Pausilippus was an early Christian martyr of the second century, commemorated in the Orthodox tradition on April 8. According to the synaxarion, he suffered during the reign of the Roman emperor Hadrian (117–138), when he was denounced by pagans and brought to trial. He openly confessed himself a Christian and refused to renounce his faith despite torture, and he is remembered as having died of the injuries inflicted on him.
Little detail about his life survives beyond the brief account of his trial and death. The surviving narrative is associated with Heraclea in Thrace, the region near Constantinople, and he is venerated as a martyr in both the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic traditions.
Timeline 2 moments
ReadHide
117–138Trial under HadrianReported to the authorities by pagans, Pausilippus was brought before the emperor Hadrian, where he declared himself a Christian. He was beaten with iron rods and then handed over to a governor named Precius, who for a long time pressed him to offer sacrifice to idols. He refused.
c. 140DeathThe governor ordered his execution. By the account preserved in the synaxarion, the weakened martyr broke the iron fetters binding him and freed himself, but died as he fled; Christians afterward buried his body. The tradition places his death at Heraclea in Thrace as a result of the torture he had endured.
Contributions & Legacy
1 contributions
ReadHide
Veneration and Sources
Pausilippus is commemorated on April 8. He is also remembered in the Roman Catholic tradition as a martyr of the second century, in some calendars grouped with other early Roman martyrs.
The accounts of his life are brief and primarily hagiographical. Details such as his exact dates and the circumstances of his death vary between sources, and the surviving record does not preserve information about his birth or early life.