Hieromartyr 3rd century

Hieromartyr Alexander of Side

3rd century (martyred during the reign of Aurelian, 270-275)

Also known as Alexander of Side in Pamphylia

A priest of Side in Pamphylia arrested and interrogated during the persecution under the emperor Aurelian. After enduring severe tortures for his confession of Christ, he was put to death.

Feast Day
March 15
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Alexander, Priest of Side in Pamphylia

Life

Alexander was a Christian priest of Side, a city of Pamphylia in Asia Minor, who was put to death for his confession of Christ during the persecution under the emperor Aurelian (270-275). He is commemorated as a hieromartyr, the rank given to clergy who die for the faith.

According to the account preserved in the synaxarion, Alexander was arrested and interrogated by the local ruler, identified in the sources as Antoninus. He answered that he was a Christian and a priest, a shepherd of Christ's flock, and after refusing to renounce his faith under a series of severe tortures he was beheaded with the sword.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 270-275 Arrest and interrogation During the reign of the emperor Aurelian, Alexander, a priest of Side in Pamphylia, was brought before the ruler Antoninus for interrogation. He confessed himself a Christian and a priest, a shepherd of the flock of Christ, and refused to renounce the faith.
  2. 270-275 Tortures and martyrdom The synaxarion relates that Alexander endured a series of torments for his confession, including beating, the wheel, immersion in boiling resin and oil, and a fiery furnace, and that he was exposed to wild beasts that did not harm him. He was finally beheaded with the sword. By tradition, a Christian named Eustathios afterward recovered his body and buried it with honor.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Martyrdom

Side, in the Roman province of Pamphylia on the southern coast of Asia Minor, was the setting of Alexander's ministry as a priest. The sources place his death in the persecution of the emperor Aurelian, whose reign fell between 270 and 275, locating Alexander among the martyrs of the pre-Nicene Church.

When the ruler Antoninus came to Side, he summoned Alexander to be questioned. Asked who he was, Alexander declared that he was a Christian and a priest, a shepherd of Christ's rational flock, and confessed Christ as the Savior of the world. He defended the divinity and resurrection of Christ before his judge and would not offer sacrifice to idols.

The synaxarion describes a sequence of tortures inflicted upon him, among them scourging, the wheel, a vessel of boiling resin and oil, and a fiery furnace, from which the accounts say he emerged unharmed. He was also given over to wild beasts, which the tradition relates did not touch him. After these torments he was put to death by beheading.

Tradition of the Persecutor

The hagiographical tradition adds that the ruler who condemned Alexander did not long outlive his sentence. As recounted in the synaxarion, Antoninus was seized as he left his judgment seat and died shortly afterward, before he could reach his own house.

Veneration

Alexander is commemorated on March 15, the date on which the Orthodox Church remembers him together with other martyrs of that day. The Prologue of Ohrid lists him for the same date as a martyr of Side, while the synaxarion preserves his rank as a hieromartyr, a priest who died for Christ.

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