The Persecution at Carthage
According to the account read on April 10, the persecution unfolded under Decius, when subjects throughout the empire were required to sacrifice to the gods. The narrative of John Sanidopoulos names the governor of Carthage as Fortunianus, who is said to have assembled the people and displayed instruments of torture to compel them. Forty Christians, led by Terence, refused to comply.
The thirty-six who were martyred apart from the leaders were, in this telling, flogged and beheaded; the tradition includes among them the names Zenon, Alexander, and Theodore. The account credits the steadfastness of the martyrs with the miraculous toppling of idols and the destruction of a pagan temple.