Hieromartyr 3rd century

Hieromartyr Cyprian Bishop of Carthage

c. 200/210 – 14 September 258

Also known as Thascius Cyprianus

A well-educated orator who converted, became Bishop of Carthage and a foundational early Christian writer, and was martyred in 258.

Feast Day
August 31
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage

Life

Cyprian (in full, Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus) was a Bishop of Carthage and one of the foundational Latin Christian writers of the third century. Born around 200–210 into a wealthy pagan family of Roman African Carthaginian background, he received an excellent rhetorical education and made his name in Carthage as an orator, a pleader in the courts, and a teacher of rhetoric.

He converted to Christianity in middle life, around 245–246, after what he himself described as a dissipated youth, guided by an elderly priest. On his baptism he committed to celibacy and gave away much of his wealth to the poor, selling his property. Ordained deacon and then priest, he was elected Bishop of Carthage about 248–249 by the vote of the people and the consent of the bishops, only a short time after his conversion.

His episcopate was dominated by two great persecutions and the disciplinary crises they produced. During the Decian persecution beginning in 250 he withdrew into hiding and afterward governed the readmission of the lapsed; during the renewed persecution under Valerian he was first exiled and then beheaded near Carthage on 14 September 258. The Eastern Orthodox Church venerates him as a hieromartyr and commemorates him on August 31.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 200–210 Birth in Carthage Born Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus at Carthage in Roman North Africa, into a wealthy pagan family of Roman African Carthaginian background.
  2. c. 245–246 Conversion and baptism After a successful career as an orator and advocate, he converted to Christianity in middle life under the guidance of an elderly priest, was baptized around age thirty-five, embraced celibacy, and distributed much of his wealth to the poor.
  3. c. 248–249 Elected Bishop of Carthage Soon after his conversion he was ordained deacon and priest, then elected bishop by the vote of the people and the consent of the bishops, a popular choice though opposed by some senior presbyters, including Novatus.
  4. 250 Decian persecution and the lapsed When Emperor Decius ordered sacrifices to the gods, Cyprian withdrew into hiding rather than face execution. Many Christians lapsed; afterward he addressed their readmission in De Lapsis and convened a council of North African bishops, taking a middle course between rigorist and laxist parties.
  5. 30 August 257 Trial and exile under Valerian Brought before the proconsul Aspasius Paternus during Valerian's persecution, he refused to sacrifice to the pagan gods and was banished to Curubis (modern Korba, Tunisia).
  6. 13 September 258 Imprisonment Under a harsher edict demanding the execution of clergy, he was imprisoned on the orders of the new proconsul Galerius Maximus.
  7. 14 September 258 Martyrdom Following his trial he was beheaded by the sword in the suburbs of Carthage, having removed his garments, knelt, and prayed; a great multitude of the faithful accompanied him and bore his body away with candles and torches.

Contributions & Legacy

6 contributions Read Hide

Conversion and Early Ministry

By the time of his conversion Cyprian had already attained a high position in the metropolis of Africa as a public speaker, legal advocate, and teacher of rhetoric. He came to Christianity around 245–246, disillusioned with the corruption and excess of his earlier life and guided by an elderly priest. He described his baptism as a liberating and transformative experience.

Committing himself to celibacy while still a catechumen, he sold his property and gave a large portion of his wealth to the poor. He was rapidly ordained deacon and then priest, and within a few years was elected Bishop of Carthage, a choice especially welcomed among the poor though resisted by some senior clergy.

The Lapsed and Church Discipline

The Decian persecution of 250 produced large numbers of lapsi, Christians who had sacrificed or otherwise complied under pressure. Cyprian's own withdrawal into hiding during the persecution drew criticism, but from concealment he continued to direct the discipline of his church.

On his return he set out his position in the treatise De Lapsis and convened a council of North African bishops at Carthage. He steered a middle course between the laxer party associated with Novatus of Carthage and the rigorism of the Roman antipope Novatian, who held that the lapsed could never be readmitted. Against this he supported Pope Cornelius and argued for the eventual restoration of the fallen through penance once persecution had ended. His pastoral devotion during a severe plague and famine further strengthened his standing among the faithful.

Writings and Theology

Cyprian was one of the most influential of the early Latin Fathers, and his style was praised as rarely equalled among them. His best-known work, De Ecclesiae Catholicae Unitate (On the Unity of the Catholic Church), defends the unity of the Church and the role of its bishops, written amid the controversies over the lapsed and schism.

His surviving output includes Ad Donatum, which recounts his own conversion; the scriptural Testimonia ad Quirinum; De Lapsis; and treatises on the Lord's Prayer, on mortality, on almsgiving, and on martyrdom. Around sixty to eighty of his letters survive. In a dispute with Pope Stephen I he also argued that baptisms administered by heretics were invalid, against the Roman practice of merely laying hands on converts from heresy.

Martyrdom

The renewed persecution under Emperor Valerian, beginning in 256, brought Cyprian before the proconsul Aspasius Paternus on 30 August 257. When he refused to sacrifice to the pagan deities he was banished to Curubis, identified with modern Korba in Tunisia.

A year later a harsher edict required the execution of clergy. He was imprisoned on 13 September 258 by order of the proconsul Galerius Maximus and, after his trial the following day, was beheaded by the sword in the suburbs of Carthage on 14 September 258. By the surviving accounts he removed his garments, knelt, and prayed before the execution, and a vast multitude of the faithful accompanied him.

Relics & Shrines

Churches were erected over Cyprian's tomb and over the place of his martyrdom. The brethren are said to have borne his body with candles and torches, with prayer and great triumph, to the cemetery of Macrobius Candidianus.

By later tradition Charlemagne transferred his bones to France. Several cities — among them Lyon, Arles, Venice, Compiègne, and Roenay in Flanders — have claimed to hold portions of his relics.

Veneration

The Eastern Orthodox Church venerates Cyprian as a hieromartyr — a bishop who died for the faith — and commemorates him on August 31. He is counted among the pre-schism Western (North African) saints honored as Orthodox.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide
Notes

Pre-schism African saint.

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