Venerable-Martyr 8th century

Martyr Michael Abbot in Armenia, and 36 Fathers

d. ca. 790

Also known as Michael of Zobe Monastery

Abbot Michael and thirty-six monks of the Zobe Monastery who suffered martyrdom during an Arab raid after refusing to deny Christ.

Feast Day
October 1
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Venerable-Martyr Michael, Abbot of Zobē Monastery, and the Thirty-Six Fathers with Him

Life

Saint Michael was the abbot (igoumen) of the Zobē Monastery, situated near Sebaste (Sebastopol) in Armenia, where he led a community of monks at the end of the eighth century.

When an Arab raiding force overran the region and seized the monastery, the invaders attempted to compel Michael and his monks to renounce Christ. The community refused, and abbot and brethren were put to death together, numbering thirty-seven martyrs in all.

The martyrdom is dated to around the year 790, during the reign of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VI and his mother, the Empress Irene. Michael and the thirty-six fathers are commemorated together on October 1.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 780 Reign of Constantine VI begins Constantine VI accedes as Byzantine emperor, with his mother Irene serving as regent during his minority; frontier raids resume with renewed vigour from around this time.
  2. ca. 790 Raid on Zobē Monastery and martyrdom An Arab force under the emir Alim seizes the Zobē Monastery near Sebaste in Armenia. Abbot Michael and his thirty-six monks refuse to deny Christ and are put to death together.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context

The Zobē Monastery (also recorded as Zovia, a variant spelling) lay near Sebaste in Armenia, a frontier zone repeatedly exposed to raiding during the Arab-Byzantine wars. After the turmoil following the Abbasid revolution, the annual raids into Byzantine and frontier territory resumed with renewed vigour from around 780 onward.

The martyrdom fell within the reign of Constantine VI, who ruled as Byzantine emperor from 780 to 797, with his mother Irene serving as regent during his minority and later as empress-colleague. This dating places the suffering of the Zobē monks around 790, consistent with the period of intensified frontier campaigns under the early Abbasid caliphate.

According to the synaxarion account, an emir named Alim led the force that seized the monastery. The invaders, described as Hagarenes or Saracens, sought to persuade the monks to abandon Christ and accept Islam.

Martyrdom

The monks rejected every demand to deny their faith. Saint Michael, as their abbot, encouraged the brethren to meet death courageously for the sake of Christ.

By the account preserved in the synaxarion, the monks were executed by the sword first, after which their abbot was tortured and beheaded. All thirty-seven holy fathers received their crowns of martyrdom together rather than forsake their Christian faith.

Notes

Named group kept as one row.

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