Refusal and Humiliation
According to the synaxarion accounts, after Theotecnus refused to sacrifice to the pagan gods, Maximian sought to humiliate him by having him dressed in women's clothing and placed among enslaved women for three weeks.
When the martyr was summoned again, the emperor threatened his life if he would not submit, but Theotecnus remained steadfast in his Christian faith.
Tortures and Martyrdom
The emperor ordered that Theotecnus be subjected to severe torments: the burning of his feet, the cutting of his tendons, and his being cast into boiling tar.
The hagiographic tradition relates a miraculous intervention at this point: the flames beneath the vessel went out and the heated tar cooled instantly, an event described as terrifying Maximian. Rather than continue the torture, the emperor had Theotecnus imprisoned.
While incarcerated alongside a fellow Christian named Alexander, Theotecnus aided his companion's escape. When the centurion in charge discovered this, he subjected Theotecnus to further torment before drowning him at sea with a stone tied around his neck.
Relics & Shrines
The synaxarion relates that Theotecnus's remains eventually washed ashore near Rusob on the Cilician coast, where local Christians discovered them and gave them proper burial.
Miracles & Traditions
Traditional Accounts: The hagiographic account records that when Theotecnus was thrown into boiling tar, the flames beneath the vessel extinguished and the tar cooled, an event said to have terrified the emperor Maximian.
Historical Context
Theotecnus is counted among the pre-Nicene martyrs of the early 4th century from the region of Syria. His sufferings are situated within the severe persecution of Christians under Maximian (305–311) in the eastern provinces of the Roman Empire.