The Holy Martyrs Christopher, Theonas, and Anthony at Rome
Life
Christopher, Theonas, and Anthony are commemorated together as martyrs who suffered during the persecution of the emperor Diocletian (reigned 284-305). According to the synaxarion, they were soldiers in the imperial service who were present at the trial and torments of the Great Martyr George. Moved by what they witnessed of George's steadfastness and the signs attending him, they renounced their rank and openly confessed Christ before the emperor, and were put to death for that confession.
Their three names are preserved as a single commemoration in the Orthodox calendar, observed on April 19. The account places their martyrdom in the same setting as George's own suffering, traditionally dated to around the year 303.
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Reign of Diocletian (284-305)Soldiers in the imperial serviceChristopher, Theonas, and Anthony held military office under Diocletian. The tradition that names them bodyguards or officers places them close to the emperor's court during the persecution of Christians.
c. 303Conversion at the trial of GeorgePresent while the Great Martyr George was being punished, the three were moved by his witness and by the miraculous signs reported in the account. They cast off the belts marking their rank and confessed Christ as true God in the emperor's presence.
c. 303Imprisonment and interrogationThey were arrested and imprisoned at once. Brought again before Diocletian and urged to renounce Christ, they refused and held firm in their confession.
c. 303Torture and martyrdomBy the synaxarion they were beaten with iron rods and their bodies raked with hooks; one account adds that they were suspended, lacerated, and burned with torches. They endured the torments unyielding, and were finally put to death by fire.
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Connection to the Great Martyr George
The defining feature of this commemoration is its link to Saint George the Great Martyr, whose own feast falls on April 23. The synaxarion presents Christopher, Theonas, and Anthony as soldiers who stood near George during his sufferings and were converted by what they saw and heard. One Greek source specifies that their conversion followed George's raising of a dead man through prayer, after which they immediately discarded the insignia of their military rank.
Because the sources treat the three together and offer little biographical detail apart from this shared episode, the Orthodox calendar keeps them as a single joint commemoration rather than three separate lives. A Greek synaxarial source records their feast on April 20, while the Orthodox Church in America commemorates them on April 19.