Episcopate at Le Mans
Victorius is identified by later record-keepers as the first bishop of Le Mans whose episcopate can be dated with certainty. The earlier bishops listed in the local Actus Pontificum, the deeds of the bishops of the see, are entangled with chronological inconsistencies that make their dating unreliable; Victorius, by contrast, can be securely placed because his name appears in the acts of regional councils.
He assisted at the synod of Angers in 453 and the synod of Tours in 461, collaborating with his fellow bishops of Gaul in matters of church discipline. His tenure is generally dated to roughly 449 to 490. He was succeeded in the see by Turibius, who held the episcopal office from about 490 to 496, which places the end of Victorius's own episcopate around the year 490.
Relationship with Saint Martin of Tours
Victorius is remembered in tradition as a disciple of Saint Martin of Tours, and a hagiographic text known as the Acts of Victor and Victorius (Acta Victori et Victorii) sought to bind the bishops of Le Mans to the celebrated bishop of Tours. According to that account, set at the death of an earlier bishop named Liborius, Martin came to Le Mans to oversee the burial and the election of a successor, and it was revealed to him that a subdeacon laboring among the vines would be the next bishop. Martin sought a blessing from this man, named Victor, who protested that he was married and had a son; his wife Maura was then summoned and pledged to live as the bishop's sister rather than his wife.
Historians regard the depiction of Victorius as the foster son or personal disciple of Saint Martin as legendary, since Martin of Tours died in 397, long before Victorius's attested activity in the latter half of the fifth century. The Acts thus express a devotional link between the two sees rather than a documented personal discipleship; the received memory of Victorius as a disciple of Martin reflects this tradition of spiritual lineage.
Miracles & Traditions
Historically Documented: Gregory of Tours, writing not long after Victorius's repose, referred to him as a venerable confessor. Gregory recorded that the saint miraculously preserved Le Mans from destruction by fire, and he attributed to Victorius's holiness cures that took place at his tomb.
Traditional Accounts: The Acts of Victor and Victorius preserve the tradition of his designation as bishop through a revelation granted to Saint Martin, together with the episode of his wife Maura's vow of continence — narrative elements that belong to the hagiographic tradition rather than to the securely attested historical record.
Relics & Shrines
From the seventh century onward Saint Victorius was venerated at a basilica dedicated to him in Le Mans, where his tomb was associated with the cures recorded by Gregory of Tours.