New Martyr 19th century

New Martyr Raiko of Bulgaria

1784–1802

Also known as Raiko-John · John of Bulgaria

A Bulgarian new martyr who suffered under Ottoman rule; few details of his life are preserved.

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

The Holy New Martyr Raiko of Shumen

Life

Raiko of Bulgaria, also called John, was a young goldsmith of Shumen (Shumla) in northeastern Bulgaria who was put to death in 1802 during the Ottoman period and is venerated as a New Martyr. He is commemorated on May 14, the day of his execution. The Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion preserves his name, his alternate name John, and his feast day but carries no detailed narrative; the surviving account of his sufferings derives from the wider hagiographic tradition of the New Martyrs of the Ottoman Balkans.

By tradition he was eighteen years old at his death, having been born about 1784. His martyrdom is associated with the record-keeping of Saint Nikephoros of Chios, who chronicled many of the New Martyrs of his era, and his memory was kept locally in Shumen long before any formal act of glorification.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1784 Birth in Shumen Raiko is born in Shumen (Shumla), a town in northeastern Bulgaria then under Ottoman rule. He takes up the trade of goldsmith.
  2. 1802 Accusation and trial By tradition, at about eighteen years of age, Raiko is brought before the local Islamic judge after a false accusation arising from a household to which he was contracted for work. Offered conversion to Islam in exchange for his life, he refuses to renounce Christ.
  3. May 14, 1802 Martyrdom After enduring prolonged torture, Raiko is beheaded. He is venerated thereafter as a New Martyr, his feast kept on the day of his death.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Martyrdom

According to the tradition recorded of him, Raiko was contracted for work by a wealthy Muslim household across from his shop, and a false accusation brought him before the local Islamic judge. He was offered the choice of converting to Islam, which would have spared his life, or facing punishment, and he refused to abandon his Christian faith.

The accounts describe severe and repeated torture before his death, said to include beating, the driving of spikes beneath his nails, hanging, being broken on a wheel, and burning with torches, all of which he is said to have endured without renouncing Christ. He was beheaded on May 14, 1802, the date on which he is commemorated.

Veneration and Legacy

Raiko's martyrdom belongs to the body of New Martyr accounts gathered in the Ottoman period and is associated with the hagiographic work of Saint Nikephoros of Chios. An icon of the saint was placed in the Church of the Ascension in Shumen, and his memory was preserved locally over the generations.

By tradition his veneration was given formal recognition by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church in 2017, though the detailed source material for his life remains limited, and major synaxaria such as that of the Orthodox Church in America record little beyond his name and feast.

Notes

Honest stub; OCA gives no detail. Flagged for review.

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