Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Desan of Persia and Companions

died 4th century

Also known as Desan, Bishop of Persia · Mariabus the Presbyter · Abdiesus · the 270 (272) Martyrs of Persia

Bishop Desan of Persia, the presbyter Mariabus, Abdiesus, and a large company of about 270 captive Christians were imprisoned and put to death under Shah Sapor (Shapur) II for refusing to renounce Christ.

Feast Day
April 9
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Desan, Bishop in Persia, and the Companions Who Suffered with Him

Life

Desan was a bishop in the Persian realm who was put to death, together with a large company of fellow Christians, during the persecution under the Sasanian king Shapur II. The Orthodox synaxarion commemorates him on April 9 as a hieromartyr at the head of his companions, among whom it names the presbyter Mariabus and a certain Abdiesus, along with some 270 others who suffered with them. Because the group is remembered as a single collective commemoration, sources differ slightly on the exact figure, the synaxarion title speaking of '272 others' while the body of the entry counts '270.'

The companions were imprisoned and pressed to renounce their faith, and when they refused to turn away from Christ they were executed. The synaxarion records that the martyr Ia was numbered among this company; she receives a separate commemoration on September 11. Beyond these few names, the tradition preserves little individual detail, presenting the group chiefly as a body of confessors who held firm under interrogation and died together.

Desan and his fellow martyrs belong to the wider company of Christians who perished in Persia under Shapur II (reigned 309–379), whose reign saw a sustained persecution of the Church from the late 330s onward. Within that broader catastrophe the precise circumstances of Desan's group are sparsely documented; some external accounts associate Desan with the region of Bizabda (Bezabde) in Mesopotamia and place his death around the middle of the fourth century, though the Orthodox commemoration itself fixes only the feast and the general reign rather than a firm year.

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The Persecution under Shapur II

The persecution in which Desan and his companions died was among the most extensive suffered by the early Church. The Sasanian king Shapur II is recorded as having persecuted Christians severely from 339 until his death in 379, with an especially harsh edict associated with the year 341. The Church historian Sozomen estimated that upwards of sixteen thousand Christians were martyred in this period, with many more whose names were never recorded.

Tradition has often linked the persecution to suspicion that Persian Christians sympathized with the rival Roman Empire, which had become Christian under Constantine. Modern scholarship treats that explanation with caution, noting that the theme of a reaction to Constantine's conversion emerged only later; what is not in doubt is that the persecution was real and prolonged. Desan's company is one of many groups of captives and confessors remembered from these decades.

Commemoration

Desan is honored as a hieromartyr, the rank given to a bishop or priest who dies a martyr's death. The collective feast on April 9 keeps his memory together with that of his companions Mariabus and Abdiesus and the roughly 270 captive Christians who were martyred with them. The martyr Ia, also numbered in this company, is additionally commemorated on September 11.

Notes

Listed in the synaxarion as a single commemoration of Bishop Desan together with his companions and the some 270 (or 272) who suffered with them.

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