Martyr 4th century

Trophimus and Eucarpus of Nicomedia

Early 4th century (martyred during the persecution of Diocletian, 284-305)

Also known as Trophimus · Eucarpus

Soldiers at Nicomedia under the persecution of Diocletian who were charged with hunting down Christians, but who were converted through a vision and themselves embraced martyrdom for Christ.

Feast Day
March 18
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Trophimus and Eucarpus of Nicomedia

Life

Trophimus and Eucarpus were soldiers stationed at Nicomedia during the persecution of Christians under the emperor Diocletian (284-305). According to the synaxarion they were first numbered among the persecutors, carrying out the imperial decrees against believers with notable severity, before a vision turned them to the faith they had been hunting.

The account relates that while pursuing Christians the two soldiers were confronted by a fiery cloud descending from the sky, out of which a voice rebuked their zeal against the servants of God. Converted by this sign, they freed the Christians held in prison and in turn confessed Christ themselves, dying by fire at Nicomedia. They are commemorated together as martyrs on March 18.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 284-305 Soldiers under Diocletian Trophimus and Eucarpus served as soldiers at Nicomedia during the persecution decreed by the emperor Diocletian, and the synaxarion relates that they distinguished themselves by their zeal in carrying out the emperor's measures against Christians.
  2. 284-305 The vision and conversion While pursuing Christians the two soldiers saw a fiery cloud descend from the sky, from which a voice challenged their persecution of God's servants; the tradition adds that the cloud disclosed the image of a radiant man surrounded by a great multitude. Recognizing the divine presence, they repented and resolved to serve Christ.
  3. 284-305 Martyrdom After their conversion the soldiers released the imprisoned Christians. For this they were arrested, suspended and torn with iron hooks, and finally gave up their souls in the fire at Nicomedia.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Martyrdom

Nicomedia, the eastern imperial capital under Diocletian, was a principal center of the persecution that began in 303, and the synaxarion sets the story of Trophimus and Eucarpus against this background. The two are remembered first as soldiers charged with enforcing the decrees against Christians, a duty the sources say they performed with marked ferocity.

The turning point, as the tradition relates it, came while they were hunting down believers. A great fiery cloud came down from the sky, and from it a voice asked why they were so zealous in threatening the servants of God, telling them that no human strength could suppress those who believe and that it was better to join them. The accounts add that the image of a radiant man appeared amid a great multitude. Overcome with fear, the soldiers fell to the ground and were converted.

Spiritually reborn, they opened the prisons and set free the Christians who had been confined there. This act brought their own arrest. The synaxarion describes their suspension and the tearing of their bodies with iron hooks, after which they went willingly into the fire and there surrendered their souls to God.

Veneration

The Orthodox Church commemorates Trophimus and Eucarpus together on March 18 as a named pair of martyrs. Some accounts give the year of their death as around 300, within the reign of Diocletian to which the synaxarion assigns them.

Notes

Named pair commemorated together; one row.

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