Martyr Pre-Nicene

Martyrs Diomedes Julian, Philip & Companions

Also known as Diomedes, Julian, Philip, Eutychian, Hesychius, Leonides, Eutychius, Philadelphus, Melanippus, Parthagape

A company of martyrs who perished by various torments — the sword, fire, water, crucifixion, and hanging

Feast Day
September 2
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Diomedes, Julian, Philip and their Companions

Life

Diomedes, Julian, Philip and their companions are a company of early Christian martyrs commemorated together on September 2. The sources preserve them as a list of names joined to an assortment of torments rather than as a narrative life: no securely attested date, place, or persecuting authority survives, and the synaxarial and martyrological notices agree that the time and site of their suffering are unknown.

The commemoration belongs chiefly to the Greek synaxarial tradition and the Roman Martyrology; the company is venerated on the same day in both the Orthodox and Catholic calendars. The fellowship named alongside Diomedes most often includes Julian, Philip, Eutychian, Hesychius, Leonides, Eutychius, Philadelphus, Melanippus, and Parthagape, with some lists also adding Theodore.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Company and Their Martyrdom

What distinguishes this commemoration is the variety of deaths the company endured rather than a single shared mode of execution. The collective notice records that they 'consummated their martyrdom, some by fire, some by water, others by the sword or by the cross.'

The Orthodox liturgical listing for September 2 assigns each named martyr a particular torment: Diomedes and Philip were put to the sword; Julian was beaten to death; Eutychian was roasted on a gridiron; Hesychius was hanged; Leonides and Melanippus perished by fire; Eutychius was crucified; and Philadelphus and Parthagape were drowned, the former by a heavy stone tied about the neck. The catalogue of torments — sword, fire, water, crucifixion, and hanging — is the principal content the tradition has retained about them.

Historical Record

No biographical narrative, acta, region, or century is securely attached to this company. The Orthodox, Catholic, and synaxarial notices alike state that there are no details as to the time or location of their martyrdom, and the OCA daily synaxarion for September 2 does not list them, the commemoration being preserved instead through the Greek synaxaria and the Roman Martyrology. They are remembered as a named fellowship of confessors whose specific circumstances have not survived.

Notes

Named in the synaxaria: Diomedes, Julian, Philip, Eutychian, Hesychius, Leonides, Eutychius, Philadelphus, Melanippus, and Parthagape

Sources: Synaxarion; Roman Martyrology