Martyr 3rd century

Martyrs Thyrsos Leukios, and Kallinikos

Also known as Thyrsus · Leucius · Callinicus

Christian martyrs who suffered under Decius at Caesarea in Bithynia after resisting pagan persecution.

Feast Day
December 14
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Thyrsos, Leukios, and Kallinikos

Life

Thyrsos, Leukios, and Kallinikos were three martyrs who, by tradition, suffered for Christ at Caesarea in Bithynia, a province of Asia Minor, during the persecution under the Emperor Decius (249-251). The synaxarion presents them as figures drawn together in a single commemoration on December 14, though they came to martyrdom by different paths: Thyrsos and Leukios were eminent citizens of the city, while Kallinikos was a pagan priest who was converted in the course of their trial.

According to the tradition, the persecution at Caesarea was directed by an official named Cumbricius. Leukios openly reproached him for the unjust persecution of Christians; he was tortured and then put to death. Thyrsos, who had not yet been baptized and was still a catechumen, nonetheless sought martyrdom and refused to offer sacrifice to the idols. The synaxarion relates that he was subjected to severe torments and that, by his prayer, a statue of Apollo was overthrown. Seeing this, the pagan priest Kallinikos professed faith in Christ and was condemned to death together with Thyrsos.

The three are commemorated together as martyrs of the pre-Nicene Church. The accounts preserved in the various synaxaria differ in several particulars, and they are reported here as the tradition relates them rather than as established biography.

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The Accounts of Their Martyrdom

The surviving accounts agree on the broad outline but diverge in detail. In the version followed by the Orthodox Church in America, Thyrsos is the catechumen and Leukios the baptized Christian; some Greek synaxaria reverse this, naming Thyrsos as already baptized and Leukios as the catechumen. Both traditions describe Leukios confronting the persecuting official and being executed after torture.

The tradition assigns to Thyrsos the most elaborate sufferings: he is said to have endured the dislocation of his limbs, the loss of his eyes, and the breaking of his teeth, yet to have remained steadfast. A recurring motif is that his death was repeatedly prevented by divine intervention. One account relates that, when he was placed in a wooden coffin to be sawn asunder, the saw could not penetrate the wood, after which he prayed and died peacefully. Kallinikos, by contrast, is uniformly said to have been beheaded with the sword.

Relics and Later Veneration

The tradition records that, near the end of the fourth century, the Emperor Flavian built a church dedicated to Saint Thyrsos in the vicinity of Constantinople and enshrined his relics there. By some accounts the relics were later carried westward to Spain, and Thyrsos came to be honored in the Mozarabic rite, where he was given a full liturgical office. His veneration thus extended well beyond Bithynia into the wider Christian world.

Notes

Named group kept as one row.

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