New Martyr 18th century

New Martyr Anastasius of Strumica

1774–1794

Also known as Anastasius of the Strumitza Eparchy

A Christian of the Strumica region, born in 1774, who suffered martyrdom for confessing Christ in 1794.

Feast Day
August 29
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Martyr Anastasius of the Strumitza Eparchy

Life

New Martyr Anastasius of the Strumitza Eparchy was a Bulgarian martyr born in 1774 in the village of Radovicha, within the Strumnitsk diocese of the Strumica region. As a youth his parents enrolled him in military studies.

At the age of twenty, while in Thessalonica with his teacher, Anastasius was instructed to pose as a Turkish merchant in order to transport clothing without paying customs duty. When Ottoman authorities questioned him and he was unable to recite the Islamic prayer, the matter escalated into pressure to convert to Islam, which he refused.

He was tortured and condemned to death by hanging, and on August 29, 1794, weakened from his wounds, he collapsed and died by the roadside, confessing the Orthodox Christian faith to the end. He is commemorated as a New Martyr on August 29.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 1774 Birth Born in the village of Radovicha, within the Strumnitsk diocese of the Strumica region, to parents who enrolled him in military studies.
  2. 1794 Arrest in Thessalonica At the age of twenty, while in Thessalonica with his teacher, he was questioned by Ottoman authorities after posing as a Turkish merchant to evade customs duty, and was pressed to convert to Islam.
  3. August 29, 1794 Martyrdom Condemned to hanging after refusing to renounce Christianity, he collapsed and died by the roadside from his wounds while being led to execution.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Arrest and Confession

According to the synaxarion account, Anastasius was in Thessalonica with his teacher, who intended to sell Turkish clothing. He was directed to disguise himself as a Turkish merchant so that the goods could be moved without paying customs duty. When Ottoman authorities questioned him, he could not recite the Islamic prayer (kalima) and was brought before a commander who pressed him to embrace Islam.

Anastasius acknowledged his civil offense — disguising himself to evade taxes — but firmly refused to abandon his Orthodox faith. The case was referred to the mufti, who instructed the tax-collector that he held both the sword and the law and might use whichever he wished. Five Turkish witnesses were then produced to testify that the youth had blasphemed Islam. Anastasius clarified that he had disrespected Muslim customs rather than blasphemed Mohammed.

Martyrdom

Having refused to convert, Anastasius was tortured and condemned to death by hanging. On the journey to his execution on August 29, 1794, the authorities continued to urge him to renounce Christianity.

Severely wounded and weakened from torture, he collapsed and died by the roadside, maintaining his confession of faith throughout the ordeal. He is venerated locally in the Macedonian and Bulgarian region as a New Martyr of the Ottoman period.

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