful ardor,
and the truly divine energy and zeal of those who believed in the Christ of
God. For as soon as sentence was pronounced against the first, one after another
rushed to the judgment seat, and confessed themselves Christians. And regarding
with indifference the terrible things and the multiform tortures, they declared
themselves boldly and undauntedly for the religion of the God of the universe.
And they received the final sentence of death with joy and laughter and cheerfulness;
so that they sang and offered up hymns and thanksgivings to the God of the
universe till their very last breath.
6 These indeed were wonderful; but yet more wonderful were those who, being
distinguished for wealth, noble birth, and honor, and for learning and philosophy,
held everything secondary to the true religion and to faith 7 in our Saviour
and Lord Jesus Christ. Such an one was Philoromus, who held a high office under
the imperial government at Alexandria, (2) and who administered justice every
day, attended by a military guard corresponding to his rank and Roman dignity.
Such also was Phileas, (3) bishop of the church of Thmuis, a man eminent on
account of his patriotism and the services rendered by him to his country,
and also on account of his philosophical learning. These persons, although
a multitude of 8 relatives and other friends besought them, and many in high
position, and even the judge himself entreated them, that they would have compassion
on themselves and show mercy to their children and wives, yet were not in the
least induced by these things to choose the love of life, and to despise the
ordinances of our Saviour concerning confession and denial. But with manly
and philosophic minds, or rather with pious and God-loving souls, they persevered
against all the threats and insults of the judge; and both of them were beheaded.
CHAPTER X.
The Writings of Phileas the Martyr describing the Occurrences at Alexandria.
Since we have mentioned Phileas as having 1 a high reputation for secular
learning, let him be his own witness in the following extract, in which he
shows us who he was, and at the same time describes more accurately than we
can the martyrdoms which occurred in his time at Alexandria: (1)
"Having
before them all these examples and models and noble tokens which are given
us in the
Divine and
Sacred Scriptures, the blessed martyrs who were
with us did not hesitate, but directing the eye of the soul in sincerity toward
the God over all, and having their mind set upon death for religion, they adhered
firmly to their calling. For they understood that our Lord Jesus Christ had
become man on our account, that he might cut off all sin and furnish us with
the means of entrance into eternal life. For 'he counted it not a prize to
be on an equality with God, but emptied himself taking the form of a servant;
and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself unto death, even the
death of the cross.' (2) Wherefore also being zealous for the greater gifts,
the Christ-bearing martyrs endured all trials and all kinds of contrivances
for torture; not once only, but some also a second time. And although the guards
vied with each other in threatening them in all sorts of ways, not in words
only, but in actions, they did not give up their resolution; because 'perfect
love casteth out fear.' (3)
4 "What
words could describe their courage and manliness under every torture? For
as liberty
to abuse
them was given to all that wished, some beat
them with clubs, others with rods, others with scourges, yet others with thongs,
and others with ropes. And the spectacle of the outrages was varied and exhibited
great malignity. For some, with their hands bound behind them, were suspended
on the stocks, and every member stretched by certain machines. Then the torturers,
as commanded, lacerated with instruments (4) their entire bodies i not only
their sides, as in the case of murderers, but also their stomachs and knees
and cheeks. Others were raised aloft, suspended from the porch by one hand,
and endured the most terrible suffering of all, through the distension of their
joints and limbs. Others were bound face to face to pillars, not resting on
their feet, but with the weight of their bodies bearing on their bonds and
drawing them tightly.
6 And they endured this, not merely as long as the governor talked with them
or was at leisure, but through almost the entire day. For when he passed on
to others, he left officers under his authority to watch the first, and observe
if any of them, overcome by the tortures, appeared to yield. And he commanded
to cast them into chains without mercy, and afterwards when they were at the
last gasp to throw them to the ground and drag them away. For he said that
they were not to have the least concern for us, but were to think and act as
if we no longer existed, our enemies having invented this second mode of torture
in addition to the stripes.
8 "Some, also, after these outrages, were placed on the stocks, and had
both their feet stretched over the four (5) holes, so that they were compelled
to lie on their backs on the stocks, being unable to keep themselves up on
account of the fresh wounds with which their entire bodies were covered as
a result of the scourging. Others were thrown on the ground and lay there under
the accumulated infliction of tortures, exhibiting to the spectators a more
terrible manifestation of severity, as they bore on their bodies the marks
of the various and diverse punishments which had been invented. As this went
on, some died under the tortures 9 , shaming the adversary by their constancy.
Others half dead were shut up in prison, and suffering with their agonies,
they died in a few days; but the rest, recovering under the care which they
received, gained confidence by time and their long detention in prison. When
therefore they were ordered to choose 10 whether they would be released from
molestation by touching the polluted sacrifice, and would receive from them
the accursed freedom, or refusing to sacrifice, should be condemned to death,
they did not hesitate, but went to death cheerfully. For they knew what had
been declared before by the Sacred Scriptures. For it is said, (6) 'He that
sacrificeth to other gods shall be utterly destroyed,' (7) and, 'Thou shalt
have no other gods before me.'" (8)
Such are the words of the truly philosophical 11 and God-loving martyr, which,
before the final sentence, while yet in prison, he addressed to the brethren
in his parish, showing them his own circumstances, and at the same time exhorting
them to hold fast, even after his approaching death, to the religion of Christ.
But why need we dwell upon these things, 12 and continue to add fresh instances
of the conflicts of the divine martyrs throughout the world, especially since
they were dealt with no longer by common law, but attacked like enemies of
war?
CHAPTER XI.
Those in Phrygia.
A Small town (1) of Phrygia, inhabited solely by Christians, was completely
surrounded by soldiers while the men were in it. Throwing fire into it, they
consumed them with the women and children while they were calling upon Christ.
This they did because all the inhabitants of the city, and the curator himself,
and the governor, with all who held office, and the entire populace, confessed
themselves Christians, and would not in the least obey those who commanded
them to worship idols.
9. There was another man of Roman dignity named Adauctus, (2) of a noble Italian
family, who had advanced through every honor under the emperors, so that he
had blamelessly filled even the general offices of magistrate, as they call
it, and of finance minister. (3) Besides all this he excelled in deeds of piety
and in the confession of the Christ of God, and was adorned with the diadem
of martyrdom. He endured the conflict for religion while still holding the
office of finance minister.
CHAPTER XII.
Many Others, both Men and Women, who suffered in Various Ways.
1 Why need we mention the rest by name, or number the multitude of the men,
or picture the various sufferings of the admirable martyrs of Christ? Some
of them were slain with the axe, as in Arabia. The limbs of some were broken,
as in Cappadocia. Some, raised on high by the feet, with their heads down,
while a gentle fire burned beneath them, were suffocated by the smoke which
arose from the burning wood, as was done in Mesopotamia. Others were mutilated
by cutting off their noses and ears and hands, and cutting to pieces the other
members and parts of their bodies, as in Alexandria. (1) Why need we revive
the recollection 2 of those in Antioch who were roasted on grates, not so as
to kill them, but so as to subject them to a lingering punishment? Or of others
who preferred to thrust their right hand into the fire rather than touch the
impious sacrifice? Some, shrinking from the trial, rather than be taken and
fall into the hands of their enemies, threw themselves from lofty houses, considering
death preferable to the cruelty of the impious. A certain holy person,--in
soul admirable 3 for virtue, in body a woman, -- who was illustrious beyond
all in Antioch for wealth and family and reputation, had brought up in the
principles of religion her two daughters, who were now in the freshness and
bloom of life. Since great envy was excited on their account, every means was
used to find them in their concealment; and when it was ascertained that they
were away, they were summoned deceitfully to Antioch. Thus they were caught
in the nets of the soldiers. When the woman saw herself and her daughters thus
helpless, and knew the things terrible to speak of that men would do to them,--and
the most unbearable of all terrible things, the threatened violation of their
chastity, (2)--she exhorted herself and the maidens that they ought not to
submit even to hear of this. For, she said, that to surrender their souls to
the slavery of demons was worse than all deaths and destruction; and she set
before them the only deliverance from all these things,--escape to Christ.
