Martyr 4th century

Martyr Sebastian at Rome and his companions

died c. 286–288

Also known as Sebastian · Zoe · Tranquillinus · Nicostratus · Castorius · Claudius · Tiburtius · Castulus

Sebastian was an imperial officer who secretly strengthened imprisoned Christians, and with many companions suffered martyrdom under Diocletian and Maximian.

Feast Day
December 18
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Commemorated as

The Holy, Glorious Martyr Sebastian at Rome and His Companions

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Military Service

Life

Sebastian was a Roman martyr who died during the Diocletianic persecution, commemorated in the Orthodox Church on December 18. He is also venerated in the Western Church on January 20, making him one of the pre-schism saints of the undivided Church whose memory is shared across traditions. His relics were buried on the Via Appia in Rome, and a basilica bearing his name has marked the site since the fourth century, attesting to an early and continuous cult. The historical details of his life rest on a hagiographic Acts compiled no earlier than the early fifth century; the Catholic Encyclopedia notes that beyond the fact of his martyrdom, very little can be confirmed from contemporary historical evidence.

According to the traditional Acts, Sebastian was born in Narbo Martius (modern Narbonne in southern France) and educated in Mediolanum (Milan). He entered the Roman army and became an officer in the imperial Praetorian Guard under Emperors Diocletian and Maximian, who did not know him to be a Christian. The Acts describe him as using his position to encourage and strengthen imprisoned Christians awaiting execution. Among those he is said to have supported were the deacons Marcellinus and Mark and their father Tranquillinus, and Tiburtius the son of the prefect Chromatius. When his Christian identity was discovered, Diocletian ordered Mauretanian archers to execute him; Sebastian was shot with arrows and left for dead, but was found alive by a woman named Irene of Rome, who nursed him back to health. He then reportedly presented himself before Diocletian to rebuke the persecution, after which he was beaten to death with clubs and his body thrown into a sewer. A Christian woman named Lucina recovered the body and buried it near the catacombs on the Via Appia, at the site where a basilica was later built.

Contributions & Legacy

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Companions

The traditional Acts present a large group of companions martyred alongside or through Sebastian's intercession. The deacon brothers Marcellinus and Mark were stabbed with spears after standing in prayer all night with their feet nailed to a tree stump. Tiburtius, son of Prefect Chromatius, was beheaded after reportedly walking across hot coals. Zoe, the wife of a jailer, was tortured and drowned in the Tiber. Tranquillinus, ordained as a presbyter, was stoned to death at the tomb of the Apostle Peter. Nicostratus, Castorius, Claudius, Victorinus, and Symphorian were drowned with stones around their necks. Castulus, who had sheltered Christians, was buried alive. Because the Acts are a fifth-century hagiographic composition, the individual details of these companions' deaths are treated as pious tradition rather than documented history.

Veneration

Sebastian's grave on the Via Appia is one of the earliest documented Christian burial sites in Rome, attested in a martyrology dated 354. A basilica was erected there by 367 and bears his name to this day. He has been invoked as a protector against plague in Western Europe, with documented communal acts of petition in Rome (680), Milan (1575), and Lisbon (1599). In the Orthodox Church, he is commemorated on December 18, two days after his Western feast of January 20 (the calendar discrepancy reflecting the Julian-Gregorian difference). He is included in the Orthodox calendar as one of the pre-schism saints of the Western Church whose martyrdom predates the Great Schism.

Notes

Named group kept as one row; pre-schism Western saints.

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