Martyr 6th century

400 Martyrs Slain by the Lombards in Sicily

died c. 579

Also known as Sanctulus the Presbyter · Hospicius the Hermit

A company of Christians in Sicily put to death by the Lombards for refusing to worship idols; among them the names of the presbyter Sanctulus and the hermit Hospicius are preserved.

Feast Day
March 2
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Four Hundred Holy Martyrs Slain by the Lombards in Sicily

Life

The Four Hundred Martyrs Slain by the Lombards are a company of Christians put to death during the Lombard incursions of sixth-century Italy for refusing to take part in idolatrous worship. The Orthodox synaxarion places their martyrdom in Sicily and dates it to the year 579, and commemorates them collectively on March 2. As a collective commemoration, the company is honoured as a body rather than by individual lives, though the synaxarion preserves the names of the presbyter Sanctulus and the hermit Hospicius among those who perished.

The earliest written witness to the event is St. Gregory the Dialogist (Gregory the Great, Bishop of Rome, commemorated March 12), who relates it in his Dialogues. According to that account, the Lombards held nearly four hundred captives and demanded that they reverence the head of a goat that had been offered in sacrifice to demons, carrying it about with blasphemous chants; the greater part of the captives refused to bow to the creature, and their captors, in great rage, put them to the sword. Gregory reports that the event was recounted to him by witnesses and had taken place about fifteen years before his writing.

Orthodox sources connect this commemoration with a related group of about forty husbandmen who, in the same period, were commanded to eat meat that had been sacrificed to idols and were beheaded when they refused. Both companies are remembered as having chosen death over participation in pagan rites during the disorder that accompanied the Lombard conquest of much of the Italian peninsula.

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Account and sources

The principal source for the martyrdom is the Dialogues of St. Gregory the Great, where the refusal to adore the sacrificed goat's head and the subsequent slaughter of the captives are described as a recent event reported by eyewitnesses. The synaxarion tradition received from this account both the circumstance of the killing and the year, customarily given as 579.

The number four hundred is the figure carried by the Orthodox commemoration; some Orthodox sources give the count as four hundred and forty, or describe the four hundred together with a separate band of about forty husbandmen martyred for refusing to eat food sacrificed to idols. The localization in Sicily follows the synaxarion; the underlying account in Gregory's Dialogues situates the events within Lombard-occupied Italy more broadly.

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