Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Hermolaus and Martyrs Hermippus and Hermocrates

d. c. 305, Nicomedia (Asia Minor)

Also known as Hermolaus · Hermippus · Hermocrates

Three priests who survived the burning of the church of Nicomedia and lived in hiding; Hermolaus brought the youth Pantoleon (St Panteleimon) to Christ, and all were martyred under Maximian.

Feast Day
July 26
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Hermolaus, Hermippus, and Hermocrates were Christian clergy of Nicomedia in Asia Minor (modern Izmit, Turkey) who were martyred during the persecution under the emperor Maximian, traditionally dated to around 305. The Orthodox Church commemorates them together on July 26 as a single group: Hermolaus as a hieromartyr, and Hermippus and Hermocrates as martyrs.

According to the synaxarion tradition, the three were among the small number of Christians who survived after some 20,000 believers were burned alive in a church at Nicomedia in the year 303, an event commemorated on December 28. Following this, they lived concealed in remote places.

Hermolaus is best remembered for his role in the conversion of the young physician Pantaleon — venerated as the Great-Martyr Panteleimon — whom he led to the Christian faith. All three were put to death shortly before Pantaleon's own martyrdom.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 303 The burning of the Christians at Nicomedia Some 20,000 Christians are recorded as burned alive in a church at Nicomedia by order of the emperor Maximian. Hermolaus, Hermippus, and Hermocrates are among the few who survive, afterward living in hiding in remote places. The massacre is commemorated separately on December 28.
  2. c. 305 The conversion of Pantaleon Hermolaus, a priest of the Nicomedia church, leads the young court physician Pantaleon back to the Christian faith, persuading him that Christ is the better physician.
  3. c. 305 Martyrdom Hermolaus, Hermippus, and Hermocrates are put to death under Maximian, shortly before the beheading of Pantaleon.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context

The martyrdom of Hermolaus and his companions belongs to the Diocletianic (Great) Persecution, the most severe of the Roman persecutions of Christians. Nicomedia, an imperial residence and a center of the persecution, was the site of mass executions of Christians; the synaxarion tradition records that some 20,000 Christians were burned alive in a church there in 303, an event commemorated separately on December 28. Hermolaus, Hermippus, and Hermocrates were among the few who survived that massacre and afterward lived in hiding in remote places.

The historical record for these figures is bound up with that of Pantaleon of Nicomedia, whose surviving acts are largely legendary. The Catholic Encyclopedia regards the miraculous lives (vitae) of Pantaleon as without value as historical sources, and the Eastern tradition differs from later Western versions — notably, the Eastern accounts lack the visible apparition of Christ in Hermolaus's form that appears in the Western tradition during Pantaleon's tortures.

The Conversion of Pantaleon

Hermolaus is described in the tradition as a holy priest of the church at Nicomedia, and in later literature as a bishop of that church. He encountered the young Pantaleon — son of a Christian mother, Eubula, and a wealthy pagan father, Eustorgius — who had drifted from the faith of his childhood while pursuing medical studies and had become a physician of high standing, serving the Roman emperor.

Hermolaus challenged Pantaleon over the limits of his worldly learning. In the account preserved by St. Alphonsus Liguori (Victories of the Martyrs, 1888), Hermolaus is quoted as asking, 'But, my friend, of what use are all thy acquirements in this art, since thou art ignorant of the science of salvation?', convincing him that Christ was the better physician. Through this counsel Pantaleon returned to the Christian faith, which he afterward confirmed by healing, distributing his inherited wealth to the poor, and ultimately by martyrdom.

By the tradition, Hermolaus remained alive while Pantaleon's torture was under way and was himself martyred, together with his two companions Hermippus and Hermocrates, only shortly before Pantaleon was beheaded.

Notes

Named group commemorated as one.

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