Commemoration
In the Orthodox Synaxarion the Ten Thousand Martyrs are remembered simply as Christians beheaded by the sword for Christ, with no surviving record of their names, date, or origin. On June 13 they are commemorated together with a number of other saints kept on the same day, among them the Martyr Aquilina of Byblos in Syria, Saint Triphyllius bishop of Leucosia (Nicosia) in Cyprus, the Venerable Andronikos (a disciple of Saint Sergius), the Venerable Savva abbot of Moscow, the Martyr Antonina of Nicaea, Saint Anna and her son Saint John of Constantinople, the Venerable James, Saint Antipater bishop of Bostra in Arabia, and Saint Anthimus bishop of Georgia.
Because no further detail is preserved in this commemoration, the entry stands as an honest record of an unnamed multitude rather than a narrated life.
The Several Traditions
The designation "Ten Thousand Martyrs" is used of more than one group, and the traditions differ markedly in detail and in historical reliability. One tradition concerns ten thousand martyred Fathers of the deserts and caves of Scete, associated with a persecution under Theophilus of Alexandria. A separate and widely diffused tradition concerns ten thousand martyrs of Mount Ararat.
Other traditions place the number elsewhere: the Greek Orthodox Synaxarion records Ten Thousand Martyrs at Antioch under the emperor Decius, kept on June 1, while a commemoration on March 18 connects martyrs put to death by the sword at Nicomedia with the larger company of the twenty thousand who suffered in that city during the Diocletianic persecution. Across these strands the feast falls variously on March 18 (Nicomedia), June 1 (Antioch), and June 22 (Mount Ararat).
The Mount Ararat Legend
The best-known and most elaborated of these traditions is the legend of the Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand on Mount Ararat. According to a medieval account attributed to the ninth-century scholar Anastasius Bibliothecarius, the ten thousand were Roman soldiers who, led by Saint Acacius, converted to Christianity and were crucified on Mount Ararat by order of the Roman emperor. The sources of the legend do not agree even on which emperor gave the command, variously naming Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, or Diocletian.
Scholars describe the Mount Ararat account as containing many historical inaccuracies and utterly improbable details, and its historicity is widely questioned. The artistic tradition surrounding the legend depicts a variety of executions, including crucifixions, decapitations, and crushing with a hammer.
Legacy in Art
Despite the doubts surrounding its historicity, the subject of the Ten Thousand Martyrs achieved considerable popularity in Renaissance art. Albrecht Dürer's painting Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand (1508), an oil measuring about 99 by 87 centimetres, was commissioned by Frederick III, Elector of Saxony, whose relic collection included relics of the Ten Thousand Martyrs, for the All Saints' Church in Wittenberg; Dürer included a self-portrait within the composition. The work now resides in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Vittore Carpaccio likewise treated the theme in a depiction of the ten thousand martyrs of Mount Ararat.