Martyrs of Córdoba explained

Martyrs of Córdoba
Death Date:Between 850 and 859
Martyred By:Abd ar-Rahman II, Muhammad I of Córdoba
Means Of Martyrdom:Decapitation
Venerated In:Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church
Death Place:Córdoba, Al-Andalus (modern-day Spain)
Notable Members:Aurelius and Natalia, Eulogius, Perfectus, Sisenandus, Roderick

The Martyrs of Córdoba were forty-eight Christian martyrs who were executed under the rule of Muslim administration in Al-Andalus (name of the Iberian Peninsula under the Islamic rule).[1] [2] [3] The hagiographical treatise written by the Iberian Christian and Latinist scholar Eulogius of Córdoba describes in detail the executions of the martyrs for capital violations of Islamic law (sharīʿa), including apostasy and blasphemy.[1] [2] [3] The martyrdoms recorded by Eulogius (the only contemporary source) took place between 850 and 859 AD,[4] which according to the Mālikī judges of al-Andalus broke the treaty signed between Muslims and their Christian subjects.

Some of the Christian martyrs were executed for apostasy and blasphemy after they appeared before the Muslim authorities and insulted the Islamic prophet Muhammad, although there was a minority case in which some of them were accused of such violations by witnesses. The witnesses at points have exaggerated the scale of the statements made by the martyrs. This was however rare, as the Mālikī judges would ask for a testimony. One example we have is the case of Perfectus who was accused of insulting Muhammad and was asked to testify. When he testified he stated that Muhammad had committed fornication and he thought of Islam as "a corrupt form of Christianity"; he was then executed for this. It has been stated he was aware of the punishment for making such a statement.[5]

The Mālikī jurist al-Qayrawānī (d. 996 AD) distinguished between two kinds of insult: an outright attack against Islam, made by ill intent and therefore punishable by death according to the Islamic death penalty, and a simple declaration of one's own religion. In this last case, the Christian could not be held accountable for this offense. If one insulted Islam beyond the needs of his religion, he or she would have to be executed.[5] The lack of another source after Eulogius's own martyrdom has given way to the misimpression that there were fewer episodes later in the 9th century. There has also been skepticism on the account he himself was a "martyr". While Perfectus could have been liable for breaking the first law, he could not be held guilty on account of his religion. The attempt to persuade him and to dismiss his offense constitutes part of the legal proceeding and reveals a keen knowledge of local trial custom.[5]

Historical background

See main article: Early Middle Ages.

In 711 AD, a Muslim army of Moors from North Africa had invaded and conquered the territories that previously belonged to the Visigothic Kingdom, which comprised the Christian Iberia. Under their leader Tariq ibn-Ziyad, they landed at Gibraltar and brought most of the Iberian Peninsula under Islamic rule in an eight-year campaign. The Iberian Peninsula was called Al-Andalus by its Muslim rulers. When the Umayyad caliphs were deposed in Damascus in 750 AD, the dynasty relocated to Córdoba, ruling an emirate there; consequently the city gained in luxury and importance, as a center of Iberian Muslim culture.

Once the Muslims had conquered Iberia, they governed it in accordance with Islamic law (sharīʿa). Blasphemy and apostasy from Islam were both capital offenses. In the Islamic religion, blasphemy includes insulting Muhammad and the Muslim faith.[6] Apostasy is the crime of converting away from Islam.[6] Under Islamic law, anyone whose father is Muslim is automatically a Muslim at birth and will automatically be guilty of apostasy if they proclaim any faith other than Islam.[6] Anyone found guilty of either blasphemy or apostasy was swiftly executed in accordance with the Islamic death penalty.[1] [2] [3]

Since they are considered "People of the Book" in the Islamic religion, Christians under Muslim rule were subjected to the status of dhimmi (along with Jews, Samaritans, Gnostics, Mandeans, and Zoroastrians), which was inferior to the status of Muslims.[7] [8] During this time, Christians could retain their churches and property on condition of paying tributes (the jizya and kharaj taxes)[7] [8] for every parish, cathedral, and monastery; frequently such tribute was increased at the will of the conqueror. Christians also had to abstain from any public displays of their faith in the presence of Muslims, as such an act was considered blasphemy under Islamic law and punishable by death penalty. In order to escape and free themselves from the Muslim rule, many Christians fled to the Christian kingdoms in Northern Spain; others took refuge in the monasteries of Sierras. Still others converted in order to gain economic and political favors or to avoid the jizya tax, and thus the number of Christians in Al-Andalus shrank eventually to small proportions.[9]