They then 4 listened to her advice. And after arranging their garments suitably,
they went aside from the middle of the road, having requested of the guards
a little time for retirement, and cast themselves into a river which was flowing
by. Thus they destroyed themselves. (3) But there were two other virgins in
the same city of Antioch who served God in all things, and were true sisters,
illustrious in family and distinguished in life, young and blooming, serious
in mind, pious in deportment, and admirable for zeal. As if the earth could
not bear such excellence, the worshipers of demons commanded to cast them into
the sea. And this was done to them.
6 In Pontus, others endured sufferings horrible to hear. Their fingers were
pierced with sharp reeds under their nails. Melted lead, bubbling and boiling
with the heat, was poured down the backs of others, and they were roasted in
the most sensitive parts of the body. Others endured on their bowels and privy
members shameful and inhuman and unmentionable torments, which the noble and
law-observing judges, to show their severity, devised, as more honorable manifestations
of wisdom. And new tortures were continually invented, as if they were endeavoring,
by surpassing one another, to gain!
8 prizes in a contest. But at the close of these calamities, when finally
they could contrive no greater cruelties, and were weary of putting to death,
and were filled and satiated with the shedding of blood, they turned to what
they considered merciful and humane treatment, so that they seemed to be no
longer devising 9 terrible things against us. For they said that it was not
fitting that the cities should be polluted with the blood of their own people,
or that the government of their rulers, which was kind and mild toward all,
should be defamed through excessive cruelty; but that rather the beneficence
of the humane and royal authority should be extended to all, and we should
no longer be put to death. For the infliction of this punishment upon us should
be stopped in consequence of the humanity 10 of the rulers. Therefore it was
commanded that our eyes should be put out, and that we should be maimed in
one of our limbs. For such things were humane in their sight, and the lightest
of punishments for us. So that now on account of this kindly treatment accorded
us by the impious, it was impossible to tell the incalculable number of those
whose right eyes had first been cut out with the sword, and then had been cauterized
with fire; or who had been disabled in the left foot by burning the joints,
and afterward condemned to the provincial copper mines, not so much for service
as for distress and hardship. Besides all these, others encountered other trials,
which it is impossible to recount; for their manly endurance surpasses all
description. In 11 these conflicts the noble martyrs of Christ shone illustrious
over the entire world, and everywhere astonished those who beheld their manliness;
and the evidences of the truly divine and unspeakable power of our Saviour
were made manifest through them. To mention each by name would be a long task,
if not indeed impossible.
CHAPTER XIII.
The Bishops of the Church that evinced by their Blood the Genuineness of the
Religion which they preached.
As for the rulers of the Church that suffered 1 martyrdom in the principal
cities, the first martyr of the kingdom of Christ whom we shall mention among
the monuments of the pious is Anthimus, (1) bishop of the city of Nicomedia,
who was beheaded. Among the martyrs 2 at Antioch was Lucian, (2) a presbyter
of that parish, whose entire life was most excellent. At Nicomedia, in the
presence of the emperor, he proclaimed the heavenly kingdom of Christ, first
in an oral defense, and afterwards by deeds as well. Of the martyrs in Phoenicia
3 the most distinguished were those devoted pastors of the spiritual flocks
of Christ: Tyrannion, (3) bishop of the church of Tyre; Zenobius, a presbyter
of the church at Sidon; and Silvanus, (4) bishop of the churches about Emesa.
4 The last of these, with others, was made food for wild beasts at Emesa,
and was thus received into the ranks of martyrs. The other two glorified the
word of God at Antioch through patience unto death. The bishop (5) was thrown
into the depths of the sea. But Zenobius, who was a very skillful physician,
died through severe tortures which were applied to his sides.
5 Of the martyrs in Palestine, Silvanus, (6) bishop of the churches about
Gaza, was beheaded with thirty-nine others at the copper mines of Phaeno. (7)
There also the Egyptian bishops, Peleus and Nilus, (8) with others, suffered
6 death by fire. Among these we must mention Pamphilus, a presbyter, who was
the great glory of the parish of Caesarea, and among the men of our time most
admirable. The virtue of his manly deeds we have recorded 7 in the proper place.
(9) Of those who suffered death illustriously at Alexandria and throughout
Egypt and Thebais, Peter, (10) bishop of Alexandria, one of the most excellent
teachers of the religion of Christ, should first be mentioned; and of the presbyters
with him Faustus, (11) Dius and Ammonius, perfect martyrs of Christ; also Phileas,
(12) Hesychius, (13) Pachymius and Theodorus, bishops of Egyptian churches,
and besides them many other distinguished persons who are commemorated by the
parishes of their country and region. It is not for us to describe the conflicts
of those who suffered for the divine religion throughout the entire world,
and to relate accurately what happened to each of them. This would be the proper
work of those who were eyewitnesses of the events. I will describe for posterity
in another work (14) those which I myself witnessed. But in the present book
(15) I will 8 add to what I have given the revocation issued by our persecutors,
and those events that occurred at the beginning of the persecution, which will
be most profitable to such as shall read them. What words could sufficiently
describe the 9 greatness and abundance of the prosperity of the Roman government
before the war against us, while the rulers were friendly and peaceable toward
us? Then those who were highest in the government, and had held the position
ten or twenty years, passed their time in tranquil peace, in festivals and
public games and most joyful pleasures and cheer. While 10 thus their authority
was growing uninterruptedly, and increasing day by day, suddenly they changed
their peaceful attitude toward us, and began an implacable war. But the second
year of this movement was not yet past, when a revolution took place in the
entire government 11 and overturned all things. For a severe sickness came
upon the chief of those of whom we have spoken, by which his understanding
was distracted; and with him who was honored with the second rank, he retired
into private life. (16) Scarcely had he done this when the entire empire was
divided; a thing which is not recorded as having ever 12 occurred before. (17)
Not long after, the Emperor Constantius, who through his entire life was most
kindly and favorably disposed toward his subjects, and most friendly to the
Divine Word, ended his life in the common course of nature, and left his own
son, Constantine, as emperor and Augustus in his stead. (18) He was the first
that was ranked by them among the gods, and received after death every honor
which one could pay to an emperor. He was the kindest and mildest of emperors,
and the only one of those of our day that passed all the time of his government
in a manner worthy of his office. Moreover, he conducted himself toward all
most favorably and beneficently. He took not the smallest part in the war against
us, but preserved the pious that were under him unharmed and unabused. He neither
threw down the church buildings, (20) nor did he devise anything else against
us. The end of his life was honorable and thrice blessed. He alone at death
left his empire happily and gloriously to his own son as his successor,--one
who was in all respects most prudent and pious. His son Constantine entered
on the government 14 at once, being proclaimed supreme emperor and Augustus
by the soldiers, And long before by God himself, the King of all. He showed
himself an emulator of his father's piety toward our doctrine. Such an one
was he.
But after this, Licinius was declared emperor and Augustus by a common vote
of the rulers. (21) These things grieved Maximinus 15 greatly, for until that
time he had been entitled by all only Caesar. He therefore, being exceedingly
imperious, seized the dignity for himself, and became Augustus, being made
such by himself. (22) In the mean time he whom we have mentioned as having
resumed his dignity after his abdication, being detected in conspiring against
the life of Constantine, perished by a most shameful death. (23) He was the
first whose decrees and statues and public monuments were destroyed because
of his wickedness and impiety. (24)
CHAPTER XIV.
The Character of the Enemies of Religion.
