Martyr 4th century

Martyrs Probus Tarachus, and Andronicus

Martyred c. 304

Also known as Probus · Tarachus · Andronicus

Three Christians martyred at Tarsus in 304, who endured repeated interrogation and torture for refusing pagan sacrifice.

Feast Day
October 12
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Probus, Tarachus, and Andronicus

Life

Probus, Tarachus, and Andronicus were three Christians martyred at Tarsus in Cilicia during the Diocletian persecution, around the year 304. Tradition records them as men of varied background: Tarachus, born about 239, a Roman native of Claudiopolis in Isauria and a former soldier; Probus, of plebeian status, from Side in Pamphylia; and Andronicus, of patrician rank, from a prominent family of Ephesus.

Arrested for their faith, the three were tried by the provincial governor Numerian Maximus and subjected to three successive rounds of interrogation and torture across several cities of Asia Minor before being put to death. They are commemorated in the Orthodox Church on October 12.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 239 Birth of Tarachus Tarachus is born, by tradition a Roman native of Claudiopolis in Isauria, and later serves as a soldier.
  2. c. 304 Trial and martyrdom at Tarsus During the Diocletian persecution, the three are tried by the governor Numerian Maximus and tortured in three rounds across Tarsus, Mopsuestia, and Anazarbus before being executed by the sword.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Background and Arrest

The three martyrs came from distinct social ranks and regions of Asia Minor. Tarachus, the eldest, was a Roman from Claudiopolis in Isauria who had served as a soldier; Probus was a man of plebeian status from Side in Pamphylia; and Andronicus belonged to a prominent patrician family of Ephesus.

The synaxarion remembers Tarachus as 'the old soldier' who, when ordered to sacrifice to the idols, refused, declaring that he would offer a pure heart to the one true God rather than take part in blood sacrifices. The accounts emphasize his firmness under interrogation.

Trial and Martyrdom

The three were tried by the governor Numerian Maximus and tortured three times in several cities of Cilicia, including Tarsus, Mopsuestia, and Anazarbus. According to the martyrdom account, Tarachus was beaten with stones; Probus was thrashed with whips, his feet burned with red-hot irons and his back and sides pierced with heated spits, and was finally cut with knives; and Andronicus too was cut to pieces with knives.

Condemned to die by wild beasts in the amphitheatre, they were spared when the animals would not touch them, and so were put to death by the sword. By tradition three witnesses to the martyrdom — Marcian, Felix, and Verus — recovered the bodies and had them buried together in a single vault.

Veneration and Legacy

The martyrs are commemorated on October 12 in the Greek Orthodox Church and on October 11 in the Roman Catholic Church, and they are also venerated in the Romanian Orthodox Church. Tarachus is honored in the Maronite Church under the name 'Mar Edna.'

The historicity of the surviving accounts has been debated by scholars: Hippolyte Delehaye classified them among 'historical romances,' while Thierry Ruinart regarded one account as entirely authentic.

Notes

Named group kept as one row.

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