Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Peter Patriarch of Alexandria

3rd century – 311

Also known as Peter the Martyr · Peter I of Alexandria

Patriarch of Alexandria during the Diocletian persecution who was executed in 311, having opposed Arius before the Nicene controversy fully developed.

Feast Day
November 25
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Peter, Archbishop of Alexandria, the Seal of the Martyrs

Life

Peter of Alexandria was the head of the Egyptian Church during the height of the Diocletianic persecution, serving as Archbishop (Patriarch) of Alexandria from about 300 until his execution in 311. He was beheaded under the emperor Maximian and is remembered as a hieromartyr, the last of the Alexandrian martyrs to suffer in that persecution, for which the Greek tradition styles him 'the Seal of the Martyrs.' He is commemorated by the Orthodox Church on November 25.

Born in Alexandria in the third century, Peter was highly educated and rose through the ranks of the Church as reader, deacon, and priest. He became head of the famous Catechetical School of Alexandria before being chosen to succeed his teacher, Bishop Theonas, on the episcopal throne. His episcopate fell within the most violent phase of Roman persecution of Christians, and much of his ministry was carried out from hiding and exile.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 300 Becomes Archbishop of Alexandria Succeeds his teacher Theonas as Archbishop of Alexandria, having earlier led the Catechetical School of the city.
  2. 303 Diocletianic persecution begins The persecution under Diocletian breaks out; Peter is forced into exile and governs his flock from hiding.
  3. 311 Martyrdom Arrested on the orders of the emperor Maximian and beheaded beyond the city walls, at the spot where Saint Mark was said to have been martyred.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Episcopate during the Persecution

Peter became Archbishop of Alexandria around the year 300, succeeding Theonas. When the Diocletianic persecution began in 303 and intensified in the years that followed, he was forced into exile from the city. Rather than abandon his flock, he governed it at a distance: he maintained contact through letters, secretly visited Christians who had been imprisoned, conducted clandestine worship, and saw to the care of widows and orphans.

A pastoral controversy arose over how to treat the 'lapsed' — Christians who had compromised under torture by offering pagan sacrifice or surrendering the Scriptures. Peter favored a measured leniency that allowed for the lapsed to be restored through penance, and he came into conflict on this point with Meletius of Lycopolis, who demanded far stricter terms. Their disagreement, said to have begun while both were imprisoned, hardened into the Meletian schism. Peter's own teaching on the discipline of repentance was preserved in his 'Penitential Canons,' which the later Church held in high regard.

Conflict with Arius

Among the figures connected to the Meletian faction was the priest Arius, who denied the full divinity of Christ. Peter confronted him and, when Arius refused to correct his position, anathematized and excommunicated him from the Church. According to the tradition, Arius later sought reconciliation through intermediaries, but Peter rejected these appeals and would not absolve him. Peter thus opposed Arius before the controversy that would dominate the Council of Nicaea had fully unfolded.

Martyrdom

On the orders of the emperor Maximian, Peter was arrested in 311 and sentenced to death. By the traditional account, Christian crowds gathered at the prison in his defense, and Peter, seeking to spare his people from bloodshed, arranged for the soldiers to take him quietly. He was led beyond the city walls and beheaded at the very spot where, by tradition, the Evangelist Mark had earlier been martyred.

Because he was the last of the Alexandrian martyrs to die in the Diocletianic persecution, the Greek tradition gave him the title 'the seal and limit of the persecution,' commonly rendered 'the Seal of the Martyrs.' A tradition records the saying that as the Apostle Peter was first among the Apostles, so Peter of Alexandria was the last of the Alexandrian martyrs.

Veneration and Legacy

Peter is venerated as a hieromartyr by the Eastern Orthodox Church, and — as a saint of the undivided pre-Nicene Church — also by the Coptic Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches. He is commemorated on November 25 in the Slavic tradition, with the Greek tradition observing him on November 24.

Beyond the 'Penitential Canons,' Peter was remembered as a theological authority: passages from his treatise 'On the Divinity (of Jesus Christ)' were cited at the later Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon, a measure of the weight his orthodoxy carried in the Christological controversies that followed his death.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • Penitential Canons — His canons on the discipline of repentance for the lapsed, held in high regard by the later Church.
  • On the Divinity (of Jesus Christ) — A treatise on the divinity of Christ; passages from it were consulted at the Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon.
Notes

Reposed 311, Alexandria.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org); OrthodoxWiki