Maxentius
his son, who obtained the government at Rome, (1) at first feigned our faith,
in complaisance
and
flattery toward the Roman people. On this account
he commanded his subjects to cease persecuting the Christians, pretending to
religion that he might appear merciful and mild beyond his predecessors. But
he did not prove in his deeds 2. to be such a person as was hoped, but ran
into all wickedness and abstained from no impurity or licentiousness, committing
adulteries and indulging in all kinds of corruption. For having separated wives
from their lawful consorts, he abused them and sent them back most dishonor-ably
to their husbands. And he not only practiced this against the obscure and unknown,
but he insulted especially the most prominent and distinguished members of
the Roman senate. All his subjects, people and rulers, 3 honored and obscure,
were worn out by grievous oppression. Neither, although they kept quiet, and
bore the bitter servitude, was there any relief from the murderous cruelty
of the tyrant. Once, on a small pretense, he gave the people to be slaughtered
by his guards; and a great multitude of the Roman populace were slain in the
midst of the city, with the spears and arms, not of Scythians and barbarians,
but of their own fellow-citizens. It would be 4 impossible to recount the number
of senators who were put to death for the sake of their wealth; multitudes
being slain on various pretenses. To crown all his wickedness, 5 the tyrant
resorted to magic. And in his divinations he cut open pregnant women, and again
inspected the bowels of newborn infants. He slaughtered lions, and performed
various execrable acts to invoke demons and avert war. For his only hope was
that, by these means, victory would be secured to him. It is impossible to
tell the ways in 6 which this tyrant at Rome oppressed his subjects, so that
they were reduced to such an extreme dearth of the necessities of life as has
never been known, according to our contemporaries, either at Rome or elsewhere.
But Maximinus, the tyrant in the East, 7 having secretly formed a friendly
alliance with the Roman tyrant as with a brother in wickedness, sought to conceal
it for a long time. But being at last detected, he suffered merited punishment.
(2) It was wonderful 8 how akin he was in wickedness to the tyrant at Rome,
or rather how far he surpassed him in it. For the chief of sorcerers and magi-clans
were honored by him with the highest rank. Becoming exceedingly timid and superstitious,
he valued greatly the error of idols and demons. Indeed, without soothsayers
and oracles he did not venture to move even a finger, (3) so to speak. Therefore
he persecuted us more violently and incessantly than his predecessors. He ordered
temples to be erected in every city, and the sacred groves which had been destroyed
through lapse of time to be speedily restored. He appointed idol priests in
every place and city; and he set over them in every province, as high priest,
some political official who had especially distinguished himself in every kind
of service, giving him a band of soldiers and a body-guard. And to all jugglers,
as if they were pious and beloved of the gods, he granted governments and the
greatest 10 privileges. From this time on he distressed and harassed, not one
city or country, but all the provinces under his authority, by extreme exactions
of gold and silver and goods, and most grievous prosecutions and various fines.
He took away from the wealthy the property which they had inherited from their
ancestors, and bestowed vast riches and large sums of 11 money on the flatterers
about him. And he went to such an excess of folly. and drunkenness that his
mind was deranged and crazed in his carousals; and he gave commands when intoxicated
of which he repented afterward when sober. He suffered no one to surpass him
in debauchery and profligacy, but made 'himself an instructor in wickedness
to those about him, both rulers and subjects. He urged on the army to live
wantonly in every kind of revelry and intemperance, and encouraged the governors
and generals to abuse their subjects with rapacity and covetousness, almost
as if they were rulers with him. Why need we relate the licentious, shameless
deeds of the man, or enumerate the multitude with whom he committed adultery?
For he could not pass through a city without continually corrupting women and
ravishing virgins. And in this he succeeded with all except the Christians.
For as they despised death, they cared nothing for his power. For the men endured
fire and sword and crucifixion and wild beasts and the depths of the sea, and
cutting off of limbs, anti burnings, and pricking and digging out of eyes,
and mutilations of the entire body, and besides these, hunger and mines and
bonds. In all they showed patience in behalf of religion rather than transfer
to idols the reverence due to God. And the 14 women were not less manly than
the men in behalf of the teaching of the Divine Word, as they endured conflicts
with the men, and bore away equal prizes of virtue. And when they were dragged
away for corrupt purposes, they surrendered their lives to death rather than
their bodies to impurity. (4) One only of those who were seized for 15 adulterous
purposes by the tyrant, a most distinguished and illustrious Christian woman
in Alexandria, conquered the passionate and intemperate soul of Maximinus by
most heroic firmness. Honorable on account of wealth and family and education,
she esteemed all of these inferior to chastity. He urged her many times, but
although she was ready to die, he could not put her to death, for his desire
was stronger than his anger. He therefore punished her 16 with exile, and took
away all her property. Many others, unable even to listen to the threats of
violation from the heathen rulers, endured every form of tortures, and rackings,
and deadly punishment.
These indeed should be admired. But far the most admirable was that woman
at Rome, who was truly the most noble and modest of all, whom the tyrant Maxentius,
fully resembling Maximinus in his actions, endeavored to abuse. For when she
learned that those 17 who served the tyrant in such matters were at the house
(she also was a Christian), and that her husband, although a prefect of Rome,
would suffer them to take and lead her away, having requested a little time
for adorning her body, she entered her chamber, and being alone, stabbed herself
with a sword. Dying immediately, she left her corpse to those who had come
for her. And by her deeds, more powerfully than by any words, she has shown
to all men now and hereafter that the virtue which prevails among Christians
is the only invincible and indestructible possession?
Such was the career of wickedness which 18 was carried forward at one and
the same time by the two tyrants who held the East and the West. Who is there
that would hesitate, after careful examination, to pronounce the persecution.
CHAPTER XV.
The Events which happened to the Heathen. (1)
1 DURING the entire ten years (2) of the persecution, they were constantly
plotting and warring against one another. (3) For the sea could not be navigated,
nor could men sail from any port without being exposed to all kinds of outrages;
being stretched on the rack and lacerated in their sides, that it might be
ascertained through various tortures, whether they came from the enemy; and
finally being subjected to punishment by the cross or by fire. And besides
these things shields and breastplates were preparing, and darts and spears
and other warlike accoutrements were making ready, and galleys and naval armor
were collecting in every place. And no one expected anything else than to be
attacked by enemies any day. In addition to this, famine and pestilence came
upon them, in regard to which we shall relate what is necessary in the proper
place. (4)
CHAPTER XVI.
The Change of Affirms for the Better.
1 Such
was the state of affairs during the entire persecution. But in the tenth
year, through the
grace of
God, it ceased altogether, having begun to
decrease after the eighth year. (1) For when the divine and heavenly grace
showed us favorable and propitious oversight, then truly our rulers, and the
very persons (2) by whom the war against us had been earnestly prosecuted,
most remarkably changed their minds, and issued a revocation, and quenched
the great fire of persecution which had been kindled, by merciful proclamations
and ordinances concerning us. But this was not due to any (2) human agency;
nor was it the result, as one might say, of the compassion or philanthropy
of our rulers;--far from it, for daily from the beginning until that time they
were devising more and more severe measures against us, and continually inventing
outrages by a greater variety of instruments;--but it was manifestly due to
the oversight of Divine Providence, on the one I hand becoming reconciled to
his people, and on the other, attacking him a who instigated these evils, and
showing anger toward him as the author of the cruelties of the entire persecution.
For though it was necessary that (3) these things should take place, according
to the divine judgment, yet the Word saith, "Woe to him through whom the
offense cometh." (4) Therefore punishment from God came upon him, beginning
with his flesh, and proceeding to his soul. (5) For an abscess 4 suddenly appeared
in the midst of the secret parts of his body, and from it a deeply perforated
sore, which spread irresistibly into his inmost bowels. An indescribable multitude
of worms sprang from them, and a deathly odor arose, as the entire bulk of
his body had, through his gluttony, been changed, before his sickness, into
an excessive mass of soft fat, which became putrid, and thus presented an awful
and intolerable sight to those who came near. Some of the physicians, being
wholly (5) unable to endure the exceeding offensiveness of the odor, were slain;
others, as the entire mass had swollen and passed beyond hope of restoration,
and they were unable to render any help, were put to death without mercy.
