New Martyr 19th century

New Martyr John of Smyrna

1785–1802

Also known as Nannos · John of Thessaloniki

Born in Thessaloniki, he was martyred at Smyrna on May 29, 1802 at the age of seventeen; he is recorded in the New Martyrologion.

Feast Day
May 29
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy New Martyr John (Nannos) of Thessaloniki, who suffered at Smyrna

Life

The New Martyr John of Smyrna, also called Nannos, was a young Greek cobbler's apprentice from Thessaloniki who was beheaded at Smyrna (modern Izmir) on May 29, 1802, at the age of seventeen. He belongs to the broad company of New Martyrs who suffered under Ottoman rule, and his account was preserved by his near-contemporaries in the New Miscellany of 1819.

Born in Thessaloniki in 1785 to Macedonian Orthodox parents, John was drawn from boyhood to the lives of the saints, and especially to the New Martyrs of his own era. His brief life ended in a public confession of Christ before a Turkish judge at Smyrna, after which his memory was recorded and his feast fixed on the day of his death.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 1785 Birth in Thessaloniki Born to Macedonian Orthodox parents; his father from Avret Hisar (old Gynaikokastro, Kilkis) and his mother from Lokovi (Taxiarchis, Halkidiki), with an elder brother named Theodore.
  2. Early 1802 Brought to Smyrna His father took him to Smyrna to continue his apprenticeship as a cobbler.
  3. May 1802 Outward conversion and recantation He declared he renounced Christianity and was circumcised and named Mehmet, then went before the kadi and reaffirmed that his name was John.
  4. May 29, 1802 Martyrdom at Smyrna Beheaded by sword at the Soan Bazaar at the age of seventeen.
  5. 1819 His account published His martyrdom was recorded in the New Miscellany compiled by Saints Makarios Notaras, Nikephoros of Chios, and Athanasios of Paros.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Origins and Family

John was born in 1785 in Thessaloniki to Macedonian parents who were Greek and Orthodox. According to the recorded account, his father came from the village of Avret Hisar — identified with old Gynaikokastro in the prefecture of Kilkis — while his mother came from the village of Lokovi, today's Taxiarchis, in Halkidiki. He had an elder brother named Theodore, and John was the younger son.

The family worked as cobblers, and John learned the trade as an apprentice in his father's shop. The sources relate that he loved to hear his brother Theodore read aloud from the lives of the saints, particularly the accounts of the New Martyrs, and that he came to desire martyrdom for Christ himself.

Apprenticeship and Martyrdom at Smyrna

At the beginning of 1802 his father brought him to Smyrna to continue his apprenticeship. There, at the age of seventeen and without telling his family, John resolved to provoke his own martyrdom. He left his father's shop, took work with a Turkish cobbler, and declared that he renounced Christianity; the Turks circumcised him and gave him the name Mehmet.

Within a few days he went before the Turkish judge, the kadi, and openly retracted, declaring that he would not be called Mehmet and that his name was John. He was condemned and taken to the Soan Bazaar, where, on Thursday, May 29, 1802, the executioner made him kneel and cut off his head with a sword.

Veneration and Sources

The sources relate that a few days after the martyrdom a first miracle occurred: a gravely ill woman was restored to health through cotton wool that had been soaked in the new martyr's blood. His body was acquired and given an honorable burial by a wealthy Russian Greek named Panagiotes Panagiotopoulos.

His martyrdom was set down by his near-contemporaries — Saints Makarios Notaras, Nikephoros of Chios, and Athanasios of Paros — in their New Miscellany, a collection of the lives of the New Martyrs, published in 1819. The Church commemorates him on May 29, the day of his death.

Notes

Also called Nannos.

Sources: GOARCH calendar; OCA / J. Sanidopoulos cross-check