Martyr 4th century

Martyrs in Africa

Also known as The Massylitan Martyrs · Martyrs of Masyla in Africa

A company of martyrs of Masyla in North Africa, on whose feast Saint Augustine is recorded to have preached; their names and the precise account of their suffering are not preserved.

Feast Day
April 9
Draft
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Life

The Martyrs in Africa are a company of martyrs of Masyla in North Africa, commemorated on April 9. Their individual names and a detailed account of their suffering are not preserved; the commemoration survives chiefly through the liturgical calendar, which retains the memory of the company while transmitting little of its particulars.

They belong to the broad class of partly-anonymous North African martyr companies of the early centuries, whose collective witness was honored in the African church and whose memory passed into the wider synaxarion. Saint Augustine of Hippo is recorded to have preached on the feast of these martyrs, a notice that anchors the commemoration in the liturgical life of North Africa even though the surviving record preserves few further details.

Contributions & Legacy

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Commemoration and Sources

The company is listed under the region of North Africa with a feast on April 9 and is reckoned among the martyrs of the pre-Nicene era, with the century given approximately as the fourth. The record is an honest stub: the synaxarion preserves the commemoration but transmits few details, and the names of the martyrs were not handed down.

Such partly-anonymous African martyr companies are characteristic of the period. Their cult was often sustained by liturgical commemoration and by the verse of early Latin poets rather than by detailed acta, so that the memory of a company endured while the specifics of its members did not.

Notes

Honest stub; the synaxarion preserves the commemoration but few details. Century approximate.

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