CHAPTER XVII.
The Revocation of the Rulers.
WRESTLING with so many evils, he thought of the cruelties which he had committed
against the pious. Turning, therefore, his thoughts toward himself, he first
openly confessed to the God of the universe, and then summoning his attendants,
he commanded that without delay they should stop the persecution of the Christians,
and should by law and royal decree, urge them forward to build their churches
and to perform their customary worship, offering prayers in behalf of the emperor.
Immediately the deed followed the word. The imperial decrees were published
in the cities, containing the revocation of the acts against us in the following
form:
"The
Emperor Caesar Galerius Valerius Maximinus, Invictus, Augustus, Pontifex
Maximus, conqueror
of the
Germans, conqueror of the Egyptians, conqueror
of the Thebans, five times conqueror of the Sarmatians, conqueror of the Persians,
twice conqueror of the Carpathians, six times conqueror of the Armenians, conqueror
of the Medes, conqueror of the Adiabeni, Tribune of the people the twentieth
time, Emperor the nineteenth time, Consul the eighth time, Father of his country,
Pro- 4 consul; and the Emperor Caesar Flavius Valerius Constantinus, Pins,
Felix, Invictus, Augustus, Pontifex Maximus, Tribune of the people, Emperor
the fifth time, Consul, Father of his country, Proconsul; and the Emperor Caesar
Valerius Licinius, Pins, Felix, Invictus, Augustus, Pontifex Maximus, Tribune
of the people the fourth time, Emperor the third time, Consul, Father of his
country, Proconsul; to the people of their provinces, greeting: (1)
"Among
the other things which we have ordained for the public advantage and profit,
we formerly
wished
to restore everything to conformity with the
ancient laws and public discipline (2) of the Romans, and to provide that the
Christians also, who have forsaken the religion of their ancestors, (3) should
return to a good 7 disposition. For in some way such arrogance had seized them
and such stupidity had overtaken them, that they did not follow the ancient
institutions which possibly their own ancestors had formerly established, but
made for themselves laws according to their own purpose, as each one desired,
and observed them, and thus assembled as separate congregations in various
places. When we had issued this decree that they should return to the institutions
established by the ancients, (4) a great many (5) submitted under danger, but
a great many being harassed endured all kinds of death. (6)
9 And
since many continue in the same folly, (7) and we perceive that they neither
offer to the heavenly
gods
the worship which is due, nor pay regard
to the God of the Christians, in consideration of our philanthropy and our
invariable custom, by which we are wont to extend pardon to all, we have determined
that we ought most cheerfully to extend our indulgence in this matter also;
that they may again be Christians, and may rebuild the conventicles in which
they were accustomed to assemble, (8) on condition that nothing be done by
them contrary to discipline. (9) In another letter we shall indicate to the
magistrates what they have to observe. Wherefore, on account of this indulgence
of ours, they ought to supplicate their God for our safety, and that of the
people, and their own, that the public welfare may be preserved in every place,
(10) and that they may live securely in their several homes."
Such is the tenor of this edict, translated, 11 as well as possible, from
the Roman tongue into the Greek? It is time to consider what took place after
these events. That which follows is found in Some Copies in the Eighth Book.
(1) The author of the edict very shortly after 1 this confession was released
from his pains and died. He is reported to have been the original author of
the misery of the persecution, having endeavored, long before the movement
of the other emperors, to turn from the faith the Christians in the army, and
first of all those in his own house, degrading some from the military rank,
and abusing others most shamefully, and threatening still others with death,
and finally inciting his partners in the empire to the general persecution.
It is not proper to pass over the death of these emperors in silence. As four
of them held the supreme authority, those who were advanced in age and honor,
after the persecution had continued not quite two years, abdicated the government,
as we have already stated, (2) and passed the remainder of their lives in a
common and private station. The end of their lives 3 was as follows. He who
was first in honor and age perished through a long and most grievous physical
infirmity. (3) He who held the second place ended his life by strangling, (4)
suffering thus according to a certain demoniacal prediction, on account of
his many daring crimes. 4 Of those after them, the last, (5) of whom we have
spoken as the originator of the entire persecution, suffered such things as
we have related. But he who preceded him, the most merciful and kindly emperor
Constantius, (6) passed all the time of his government in a manner worthy of
his office. (6) Moreover, he conducted himself towards all most favorably and
beneficently. He took not the smallest part in the war against us, and preserved
the pious that were under him unharmed and unabused. Neither did he throw down
the church buildings, nor devise anything else against us. The end of his life
was happy and thrice blessed. He alone at death left his empire happily and
gloriously to his own son (7) as his successor, one who was in all respects
most prudent and pious. He entered on the government at once, being proclaimed
supreme emperor and Augustus by the soldiers; and he showed himself an emulator
of his father's piety toward our doctrine. Such were the deaths of the four
of whom we have written, which took place at different times. Of these, moreover,
only the one 6 referred to a little above by us,s with those who afterward
shared in the government, finally 9 published openly to all the above-mentioned
confession, in the written edict which he issued.
MARTYRS OF PALESTINE. (1)
The Following also we found in a Certain Copy in the Eighth Book. (2)
IT was in the nineteenth year of the reign of Diocletian, in the month Xanthicus,
(3) which is called April by the Romans, about the time of the feast of our
Saviour's passion, while Flavianus (4) was governor of the province of Palestine,
that letters were published everywhere, commanding that the churches be leveled
to the ground and the Scriptures be destroyed by fire, and ordering that those
who held places of honor be degraded, and that the household servants, if they
persisted in the profession of Christianity, be deprived of freedom.
Such was the force of the first edict against us. But not long after other
letters were issued, commanding that all the bishops of the churches everywhere
be first thrown into prison, and afterward, by every artifice, be compelled
to sacrifice.
CHAPTER I.
The first of the martyrs of Palestine was 1 Procopius, (1) who, before he
had received the trial of imprisonment, immediately on his first appearance
before the governor's tribunal, having been ordered to sacrifice to the so-called
gods, declared that he knew only one to whom it was proper to sacrifice, as
he himself wills. But when he was commanded to offer libations to the four
emperors, having quoted a sentence which displeased them, he was immediately
beheaded. The quotation was from the poet:
"The rule of many is not good; let there be one ruler and one king." (2)
2. It was the seventh (3) day of the month Desius, (4) the seventh before
the ides of June, (5) as the Romans reckon, and the fourth day of the week,
when this first example was given at Caesura in Palestine.
Afterwards, (6) in the same city, many rulers of the country churches readily
endured terrible sufferings, and furnished to the beholders an example of noble
conflicts. But others, benumbed in spirit by terror, were easily weakened at
the first onset. Of the rest, each one endured different forms of torture,
as scourgings without number, and rackings, and tearings of their sides, and
insupportable fetters, by which 4 the hands of some were dislocated. Yet they
endured what came upon them, as in accordance with the inscrutable purposes
of God. For the hands of one were seized, and he was led to the altar, while
they thrust into his right hand the polluted and abominable offering, and he
was dismissed as if he had sacrificed. Another had not even touched it, yet
when others said that he had sacrificed, he went away in silence. Another,
being taken up half dead, was cast aside as if already dead, and released from
his bonds, and counted among the sacrificers. When another cried out, and testified
that he would not obey, he was struck in the mouth, and silenced by a large
band of those who were drawn up for this purpose, and driven away by force,
even though he had not sacrificed. Of such consequence did they consider it,
to seem by any means to have accomplished their purpose.
5. Therefore, of all this number, the only ones who were honored with the
crown of the holy martyrs were Alphaeus and Zacchaeus. (7) After stripes and
scrapings and severe bonds and additional tortures and various other trials,
and after having their feet stretched for a night and day over four holes in
the stocks, (8) on the seventeenth day of the month Dius, (9) -- that is, according
to the Romans, the fifteenth before the Kalends of December, -- having confessed
one only God and Christ Jesus as king, (10) as if they had uttered some blasphemy,
they were beheaded like the former martyr.
