Martyr 4th century

Martyrs of Niculitsel

Also known as Zoticus · Atallus · Camisius · Philip

Martyrs of the Lower Danube whose relics were found together at Niculitsel, in the land of ancient Scythia Minor, where Christians suffered exile and death for refusing the worship of idols.

Feast Day
June 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Zoticos, Attalos, Kamasis and Philippos of Niculitsel

Life

The Martyrs of Niculitsel are four Christians — Zoticos, Attalos, Kamasis and Philippos — who suffered death in Lesser Scythia (Scythia Minor), the Roman territory between the Lower Danube and the Black Sea that corresponds to modern Dobrogea in Romania. According to the surviving record, they were tried by the Roman authorities of Noviodunum, near present-day Isaccea, and beheaded for their faith. They are commemorated together on June 4.

Their memory remained obscure until 1971, when their relics were unexpectedly recovered from an early martyrion at the village of Niculitsel in Tulcea county. The crypt's walls preserved the four names alongside an inscription naming them as martyrs of Christ, an unusually direct archaeological confirmation of a commemoration that had been carried in church records.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 4th century Martyrdom at Noviodunum The four were tried by the Roman authorities of Noviodunum (modern Isaccea) in Lesser Scythia and put to death by beheading. Their relics were later found decapitated, consistent with this account. The exact reign is disputed among historians, who variously assign the deaths to the persecutions of Diocletian or Licinius (early fourth century) or, in other readings, to the Gothic persecution of Athanaric (370-372).
  2. September 1971 Discovery of the martyrion When a creek overflowed near Niculitsel in Tulcea county, it exposed a brick crypt of two rooms — one of the oldest martyria known in the region. The upper chamber held the decapitated remains of the four men in a single wooden coffin; an inscription on one wall read 'Christ's martyrs', and the four names were written on the opposite wall, each accompanied by the Chi-Rho monogram.
  3. 1971-1973 Translation of the relics to Cocos Monastery The relics were taken to the Cocos Monastery in Dobrogea, where they are venerated by the faithful. Sources record that Archbishop Antim Nica formally transferred them on January 17, 1973. A protective building was raised over the crypt and the surrounding church ruins in the 1980s.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Earlier Martyrs Beneath the Crypt

Beneath the chamber holding the four named martyrs, excavators found the bone fragments of two further men, aged roughly forty-five to fifty. These are thought to have died in an earlier wave of persecution, that of the Emperor Decius (249-251), and to have been reinterred at the site around 370-380, when the upper martyrion was built above them.

The find situated the four named martyrs within a longer history of Christian witness in Scythia Minor. An inscribed piece of sandstone recovered at the site bore the words 'here and there the blood of the martyrs', and an extended Greek synaxarion tradition associates the wider region of Old Noviodunum with additional Christians who died there, though only the four are documented at this particular burial.

Relics & Shrines

The relics of Zoticos, Attalos, Kamasis and Philippos rest at the Cocos Monastery in Dobrogea, to which they were brought after the 1971 discovery. The original martyrion at Niculitsel was preserved in place, with a covering structure built over the crypt and the adjacent church ruins in the 1980s, so that both the burial site and the relics remain accessible to pilgrims.

Notes

Named group commemorated as one.

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