Historical Context
The commemoration is set in the persecution of the emperor Decius (reigned 249-251), under whom an empire-wide demand to sacrifice to the gods fell heavily on Christians. The events are placed in Bithynia, a region of Asia Minor, in the year 250.
The governor responsible is named in the sources, though the spelling varies between recensions: the OCA and Romanian Patriarchate calendars give Aquianus, while the Prologue of Ohrid gives Aquilinus. He is described as governor of the Eastern regions.
Account of the Martyrdom
The governor had imprisoned 370 Christians and tried, by beatings and the threat of death, to make them renounce Christ and sacrifice to idols, but not one of them submitted. The Prologue of Ohrid relates that they were bound at a place where there stood an idolatrous temple of the god Poseidon.
Paramon, described as a respected local man, passed by, learned what was happening, and cried out against the governor for desiring to slaughter the innocent because they would not worship dead and mute idols. The governor sent servants who, by the Prologue's account, pierced his tongue with a thorn, stripped him, and stabbed his whole body; the OCA records that he was beheaded after fierce tortures. The 370 were then beheaded.