CHAPTER II.
What occurred
to Romanus on the same day (1) at Antioch, is also worthy of record. For
he was a native
of
Palestine, a deacon and exorcist in the parish
of Caesarea; and being present at the destruction of the churches, he beheld
many men, with women and children, going up in crowds to the idols and sacrificing.
(2) But, through his great zeal for religion, he could not endure the sight,
and rebuked them with a loud voice. Being arrested for his boldness, he proved
a most noble witness of the truth, if there ever was one. For when the judge
informed him that he was to die by fire, (3) he received the sentence with
cheerful countenance and most ready mind, and was led away. When he was bound
to the stake, and the wood piled up around him, as they were awaiting the arrival
of the emperor before lighting the fire, he cried, "Where is the fire
for me?" 3 Having said this, he was summoned again before the emperor,
(4) and subjected to the unusual torture of having his tongue cut out. But
he endured this with fortitude and showed to all by his deeds that the Divine
Power is present with those who endure any hardship whatever for the sake of
religion, lightening their sufferings and strengthening their zeal. When he
learned of this strange mode of punishment, the noble man was not terrified,
but put out his tongue readily, and offered it with the greatest alacrity to
those who cut it off. 4 After this punishment he was thrown into prison, and
suffered there for a very long time. At last the twentieth anniversary of the
emperor being near, (5) when, according to an established gracious custom,
liberty was proclaimed everywhere to all who were in bonds, he alone had both
his feet stretched over five holes in the stocks, (6) and while he lay there
was strangled, and was thus honored with martyrdom, 5 as he desired. Although
he was outside of his country, yet, as he was a native of Palestine, it is
proper to count him among the Palestinian martyrs. These things occurred in
this manner during the first year, when the persecution was directed only against
the rulers of the Church.
CHAPTER III.
1 In the course of the second year, the persecution against us increased greatly.
And at that time Urbanus (1) being governor of the province, imperial edicts
were first issued to him, commanding by a general decree that all the people
should sacrifice at once in the different cities, and offer libations to the
idols. (2)
In Gaza, a city of Palestine, Timotheus endured countless tortures, and afterwards
was subjected to a slow and moderate fire. Having given, by his patience in
all his sufferings, most genuine evidence of sincerest piety toward the Deity,
he bore away the crown of the victorious athletes of religion. At the same
time Agapius (3) and our contemporary, Thecla, (4) having exhibited most noble
constancy, were condemned as food for the wild beasts.
But who that beheld these things would 2 not have admired, or if they heard
of them by report, would not have been astonished? For when the heathen everywhere
were holding a festival and the customary shows, it was noised abroad that
besides the other entertainments, the public combat of those who had lately
been condemned to wild beasts would also 3 take place. As this report increased
and spread in all directions, six young men, namely, Timolaus, a native of
Pontus, Dionysius from Tripolis in Phoenicia, Romulus, a sub-deacon of the
parish of Diospolis, (5) Paesis and Alexander, both Egyptians, and another
Alexander from Gaza, having first bound their own hands, went in haste to Urbanus,
who was about to open the exhibition, evidencing great zeal for martyrdom.
They confessed that they were Christians, and by their ambition for all terrible
things, showed that those who glory in the religion of the God of the universe
do not cower before the attacks of wild beasts.
4 Immediately, after creating no ordinary astonishment in the governor and
those who were with him, they were cast into prison. After a few days two others
were added to them. One of them, named Agapius, (6) had in former confessions
endured dreadful torments of various kinds. The other, who had supplied them
with the necessaries of life, was called Dionysius. All of these eight were
beheaded on one day at Caesarea, on the twenty-fourth day of the month Dystrus,
(7) which is the ninth before the 5 Kalends of April. Meanwhile, a change in
the emperors occurred, and the first of them all in dignity, and the second
retired into private life, (8) and public affairs began to be troubled.
6 Shortly after the Roman government became divided against itself, and a
cruel war arose among them. (9) And this division, with the troubles which
grew out of it, was not settled until peace toward us had been established
throughout the entire Roman Empire. For when this peace arose for all, as the
daylight after the darkest and most gloomy night, the public affairs of the
Roman government were re-established, and became happy and peaceful, and the
ancestral good-will toward each other was revived. But we will relate these
things more fully at the proper time. Now let us return to the regular course
of events.
CHAPTER IV.
Maximinus Caesar (1) having come at that time into the government, as if to
manifest to all the evidences of his reborn enmity against God, and of his
impiety, armed himself for persecution against us more vigorously than his
predecessors. In consequence, no little 2 confusion arose among all, and they
scattered here and there, endeavoring in some way to escape the danger; and
there was great commotion everywhere. But what words would suffice for a suitable
description of the Divine love and boldness, in confessing God, of the blessed
and truly innocent lamb,- I refer to the martyr Apphianus, (2) --who presented
in the sight of all, before the gates of Caesarea, a wonderful example of piety
toward the only God? He was at 3 that time not twenty years old. He had first
spent a long time at Berytus, (3) for the sake of a secular Grecian education,
as he belonged to a very wealthy family. It is wonderful to relate how, in
such a city, he was superior to youthful passions, and clung to virtue, uncorrupted
neither by his bodily vigor nor his young companions; living discreetly, soberly
and piously, in accordance with his profession of the Christian doctrine and
the life of his teachers. If it is needful to mention his native (4) country,
and give honor to it as producing this noble athlete of piety, we will do so
with pleasure. The young man came from 5 Pagae, (4) -- if any one is acquainted
with the place, -- a city in Lycia of no mean importance. After his return
from his course of study in Berytus, though his father held the first place
in his country, he could not bear to live with him and his relatives, as it
did not please them to live according to the rules of religion. Therefore,
as if he were led by the Divine Spirit, and in accordance with a natural, or
rather an inspired and true philosophy, regarding this preferable to what is
considered the glory of life, and despising bodily comforts, he secretly left
his family. And because of his faith and hope in God, paying no attention to
his daily needs, he was led by the Divine Spirit to the city of Caesarea, where
was prepared for him the crown of martyrdom for piety. Abiding with us there,
6 and conferring with us in the Divine Scriptures diligently for a short time,
and fitting himself zealously by suitable exercises, he exhibited such an end
as would astonish any one should it be seen again. Who, that hears 7 of it,
would not justly admire his courage, boldness, constancy, and even more than
these the daring deed itself, which evidenced a zeal for religion and a spirit
truly superhuman?
8 For in the second attack upon us under Maximinus, in the third year of the
persecution, edicts of the tyrant were issued for the first time, commanding
that the rulers of the cities should diligently and speedily see to it that
all the people offered sacrifices. (5) Throughout the city of Caesarea, by
command of the governor, the heralds were summoning men, women, and children
to the temples of the idols, and besides this, the chiliarchs were calling
out each one by name from a roll, and an immense crowd of the wicked were rushing
together from all quarters. Then this youth fearlessly, while no one was aware
of his intentions, eluded both us who lived in the house with him and the whole
band of soldiers that surrounded the governor, and rushed up to Urbanus as
he was offering libations, and fearlessly seizing him by the right hand, straightway
put a stop to his sacrificing, and skillfully and persuasively, with a certain
divine inspiration, exhorted him to abandon his delusion, because it was not
well to forsake the one and only true God, and 9 sacrifice to idols and demons.
It is probable that this was done by the youth through a divine power which
led him forward, and which all but cried aloud in his act, that Christians,
who were truly such, were so far from abandoning the religion of the God of
the universe which they had once espoused, that they were not only superior
to threats and the punishments which followed, but yet bolder to speak with
noble and untrammeled tongue, and, if possible, to summon even their persecutors
to turn from their ignorance and acknowledge the only true God.
