Hieromartyr 4th century

Martyrs Urban Theodore, Medimnus & 77 Companions

died 370

Also known as the clergy martyred under Valens

Seventy-seven priests and deacons of Nicomedia put on a ship and burned at sea by command of the Arian emperor Valens (370)

Feast Day
September 5
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Urban, Theodore, Medimnus and Seventy-Seven Companions of Nicomedia

Life

The Martyrs Urban, Theodore, Medimnus and their seventy-seven companions were a body of Orthodox clergy who suffered during the reign of the Arian emperor Valens (364–378). According to the synaxarion, they belonged to the Christian community of the region of Nicomedia and Constantinople, and they died together when the ship carrying them was set afire on the open sea. They are commemorated together on September 5.

By tradition, the Orthodox Christians of the area who refused to accept the Arian heresy were imprisoned and subjected to mistreatment. Driven to despair by the persecution, they resolved to appeal directly to the emperor for protection, and chose a delegation of clergymen to carry their petition. Urban, Theodore and Medimnus are named as the leaders of this delegation, which the sources number at seventy-seven, with some accounts giving eighty in all.

Rather than receiving the petitioners, the emperor ordered the eparch Modestus to put them to death. The synaxarion relates that Modestus, concealing his intent, placed the delegates aboard a ship under the pretext that they were being taken to prison, while privately instructing the ship's officers to set the vessel ablaze once it reached the open water. The ship was burned at sea, and the martyrs perished together; their commemoration preserves the memory of clergy who died for the Orthodox confession during the Arian troubles of the fourth century.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

The Arian Persecution under Valens

The episode is set within the wider conflict between Nicene Orthodoxy and Arianism that marked the fourth century. The emperor Valens, who reigned in the East from 364, favored the Arian party and acted against bishops and clergy who held to the Nicene faith. The sources associate the martyrs' delegation with grievances arising from this persecution, including the banishment of the Orthodox bishop Evagrius from Constantinople.

The synaxarion presents the delegation as an attempt to obtain relief through lawful appeal to the emperor, which was answered instead with a covert sentence of death. The account names the eparch Modestus as the official who carried out the emperor's order by deception.

Martyrdom at Sea

The distinctive feature of this commemoration is the manner of the martyrs' death: they were burned not on land but aboard a ship at sea. According to tradition the vessel, once set afire, drifted upon the water for a time before being wholly consumed at a place named Dakizis, where all aboard perished. Because the company comprised priests and deacons, those of clerical rank among them are honored as hieromartyrs.

Sources: Synaxarion