Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyrs John the Bishop and James the Presbyter of Persia

4th century; martyred 332 or 343

Also known as John · Jacob

Persian clergy who preached Christ under Shapur II and suffered torture and martyrdom during the persecution.

Feast Day
November 1
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Life

John and James (also called Jacob) were Persian Christian clergy of the 4th century who were martyred during the persecution under the Sasanian king Shapur II. John served as a bishop and James held the rank of presbyter; James is given the epithet "the zealot" in the synaxarion.

According to the synaxarion, the two ministers preached the Christian faith during Shapur II's reign and converted many unbelievers to piety. Their preaching drew many devout people, and they were arrested, subjected to cruel torments intended to compel them to accept Zoroastrianism, and finally beheaded by the sword.

The Orthodox Church commemorates them together on November 1; their martyrdom is recorded as having occurred either in 332 or in 343.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 309/310-379/381 Reign of Shapur II John and James lived and preached during the reign of the Sasanian king Shapur II, under whom an extensive persecution of Christians took place in Persia.
  2. 332 or 343 Arrest and martyrdom After converting many to the Christian faith, John the bishop and James the presbyter were arrested, tortured, and beheaded by the sword. Sources record the year as either 332 or 343.
  3. November 1 Commemoration The Orthodox Church commemorates the two hieromartyrs together on this date.

Contributions & Legacy

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Ministry and Martyrdom

The synaxarion records that John, as bishop, and James, as presbyter, taught the words of faith to the pious and converted many unbelievers. Their success in attracting converts led to their arrest by the king.

Both men were subjected to various tortures designed to force them to abandon Christianity and accept Zoroastrianism. When they refused, they were executed; the synaxarion states that their heads were cut off by the sword. They are remembered in Orthodox tradition as having received the crowns of martyrdom.

Historical Context

John and James suffered during the persecution of Christians under Shapur II, whose reign is variously dated to 309-379 or 310-381. The persecution intensified after Constantine the Great's embrace of Christianity led Shapur to regard his Christian subjects as potential agents of Rome; he imposed a double tax on Christians to finance his wars against the Roman Empire.

The persecution was vast in scale. The contemporary historian Sozomen estimated that upwards of sixteen thousand Christians whose names were known were martyred, with many more unrecorded, and the period became known as the "cycle of the martyrs." Other named clergy who died in this persecution include the patriarch Shemon Bar Sabbae and his successors Shahdost and Barba'shmin, and Barbasceminus, Bishop of Seleucia and Ctesiphon. Accusations against Christians were brought by Zoroastrian Magi and certain other groups.

Notes

Named pair kept as one row.

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