Confession and Martyrdom
According to his life, Menignus was a simple worker, a linen-bleacher, who lived during the Decian persecution. He received supernatural encounters in which a voice from Heaven called upon him to suffer for Christ.
During the persecution an angel led a group of Christians out of prison. Inspired by this miracle and remembering his heavenly calling, Menignus tore down the emperor's persecution decree that was displayed publicly and openly declared himself a Christian.
The authorities arrested him. He endured fierce tortures before being executed by beheading.
Parium, His Native City
Parium (near modern Kemer in the Biga district of Çanakkale province, Turkey) lay in Mysia on the Hellespont. Founded in 709 BC as a colony of Milesians, Erythraeans, and Parians, it passed through Persian, Delian League, and Roman control before becoming a Roman colonia in the province of Asia.
A Christian community existed in the region before 180, attested by the Acts of the martyr Onesiphorus. Parium is associated with several early Christian martyrs, among them Menignus (under Decius), the bishop-martyr Theogenes, and the 8th-century bishop and confessor Basil. The city later became a metropolitan see before declining after the Turkish invasions.
Relics & Shrines
Orthodox hagiographical tradition cites the relics of Menignus among those of several early martyrs — including Polyeuctus, Leontius, Acacius, Arethas, James, and Theodore — connected with the Dormition Cathedral of the Kiev Caves, where, by tradition, the Mother of God is said to have given relics to the Byzantine architects to place within the building's foundation. This points to his veneration within the Eastern Orthodox tradition.