Martyr 4th century

Martyr Antiochus the Physician of Sebaste

Also known as Antiochus of Sebaste

A Christian physician of Sebastea, brother of the martyr Platon, who healed the sick freely and, confessing Christ, endured boiling and torture before he was beheaded; milk flowed from his wound.

Feast Day
July 16
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Antiochus the Physician of Sebaste

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Antiochus was a Christian physician of Cappadocian Sebastea (Sebaste), commemorated on July 16 and venerated as a martyr of the early Church. The synaxarion remembers him as a healer who attended to the sick both in body and in soul, and as the brother of the Martyr Platon, who is commemorated on November 18. He is numbered among the unmercenary physicians of the tradition, a doctor who treated the afflicted while openly professing the Christian faith.

According to the accounts, Antiochus was discovered to be a Christian while caring for the sick, and was brought to trial and subjected to fierce tortures. The Greek tradition recorded by Sanidopoulos places his interrogation in Galatia before a governor named Adrian, and describes his being suspended on wood with his sides torn and burned, his imprisonment, and his being cast into a cauldron of boiling oil; the OCA account summarizes these ordeals as his being thrown into boiling water. Through all of these he was preserved unharmed.

When he was given over to wild beasts to be devoured, the animals would not harm him but, by tradition, lay peacefully at his feet, and the tradition relates that many miracles were worked through his prayers and the idols crumbled to dust. He was finally put to death by beheading. The tradition relates that as he was beheaded, blood mixed with milk flowed from his wound — a sign that moved one of the executioners, named Cyriacus (Kyriakos), to confess Christ before all. Cyriacus was beheaded as well, and the two were buried side by side.

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The Physician

Antiochus is remembered specifically as a physician who healed the sick freely. The Mystagogy account describes him as one who treated and healed the sick both physically and spiritually, and his veneration places him within the wider Orthodox tradition of holy physicians who exercised their craft as an expression of Christian charity rather than for gain. His anchor commemoration retains this dual character: a medical practitioner whose care for the body accompanied the confession of Christ.

Martyrdom and the Conversion of the Executioner

The narrative of Antiochus's passion turns on a chain of survived tortures — boiling water or oil, fire, and exposure to wild beasts — that culminated in beheading. The tradition's distinctive detail is the milk that flowed with his blood at his death, a wonder that the accounts present as the cause of a further conversion: Cyriacus, a participant in the execution, was so moved by the sight that he openly professed faith in Christ and was himself beheaded. The two martyrs were buried together, and Cyriacus is remembered alongside Antiochus on the same day.

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