Life and Martyrdom
The OCA Synaxarion records that Florentius was a native of Thessalonica who was zealous for the glory of God. He actively opposed pagan practices, exposing idolatry and working to turn his fellow citizens toward Christianity. His teaching is said to have led many to the knowledge of the true God.
Because of this activity, the pagans subjected him to severe torments. The Roman Martyrology describes him as being hung on a torture device and his sides torn with iron rakes; left more dead than alive, he was then cast into a burning pile of wood. An alternative liturgical description states simply that, after enduring various torments, he was burned alive.
Commemoration and Veneration
Florentius is commemorated on October 13 in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar, with a cross-referenced commemoration on March 14 (March 27 on the Old Calendar), where the calendar notes: 'Martyr Florentius, in Thessaloniki, by fire.'
A historical image of Florentius of Thessalonica appears in the Menologion of Basil II, a Byzantine illuminated manuscript of around the year 1000, which depicts saints alongside their days of commemoration — evidence of his veneration within the Eastern Orthodox tradition.
Sources and Uncertainty
The surviving hagiographic record for Florentius is thin. No dedicated Wikipedia or OrthodoxWiki article exists for him, and the available account is limited to the OCA Synaxarion entry, the liturgical calendar notes, and the brief description in the Roman Martyrology. His dating to the 1st–2nd centuries is traditional rather than firmly documented.