Historical Context
Alexander I led the Roman Church in the early second century, an era for which biographical records are sparse and largely reconstructed from later sources. St. Irenaeus' enumeration of the Roman succession places him fifth from the Apostles, and he is consistently named between Evaristus and Sixtus I.
Modern scholars treat the dating of his pontificate as approximate, offering ranges such as 106–115 (Duchesne) and 109–116 (Lightfoot). His identification as bishop of Rome rests on documents of questionable accuracy composed in the centuries after his repose, so most concrete details of his life are held with caution.
Attributed Contributions
The Liber Pontificalis credits Alexander with inserting the narrative of the Last Supper (the Qui Pridie) into the Eucharistic canon. Scholars regard this attribution as historically inaccurate — a product of the fifth-century text's own agenda rather than a reliable record of second-century practice.
He is also traditionally credited with introducing the blessing of water mixed with salt for the purification of Christian homes. As with the liturgical attribution, this tradition is later and cannot be securely traced to Alexander himself.
Martyrdom
Alexander is venerated as a hieromartyr, but the circumstances of his death are not firmly established. Sources variously place his martyrdom under the emperor Trajan or Hadrian.
The OCA Synaxarion records that he was burned alive on May 3, 119 by order of Hadrian. The fifth-century Roman tradition preserved in the Liber Pontificalis instead reports that he suffered death by decapitation on the Via Nomentana on May 3. The Acts attributed to him — which recount legends such as the conversion of the Roman governor Hermes and his household of 1,500, and associations with Quirinus of Neuss and his daughter Balbina — are not genuine and were compiled at a much later date.
Relics & Shrines
An eighth-century fresco of Saint Pope Alexander I survives in the Church of Santa Maria Antiqua in the Roman Forum, documenting his veneration in that period.
In 1855 a cemetery was discovered near the Via Nomentana containing remains identified as three holy martyrs — Alexander, Eventulus (Eventius), and Theodulus. Some archaeologists identified this Alexander with the pope, though Duchesne disputed the identification while granting that the confusion of the two figures is of ancient date. Relics associated with Alexander were reportedly transferred to Freising, Bavaria, in 834.
Veneration
Alexander I is honored as a saint in both the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches. In the Greek and Eastern Christian tradition his feast is kept on March 16; in the older Western (Tridentine) calendar it falls on May 3.
An eighth-century fresco in Santa Maria Antiqua attests to his cult in Rome, and his commemoration has continued in the synaxaria of the Church under the title of hieromartyr.