Martyr 3rd century

Martyrs Thyrsus Leucius, Coronatus, and those with them

died c. 251

Also known as Thyrsus · Leucius · Coronatus · Cornutus

Martyrs who suffered in Bithynian Caesarea and Apollonia under Decius.

Feast Day
August 17
Also Dec 14
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Martyrs Thyrsus, Leucius, Coronatus, and those with them are a group of early Christian martyrs who suffered during the persecution under the Roman emperor Decius (249–251). According to the Orthodox synaxarion, they were put to death in Bithynian Caesarea and Apollonia.

The core of the group comprises Thyrsus, a catechumen who refused to offer pagan sacrifice and endured prolonged torture; Leucius, who openly reproached the local governor over his treatment of Christians and was executed; and a converted pagan priest variously named Callinicus (Kallinikos) in the December 14 account and Coronatus in the August 17 account. The Orthodox Church in America notes that Coronatus may be the same person as Cornutus, commemorated on September 12.

Devotion to Thyrsus spread widely beyond the East: his relics were translated to Constantinople, and his cult became popular across the Iberian Peninsula and into France during the Middle Ages, where he was honored as Santo Tirso in Portugal and San Tirso in Spain.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 3rd century Birth of Thyrsus According to tradition, Thyrsus was born in the 3rd century at Smyrna in Asia (modern İzmir, Turkey).
  2. 249–251 Decian persecution The martyrs suffered under the emperor Decius, whose persecution targeted Christians who refused to offer pagan sacrifice.
  3. c. 251 Martyrdom in Bithynia and Phrygia Thyrsus, Leucius, and the converted priest Callinicus (Coronatus) were put to death at Caesarea in Bithynia and at Apollonia; Thyrsus is recorded as killed at Apollonia in Phrygia.
  4. Middle Ages Spread of the cult to the West Thyrsus's relics were translated to Constantinople and later in part to France; his veneration spread across the Iberian Peninsula as Santo Tirso and San Tirso, and he became patron of Sisteron.

Contributions & Legacy

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Martyrdom

By tradition, Thyrsus was a catechumen who refused to sacrifice to the pagan gods. He endured extreme tortures, which the accounts describe as including the dislocation of his limbs, the removal of his eyes, and the destruction of his teeth. The synaxarion further relates that during his ordeal he caused a statue of Apollo to collapse through his prayer, which enraged the prefect and led to intensified torments. He is said to have died after making the Sign of the Cross. One tradition holds that he was sentenced to be sawn in half, but the saw became so heavy that the executioners could not use it; for this reason a bucksaw became his iconographic attribute.

Leucius confronted the governor — named Cumbricius in the December 14 account — over his treatment of Christians. He was tortured, hung up and harrowed on his sides, and then beheaded.

The converted pagan priest, called Callinicus in the December 14 account, witnessed the courage of Thyrsus and the collapse of the idol, professed his Christian faith publicly, and was beheaded.

Sources and Names

The group is commemorated on both August 17 and December 14, and the Orthodox tradition treats these as feasts of the same martyrs. The August 17 entry in the OCA Synaxarion is brief, naming Thyrsus, Leucius, Coronatus, and their companions and locating their suffering in Bithynian Caesarea and Apollonia; the December 14 account supplies the fuller narrative of Leucius, Thyrsus, and Callinicus.

The names Coronatus (August 17) and Callinicus (December 14) appear to belong to different manuscript traditions for what may be the same individual — the converted pagan priest. The OCA additionally suggests that Coronatus may be identical with Cornutus, commemorated on September 12.

There is no dedicated combined account of the whole group in wider reference works; the principal external coverage is the article on Saint Thyrsus, which treats him as the central figure of the group.

Relics & Shrines

The relics of Thyrsus were brought to Constantinople. From there his veneration spread to the West, and some relics were later transferred to France.

Thyrsus became the titular saint of the cathedral of Sisteron in the Basses-Alpes (Cathédrale Notre-Dame-et-Saint-Thyrse), and a 12th-century church dedicated to him was established at Châteauponsac. He held a full liturgical office in the Mozarabic liturgy of the Iberian Peninsula.

Notes

OCA notes Coronatus may be the same as Cornutus commemorated Sep 12. Named group kept as one row. Dec 14 = the same martyrs (listed with Kallinikos).

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