Life and Martyrdom
The brief life recorded for Eulogius identifies him as a native of Palestine born to pagan parents. When his parents died, he distributed his entire inheritance among the poor rather than retaining it, and adopted a homeless, itinerant manner of life.
As a wanderer he moved through Palestine preaching Christ and, by the synaxarion's account, bringing pagans to the Christian faith. His missionary work eventually brought him into conflict with the authorities during a persecution, when he was seized, tortured, and beheaded for his confession of Christ.
The sources transmit no precise chronology, place of death, or details of relics; the tradition remembers him chiefly for his renunciation of wealth and his preaching, and commemorates him as a martyr on March 5.