10 Thereupon, he of whom we are speaking, and that instantly, as might have
been expected after so bold a deed, was torn by the governor and those who
were with him as if by wild beasts. And having endured manfully innumerable
blows over his entire body, he 11 was straightway cast into prison. There he
was stretched by the tormentor with both his feet in the stocks for a night
and a day; and the next day he was brought before the judge. As they endeavored
to force him to surrender, he exhibited all constancy under suffering and terrible
tortures. His sides were torn, not once, or twice, but many times, to the bones
and the very bowels; and he received so many blows on his face and neck that
those who for a long time had been well acquainted with him could 12 not recognize
his swollen face. But as he would not yield under this treatment, the torturers,
as commanded, covered his feet with linen cloths soaked in oil and set them
on fire. No word can describe the agonies which the blessed one endured from
this. For the fire consumed his flesh and penetrated to his bones, so that
the humors of his body were melted and oozed out and dropped down like wax.
But as 13 he was not subdued by this, his adversaries being defeated and unable
to comprehend his superhuman constancy, cast him again into prison. A third
time he was brought before the judge; and having witnessed the same profession,
being half dead, he was finally thrown into the depths of the sea. But what
happened immediately after 14 this will scarcely be believed by those who did
not see it. Although we realize this, yet we must record the event, of which
to speak plainly, all the inhabitants of Caesarea were witnesses. For truly
there was no age but beheld this marvelous sight. For as soon as 15 they had
cast this truly sacred and thrice-blessed youth into the fathomless depths
of the sea, an uncommon commotion and disturbance agitated the sea and all
the shore about it, so that the land and the entire city were shaken by it.
And at the same time with this wonderful and sudden perturbation, the sea threw
out before the gates of the city the body of the divine martyr, as if unable
to endure it. (6)
Such was the death of the wonderful Apphianus. It occurred on the second day
of the month Xanthicus, (7) which is the fourth day before the Nones of April,
on the day of preparation (8)
CHAPTER V.
1 ABOUT the same time, in the city of Tyre, a youth named Ulpianus,(1) after
dreadful tortures and most severe scourgings, was enclosed in a raw oxhide,
with a dog and with one of those poisonous reptiles, an asp, and cast into
the sea. Wherefore I think that we may properly mention him in connection with
the martyrdom of Apphianus.
2 Shortly afterwards, AEdesius, (2) a brother of Apphianus, not only in God,
but also in the flesh, being a son of the same earthly father, endured sufferings
like his, after very many confessions and protracted tortures in bonds, and
after he had been sentenced by the governor to the mines in Palestine. He conducted
himself through them all in a truly philosophic manner; for he was more highly
educated than his brother, and had prosecuted 3 philosophic studies. Finally
in the city of Alexandria, when he beheld the judge, who was trying the Christians,
offending beyond all bounds, now insulting holy men in various ways, and again
consigning women of greatest modesty and even religious virgins to procurers
for shameful treatment, he acted like his brother. For as these things seemed
insufferable, he went forward with bold resolve, and with his words and deeds
overwhelmed the judge with shame and disgrace. After suffering in consequence
many forms of torture, he endured a death similar to his brother's, being cast
into the sea. But these things, as I have said, happened to him in this way
a little later.
CHAPTER VI.
1 IN the fourth year of the persecution against us, on the twelfth day before
the Kalends of December, which is the twentieth day of the month Dius, (1)
on the day before the Sabbath, (2) while the tyrant Maximinus was present and
giving magnificent shows in honor of his birthday, the following event, truly
worthy of record, occurred in the city of Caesarea. As it was an ancient custom
to furnish the 2 spectators more splendid shows when the emperors were present
than at other times,new and foreign spectacles taking the place of the customary
amusements, such as animals brought from India or Ethiopia or other places,
or men who could astonish the beholders with skillful bodily exercises, --
it was necessary at this time, as the emperor was giving the exhibition, to
add to the shows something more wonderful. And what should this be? A witness
of our doctrine was brought into 3 the midst and endured the contest for the
true and only religion. This was Agapius, who, as we have stated a little above,
(3) was, with Thecla, the second to be thrown to the wild beasts for food.
He had also, three times and more, marched with malefactors from the prison
to the arena; and every time, after threats from the judge, whether in compassion
or in hope that he might change his mind, had been reserved for other conflicts.
But the emperor being present, he was brought out at this time, as if he had
been appropriately reserved for this occasion, until the very word of the Saviour
should be fulfilled in him, which through divine knowledge he declared to his
disciples, that they should be brought before kings on account of their testimony
unto him. (4) He was taken 4 into the midst of the arena with a certain malefactor
who they said was charged with i the murder of his master. But this murderer
of his master, when he had been cast to the wild beasts, was deemed worthy
of compassion and humanity, almost like Barabbas in the time of our Saviour.
And the whole theater resounded with shouts and cries of approval, because
the murderer was humanely saved by the emperor, and deemed worthy of honor
and freedom. But the athlete of religion 6 was first summoned by the tyrant
and promised liberty if he would deny his profession. But he testified with
a loud voice that, not for any fault, but for the religion of the Creator of
the universe, he would readily and with pleasure endure whatever might be inflicted
upon him. Having said this, he joined the deed 7 to the word, and rushed to
meet a bear which had been let loose against him, surrendering himself most
cheerfully to be devoured by him. After this, as he still breathed, he was
cast into prison. And living yet one day, stones were bound to his feet, and
he was drowned in the depths of the sea. Such was the martyrdom of Agapius.
CHAPTER VII.
Again, in Caesarea, when the persecution had continued to the fifth year,
on the second day of the month Xanthicus, (1) which is the fourth before the
Nones of April, on the very Lord's day of our Saviour's resurrection, (2) Theodosia,
a virgin from Tyre, a faithful and sedate maiden, not yet eighteen years of
age, went up to certain prisoners who were confessing the kingdom of Christ
and sitting before the judgment seat, and saluted them, and, as is probable,
besought them to remember her when they came before the Lord. Thereupon, as
if she had committed a profane and impious act, the soldiers seized her and
led her to the governor. And he immediately, like a madman and a wild beast
in his anger, tortured her with dreadful and most terrible torments in her
sides and breasts, even to the very bones. And as she still breathed, and withal
stood with a joyful and beaming countenance, he ordered her thrown into the
waves of the sea. Then passing from her to the other confessors, he condemned
all of them to the copper mines in Phaeno in Palestine.
Afterwards on the fifth of the month Dius, (3) on the Nones of November according
to the Romans, in the same city, Silvanus 4 (who at that time was a presbyter
and confessor, but who shortly after was honored with the episcopate and died
a martyr), and those with him, men who had shown the noblest firmness in behalf
of religion, were condemned by him to labor in the same copper mines, command
being first given that their ankles be disabled with hot irons. At the same
time he 4 delivered to the flames a man who was illustrious through numerous
other confessions. This was Domninus, who was well known to all in Palestine
for his exceeding fearlessness (5) After this the same judge, who was a cruel
contriver of suffering, and an inventor of devices against the doctrine of
Christ, planned against the pious punishments that had never been heard of.
He condemned three to single pugilistic combat. He delivered to be devoured
by wild beasts Auxentius, a grave and holy old man. Others who were in mature
life he made eunuchs, and condemned them to the same mines. Yet others, after
severe tortures, he cast into prison.
Among these was my dearest friend Pamphilus, (6) who was by reason of every
virtue the most illustrious of the martyrs in our time. Urbanus first tested
him in rhetorical philosophy 5 and learning; and afterwards endeavored to compel
him to sacrifice. But as he saw that he refused and in nowise regarded his
threats, being exceedingly angry, he ordered him to be tormented with severest
tortures. And when the brutal man, after he had 6 almost satiated himself with
these tortures by continuous and prolonged scrapings in his sides, was yet
covered with shame before all, he put him also with the confessors in prison.
