Venerable-Martyr 3rd century

Venerable-Martyr Nikon of Sicily

3rd century

Also known as Nikon of Sicily · Nikon and his 199 disciples · Nicon

A soldier born near Naples of a pagan father and Christian mother, Nikon was baptized and became a monastic leader in Sicily. He and his 199 disciples were arrested and put to death for confessing Christ.

Feast Day
March 23
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Commemorated as

The Holy Venerable-Martyr Nikon and the Hundred and Ninety-Nine Disciples with Him in Sicily

Come to them for
Military Service

Life

Nikon of Sicily was a third-century soldier turned monastic leader who, with a community of disciples, was put to death for confessing Christ. He is commemorated together with the one hundred and ninety-nine disciples who shared his martyrdom.

Born at Neapolis (Naples) to a pagan father and a Christian mother, Nikon was raised quietly in the Christian faith but remained unbaptized into adulthood. According to his life, a deliverance in battle led him to vow baptism, after which he sought out the faith in earnest, received baptism and the monastic tonsure, and eventually led a body of monks to Sicily, where governor and community alike met death in a persecution of Christians.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 3rd century Birth at Naples Nikon was born at Neapolis (Naples) of a pagan father and a Christian mother, who secretly instructed him in the principles of the Christian faith though he was not baptized as a child.
  2. early adulthood Soldier and battlefield vow Serving as a soldier and noted for unusual courage and strength, Nikon was, by his life, surrounded by enemies in one engagement; he signed himself with the Cross and called on Christ, vowing baptism if delivered, and prevailed.
  3. after his conversion Baptism and monastic tonsure Seeking baptism, Nikon came to Mount Ganos, where Theodosius, Bishop of Cyzicus, administered both his baptism and the monastic schema. He is said to have lived in a cave church for three years before being advanced to the priesthood and then the episcopate.
  4. later Flight to Sicily After the death of Theodosius, Nikon led the monastic community by sea toward Sicily. His life records that ten former soldier companions were converted and joined him, bringing the brotherhood to one hundred and ninety-nine disciples.
  5. during a persecution of Christians Martyrdom Quintilian, the governor of Sicily, learned that Nikon was living nearby with his many monks. All one hundred and ninety-nine disciples were seized and beheaded; Nikon himself was subjected to prolonged torture and finally beheaded. He and his disciples are commemorated on March 23.

Contributions & Legacy

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From Soldier to Monastic

Nikon's life follows a pattern familiar in the accounts of soldier-saints: a man of the army, raised between a pagan father and a believing mother, brought to open faith through deliverance in battle. His mother, according to the tradition, had instructed him secretly in Christian teaching while he remained outwardly unbaptized.

Having vowed baptism if he survived an engagement in which he found himself surrounded, Nikon sought out the sacrament in a time when professing the faith was dangerous. His life relates that he came to Mount Ganos, where Theodosius, Bishop of Cyzicus, both baptized him and clothed him in the monastic habit. After a period of ascetic life he was ordained, and the leadership of the monastic brotherhood passed to him upon Theodosius's death.

The Community in Sicily

Nikon brought his community by sea to Sicily, where they settled in a remote, desolate place. The sources differ on the exact site: one names a deserted area called Gigia near the river Asinum, while another places the brotherhood in the mountains near Taormina. The brotherhood numbered one hundred and ninety-nine disciples, a figure the synaxarion preserves in commemorating them together with their leader.

The arrival in Sicily is linked in the tradition to flight from danger, and the saints are remembered as a single monastic body that shared both its common life and, ultimately, its death.

Martyrdom and Commemoration

When a persecution of Christians arose, Quintilian, the governor of Sicily, was informed that Nikon and his monks were nearby. The one hundred and ninety-nine disciples were seized and beheaded together. Nikon was kept alive to be tortured: his life relates that he was burned with fire yet remained unharmed, bound to wild horses that would not move, had his tongue cut out, and was thrown from a high cliff before being beheaded.

Saint Nikon and his one hundred and ninety-nine disciples are commemorated by the Orthodox Church on March 23.

Traditional Accounts

Beyond the core narrative, the tradition preserves further details that the sources themselves frame as part of the saint's life rather than documented history. Among these are an angelic direction sent to Nikon by way of Mount Ganos, and an account that, after the martyrdom, the saint's exposed body was discovered by a possessed shepherd who was healed, after which the Bishop of Messina gathered and buried the remains of Nikon and his disciples.

Notes

Named cluster commemorated as one: Nikon together with his 199 disciples.

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