Martyr 4th century

Martyr Varus and Seven Monastic Martyrs

early 4th century

Also known as Ouaros

A secret Christian soldier who strengthened imprisoned monks and joined them in martyrdom, suffering with seven monastic martyrs during persecution.

Feast Day
October 19
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Varus and the Seven Monastic Martyrs with Him

Come to them for
Military Service

Life

Varus was a Roman soldier stationed in Egypt who secretly practised Christianity during the period of persecution under Emperor Licinius (r. 308–324). He regularly visited imprisoned Christians and ministered to their needs. Seven monks had been arrested and were being held awaiting trial; weakened by their ordeal, they were dying one by one in their cell. Moved by their example and faith, Varus crept into the prison by night to strengthen and care for them.

When one of the seven monks died and only six remained alive to be brought before the governor, Varus presented himself and declared that he would take the place of the deceased, completing the number of seven confessors. He was subjected to severe torture—stripped and beaten with dry rods, then tied to a tree and cut piece by piece—before being executed. His relics were secretly gathered by a devout Christian widow named Cleopatra, who concealed them in her house and later, emigrating to Palestine, carried them with her. At her new home she built a church and enshrined the relics of Varus there; her son John, who had sought a military career, died shortly after the church's consecration and was himself later commemorated together with his mother.

Contributions & Legacy

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Cleopatra and the Translation of Relics

The story of the translation of Varus's relics is closely linked to the widow Cleopatra, who venerated him and bore his remains from Egypt to Palestine at considerable personal risk. The account presents her as a figure of faithful piety; her son John died young, and she is said to have appealed to Varus in prayer for comfort. Both Cleopatra and her son John are commemorated in the Orthodox calendar on October 19.

Varus holds a distinctive place in Russian Orthodox devotional practice as an intercessor for those who died outside the Orthodox faith—unbaptized individuals or those who died without the sacraments—reflecting a pastoral reading of his willingness to join and die alongside believers even before his own formal identification with martyrdom.

Veneration

The feast of Holy Martyr Varus and his companions is observed on October 19. He is venerated especially in Russian Orthodox tradition as a patron for the departed who died outside the faith, and chapels dedicated to him have been established in several Russian churches. A chapel in the Archangel Cathedral in Moscow was restored to his dedication in the early twenty-first century.

Notes

Named group kept as one row.

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