But what recompense for his cruelty to 7 the saints, he who thus abused the
martyrs of Christ, shall receive from the Divine judgment, may be easily determined
from the preludes to it, in which immediately, and not long after his daring
cruelties against Pamphilus, while he yet held the government, the Divine judgment
came upon him. For thus suddenly, he who but yesterday was judging on the lofty
tribunal, guarded by a band of soldiers, and ruling over the whole nation of
Palestine, the associate and dearest friend and table companion of the tyrant
himself, was stripped in one night, and overwhelmed with disgrace and shame
before those who had formerly admired him as if he were himself an emperor;
and he appeared cowardly and unmanly, uttering womanish cries and supplications
to all the people whom he had ruled. And Maximinus himself, in reliance upon
whose favor Urbanus was formerly so arrogantly insolent, as if he loved him
exceedingly for his deeds against us, was set as a harsh and most severe judge
in this same Caesarea to pronounce sentence of death against him, for the great
disgrace of the crimes of which he was convicted. Let us say this in passing.
A suit- 8 able time may come when we shall have leisure to relate the end and
the fate of those impious men who especially fought against us, (7) both of
Maximinus himself and those with him.
CHAPTER VIII.
1 UP to the sixth year the storm had been incessantly raging against us. Before
this time there had been a very large number of confessors of religion in the
so-called Porphyry quarry in Thebais, which gets its name from the stone found
there. Of these, one hundred men, lacking three, together with women and infants,
were sent to the governor of Palestine. When they confessed the God of the
universe and Christ, Firmilianus, (1) who had been sent there as governor in
the place of Urbanus, directed, in accordance with the imperial command, that
they should be maimed by burning the sinews of the ankles of their left feet,
and that their right eyes with the eyelids and pupils should first be cut out,
and then destroyed by hot irons to the very roots. And he then sent them to
the mines in the province to endure hardships with severe toil and suffering.
But it was not sufficient that these only who suffered such miseries should
be deprived of their eyes, but those natives of Palestine also, who were mentioned
just above as condemned to pugilistic combat, Since they would neither receive
food from the royal storehouse nor undergo the necessary preparatory Exercises.
Having been brought on this account not only before the overseers, but also
3 before
Maximinus himself, and having manifested the noblest persistence in confession
by the endurance
of hunger and stripes, they received like punishment
with those whom we have mentioned, and with them other confessors 4 in the
city of Caesarea. Immediately afterwards others who were gathered to hear the
Scriptures read, were seized in Gaza, and some endured the same sufferings
in the feet and eyes; but others were afflicted with yet greater torments and
with most terrible tortures in the sides. One of these, in body a woman, but
in understanding a man, would not endure the threat of fornication, and spoke
directly against the tyrant who entrusted the government to such cruel judges.
She was first scourged and then raised aloft on the stake, and her sides lacerated.
As those appointed for this purpose applied the tortures incessantly and severely
at the command of the judge, another, with mind fixed, like the former, on
virginity as her aim,-- a woman who was altogether mean in forth and contemptible
in appearance; but, on the other hand, strong in soul, and endowed with an
understanding superior to her body,--being unable to bear the merciless and
cruel and inhuman deeds, with a boldness beyond that of the combatants famed
among the Greeks, cried out to the judge from the midst of the crowd: "And
how long will you thus cruelly torture my sister?" But he was greatly
enraged, and ordered the woman to be immediately seized. Thereupon she was
brought forward and having called herself by the august name of the Saviour,
she was first urged by words to sacrifice, and as she refused she was dragged
by force to the altar. But her sister continued to maintain her former zeal,
and with intrepid and resolute foot kicked the altar, and overturned it with
the fire that was on it. There- 8 upon the judge, enraged like a wild beast,
inflicted on her such tortures in her sides as he never had on any one before,
striving almost to glut himself with her raw flesh. But when his madness was
satiated, he bound them both together, this one and her whom she called sister,
and condemned them to death by fire. It is said that the first of these was
from the country of Gaza; the other, by name Valentina, was of Caesarea, and
was well known to many.
But how can I describe as it deserves the martyrdom which followed, with which
the thrice-blessed Paul was honored. He was condemned to death at the same
time with them, under one sentence. At the time of his martyrdom, as the executioner
was about to cut off his head, he requested a brief respite. This being granted,
he first, in a clear and 10 distinct voice, supplicated God in behalf of his
fellow-Christians, (2) praying for their pardon, and that freedom might soon
be restored to them. Then he asked for the conversion of the Jews to God through
Christ; and proceeding in order he requested the same things for the Samaritans,
and besought that those Gentiles, who were in error and were ignorant of God,
might come to a knowledge of him, and adopt the true religion. Nor did he leave
neglected the mixed multitude who were standing around. After all these, oh!
great and unspeakable forbearance! he entreated the God of the universe for
the judge who had condemned him to death, and for the highest rulers, and also
for the one who was about to behead him, in his hearing and that of all present,
beseeching that their sin toward him 12 should not be reckoned against them.
Having prayed for these things with a loud voice, and having, as one who was
dying unjustly, moved almost all to compassion and tears, of his own accord
he made himself ready, and submitted his bare neck to the stroke of the sword,
and was adorned with divine martyrdom. This took place on the twenty-fifth
day of the month Panemus, (3) which is the eighth before the Kalends of August.
18 Such was the end of these persons. But not long after, one hundred and
thirty admirable athletes of the confession of Christ, from the land of Egypt,
endured, in Egypt itself, at the command of Maximinus the same afflictions
in their eyes and feet with the former persons, and were sent to the above-mentioned
mines in Palestine. But some of them were condemned to the mines in Cilicia.
CHAPTER IX.
1 After such noble acts of the distinguished martyrs of Christ, the flame
of persecution lessened, and was quenched, as it were by their sacred blood,
and relief and liberty were granted to those who, for Christ's sake, were laboring
in the mines of Thebais, and for a little time we were beginning to breath
pure air.
But by some new impulse, I know not what, he who held the power to persecute
was again aroused against the Christians. Immediately letters from Maximinus
against us were published everywhere in every province. (1) The governors and
the military prefect (2) urged by edicts and letters and public ordinances
the magistrates and generals and notaries (3) in all the cities to carry out
the imperial decree, which ordered that the altars of the idols should with
all speed be rebuilt; and that all men, women, and children, even infants at
the breast, should sacrifice and offer oblations; and that with diligence and
care they should cause them to taste of the execrable offerings; and that the
things for sale in the market should be polluted with libations from the sacrifices;
and that guards should be stationed before the baths in order to defile with
the abominable sacrifices those who went to wash in them. When these 3 orders
were being carried out, our people, as was natural, were at the beginning greatly
distressed in mind; and even the unbelieving heathen blamed the severity and
the exceeding absurdity of what was done. For these things appeared to them
extreme and burdensome.
As the heaviest storm impended over all in every quarter, the divine power
of our Saviour again infused such boldness into his athletes, (4) that without
being drawn on or dragged forward by any one, they spurned the threats. Three
of the faithful joining together, rushed 4 on the governor as he was sacrificing
to the idols, and cried out to him to cease from his delusion, there being
no other God than the Maker and Creator of the universe. When he asked who
they were, they confessed boldly that they were Christians. Thereupon Firmilianus,
5 being greatly enraged, sentenced them to capital punishment without inflicting
tortures upon them. The name of the eldest of these was Antoninus; of the next,
Zebinas, who was a native of Eleutheropolis; and of the third, Germanus. This
took place on the thirteenth of the month Dius, the Ides of November?
There was associated with them on the 6 same day Ennathas, a woman from Scythopolis,
who was adorned with the chaplet of virginity. She did not indeed do as they
had. done, but was dragged by force and brought before the judge. She endured
scourgings 7 and cruel insults, which Maxys, a tribune of a neighboring district,
without the knowledge of the superior authority, dared to inflict upon her.
He was a man worse than his name, (6) sanguinary in other respects, exceedingly
harsh, and altogether cruel, and censured by all who knew him. This man stripped
the blessed woman of all her clothing, so that she was covered only from her
loins to her feet and the rest of her body was bare. And he led her through
the entire city of Caesarea, and regarded it as a great thing to beat her with
thongs while she was dragged 8 through all the market-places. After such treatment
she manifested the noblest constancy at the judgment seat of the governor himself;
and the judge condemned her to be burned alive. He also carried his rage against
the pious to a most inhuman length and transgressed the laws of nature, not
being ashamed even to deny burial to the lifeless bodies of the sacred 9 men.
Thus he ordered the dead to be exposed in the open air as food for wild beasts
and to be watched carefully by night and day. For many days a large number
of men attended to this savage and barbarous decree. And they looked out from
their post of observation, as if it were a matter worthy of care, to see that
the dead bodies should not be stolen. And wild beasts and dogs and birds of
prey scattered the human limbs here and there, and the whole city was strewed
with the entrails and bones of 10 men, so that nothing had ever appeared more
dreadful and horrible, even to those who formerly hated us; though they bewailed
not so much the calamity of those against whom these things were done, as the
outrage against themselves and the common nature of man.
11 For there was to be seen near the gates a spectacle beyond all description
and tragic recital; for not only was human flesh devoured in one place, but
it was scattered in every place; so that some said that limbs and masses of
flesh and parts of entrails were to be seen even within the gates.
12 After these things had continued for many days, a wonderful event occurred.
The air was clear and bright and the appearance of the sky most serene. When
suddenly throughout the city from the pillars which supported the public porches
many drops fell like tears; and the market places and streets, though there
was no mist in the air, were moistened with sprinkled water, whence I know
not. Then immediately it was reported everywhere that the earth, unable to
endure the abomination of these things, had shed tears in a mysterious manner;
and that as a rebuke to the relentless and unfeeling nature of men, stones
and lifeless wood had wept for what had happened. I know well that this account
may perhaps appear idle and fabulous to those who come after us, but not to
those to whom the truth was confirmed at the time. (7)
CHAPTER X.
ON the fourteenth day of the following 1 month Appellaeus, (1) the nineteenth
before the Kalends of January, certain persons from Egypt were again seized
by those who examined people passing the gates. They had been sent to minister
to the confessors in Cilicia. They received the same sentence as those whom
they had gone to help, being mutilated in their eyes and feet. Three of them
exhibited in Ascalon, where they were imprisoned, marvelous bravery in the
endurance of various kinds of martyrdom. One of them named Ares was condemned
to the flames, and the others, called Probus (2) and Elias, were beheaded.
On the
eleventh day of the month Audynaeus, (3) which is the third before the Ides
of January, in
the same
city of Caesarea, Peter an ascetic, also called
Apselamus, (4) from the village of Anea, (5) on the borders of Eleutheropolis,
like purest gold, gave noble proof by fire of his faith in the Christ of God.
Though the judge and those around him besought him many times to have compassion
on himself, and to spare his own youth and bloom, he disregarded them, preferring
hope in the God of the universe to all things, even to life itself. A certain
Asclepius, supposed to be (6) a bishop of the sect of Marcion, possessed as
he thought with zeal for religion, but "not according to knowledge," (7)
ended his life on one and the same funeral pyre. These things took place in
this manner.
CHAPTER XI.
IT iS time to describe the great and celebrated spectacle of Pamphilus, (1)
a man thrice dear to me, and of those who finished their course with him. They
were twelve in all; being counted worthy of apostolic grace and number. Of
these the leader and the only one 2 honored with the position of presbyter
at Caesarea, was Pamphilus; a man who through his entire life was celebrated
for every virtue, for renouncing and despising the world, for sharing his possessions
with the needy, for contempt of earthly hopes, and for philosophic deportment
and exercise. He especially excelled all in our time in most sincere devotion
to the Divine Scriptures and indefatigable industry in whatever he undertook,
and in his helpfulness to his relatives and associates. In a separate treatise
on his life, (2) consisting of three books, we have already described the excellence
of his virtue. Referring to this work those who delight in such things and
desire to know them, let us now consider the martyrs in order.
4 Second after Pamphilus, Vales, who was honored for his venerable gray hair,
entered the contest. He was a deacon from AElia, (3) an old man of gravest
appearance, and versed in the Divine Scriptures, if any one ever was. He had
so laid up the memory of them in his heart that he did not need to look at
the books if he undertook tO repeat any passage of Scripture.
5 The third was Paul from the city of Jamna, (4) who was known among them
as most zealous and fervent in spirit. Previous to his martyrdom, he had endured
the conflict of confession by cauterization.
After
these persons had continued in prison for two entire years, the occasion
of their martyrdom
was a second
arrival of Egyptian brethren who suffered with
them. They had accompanied the confessors in Cilicia to the mines there and
were returning to their homes. At the entrance of the gates of Caesarea, the
guards, who were men of barbarous character, questioned them as to who they
were and whence they came. They kept back nothing of the truth, and were seized
as malefactors taken in the very act. They were five 7 in number. When brought
before the tyrant, being very bold in his presence, they were immediately thrown
into prison. On the next day, which was the nineteenth of the month Peritius,
(5) according to the Roman reckoning the fourteenth before the Kalends of March,
they were brought, according to command, before the judge, with Pamphilus and
his associates whom we have mentioned. First, by all kinds of torture, through
the invention of strange and various machines, he tested the invincible constancy
of the Egyptians. Having practised these 8 cruelties upon the leader (5a) of
all, he asked him first who he was. He heard in reply the name of some prophet
instead of his proper name. For it was their custom, in place of the names
of idols given them by their fathers, if they had such, to take other names;
so that you would hear them calling themselves Elijah or Jeremiah or Isaiah
or Samuel or Daniel, thus showing themselves inwardly true Jews, and the genuine
Israel of God, not only in deeds, but in the names which they bore. When Firmilianus
had heard some such name from the martyr, and did not understand the force
of the word, he asked next the name of his country. But 9 he gave a second
answer similar to the former, saying that Jerusalem was his country, meaning
that of which Paul says, "Jerusalem which is above is free, which is our
mother," (6) and, "Ye are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the city
of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem." (7) This was what he meant;
but 10 the judge thinking only of the earth, sought diligently to discover
what that city was, and in what part of the world it was situated. And therefore
he applied tortures that the truth might be acknowledged. But the man, with
his hands twisted behind his back, and his feet crushed by strange machines,
asserted firmly that he had spoken the truth. And being 11 questioned again
repeatedly what and where the city was of which he spoke, he said that it was
the country of the pious alone, for no others should have a place in it, and
that it lay toward the far East and the rising sun. He philosophized about
these things ac- 12 cording to his own understanding, and was in nowise turned
froth them by the tortures with which he was afflicted on every side. And as
if he were without flesh or body he seemed insensible of his sufferings. But
the judge being perplexed, was impatient, thinking that the Christians were
about to establish a city somewhere, inimical and hostile to the Romans. And
he inquired much about this, and investigated where that country toward the
East was located. But when he had for a long 13 time lacerated the young man
with scourgings, and punished him with all sorts of torments, he perceived
that his persistence in what he had said could not be changed, and passed against
him sentence of death. Such a scene was exhibited by what was done to this
man. And having inflicted similar tortures on the others, he sent them away
in the same manner.
Then being wearied and perceiving that 14 he punished the men in vain, having
satiated his desire, he proceeded against Pamphilus and his companions. And
having learned that already under former tortures they had manifested an unchangeable
zeal for the faith, he asked them if they would now obey. And receiving from
every one of them only this one answer, as their last word of confession in
martyrdom, he inflicted on them punishment similar to the others.
16 When
this had been done, a young man, one of the household servants of Pamphilus,
who had been
educated in
the noble life and instruction of such
a man, learning the sentence passed upon his mast