In 786 AD the Muslim caliph of Al-Andalus, Abd al-Rahman I, began the construction of the great mosque of Córdoba (now a Christian cathedral), and compelled many Christians to take part in the preparation of the site and foundations. The executions of the martyrs caused tension not only between Muslims and Christians, but within the entire Christian community of Al-Andalus. Abd al-Rahman II at first ordered the arrest and detention of the clerical leadership of the local Christian community of Córdoba. As the civil disobedience seemed to subside, the Christian clergymen were released in November 851 AD. When several months later there was a new wave of protests, the emir turned again to the Christian leaders as the ones most capable of controlling the Christian community. Instead of imprisoning them, he ordered them to convene a council in Córdoba to review the matter and develop some strategy for dealing with the dissidents internally. He gave the bishops a choice: Christians could stop the public dissent or face harassment, loss of jobs, and economic hardship. Upon the death of Abd-al Rahman II in 852 AD, his son and successor Muhammad I removed all Christian officials from their palace appointments. Reccafred, bishop of Córdoba, urged compromise with the Muslim authorities. The closures of monasteries where some of the martyrs had lived occurred towards the middle of the 9th century. The Christian monk and Latinist scholar Eulogius, who has been venerated as a saint from the 9th century onwards, viewed the bishop as siding with Muslim authorities against the Iberian Christians.[2] [3] Eulogius encouraged the public declarations of the Christian faith as a way to reinforce the identity and cohesion of the Christian community in Al-Andalus and protest against the Islamic laws that Christians saw as unjust towards their rights and religion.[2] [3] He composed tractates and martyrologies, of which a single manuscript, containing his Documentum martyriale, the three books of his Memoriale sanctorum, and his Liber apologeticus martyrum was preserved in Oviedo, in the Christian Kingdom of Asturias, located in the far Northwestern coast of Hispania. The relics of Eulogius were moved there in 884 AD.[10]

Causes

Wolf points out that it is important to distinguish between the motivations of the individual martyrs, and those of Eulogius and Alvarus in writing the Memoriale. Jessica A. Coope says that while it would be wrong to ascribe a single motive to all forty-eight, she suggests that it reflects a protest against the process of assimilation. They demonstrated a determination to assert Christian identity. Wolf maintains that it is necessary to view the actions of the martyrs in the context of the penitential aspect of 9th century Iberian Christianity. "Martyrdom was in fact a perfect solution... Not only did it epitomize self-abnegation and separation from the world, but it guaranteed that there would be no opportunity to sin again."

The executions

The forty-eight Christians (mostly monks) were martyred in Córdoba, between the years 850 AD and 859 AD, being decapitated for announcing their apostasy publicly and blaspheming against the prophet

The detailed Acta of these martyrs were ascribed to the aptly named "Eulogius" ("blessing"), who was one of the last two to die. Although most of the martyrs of Córdoba were Hispanic, either Baeto-Roman or Visigothic, one name is from Septimania, another Arab or Berber, and another of indeterminate nationality. There were also connections with the Orthodox East: one of the martyrs was Syrian, another an Arab or Greek monk from Palestine, and two others had distinctive Greek names.[10] The Greek element recalls the Byzantine interlude of power in southernmost Hispania Baetica: representatives of the Byzantine Empire had been invited to help settle a Visigothic dynastic struggle, but had stayed on, as a hoped-for spearhead to a "Reconquest" of the far west envisaged by emperor Justinian I.

List of martyrs

The following list is from Kenneth Wolf's Christian Martyrs in Muslim Spain.

Charged with blasphemy

Charged with apostasy

Sabigotho, Felix and Liliosa – July 27 c. 852. Martyrs in Córdoba under Emir Abd ar-Rahman II. Aurelius and Felix, with their wives, Natalia and Liliosa, were Iberians whose family backgrounds, although religiously mixed, legally required them to profess Islam. After given four days to recant, they were condemned as apostates for revealing their previously secret Christian faith. The deacon George was a monk from Palestine who was arrested along with the two couples. Though offered a pardon as a foreigner, he chose to denounce Islam again and die with the others.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sahner, Christian C. . 2020 . 2018 . Christian Martyrs under Islam: Religious Violence and the Making of the Muslim World . Introduction: Christian Martyrs under Islam . https://books.google.com/books?id=TZqzDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA1 . . . 1–28 . 978-0-691-17910-0 . 2017956010.
  2. Fierro . Maribel . January 2008 . Decapitation of Christians and Muslims in the Medieval Iberian Peninsula: Narratives, Images, Contemporary Perceptions . . 45 . 2: Al-Andalus and Its Legacies . . . 137–164 . 10.2307/complitstudies.45.2.0137 . 1528-4212 . 25659647 . 161217907. free .
  3. Trombley . Frank R. . Winter 1996 . The Martyrs of Córdoba: Community and Family Conflict in an Age of Mass Conversion (review) . . 4 . 4 . . . 581–582 . 10.1353/earl.1996.0079 . 1086-3184 . 170001371 .
  4. Graves . Coburn V. . November 1964 . The Martyrs of Cordoba, 850–859. A Study of the Sources (review) . . 44 . 4 . . . 644 . 10.1215/00182168-44.4.644 . free . 1527-1900 . 227325750.
  5. Web site: Claiming Martyrdom in the Episode of The Martyrs of Córdoba . Duque . Adriano . . 14 July 2010 . 17 February 2022 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20210729224402/https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/230634912.pdf . 29 July 2021.
  6. Book: Schirrmacher . Christine . 2020 . Chapter 7: Leaving Islam . https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004331471/BP000008.xml?body=pdf-43180 . Enstedt . Daniel . Larsson . Göran . Mantsinen . Teemu T. . Handbook of Leaving Religion . . . Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion . 18 . 10.1163/9789004331471_008 . free . 81–95 . 978-90-04-33092-4 . 1874-6691.
  7. Book: Stillman, Norman A. . Norman Stillman . 1998 . 1979 . The Jews of Arab Lands: A History and Source Book . Under the New Order . https://books.google.com/books?id=bFN2ismyhEYC&pg=PA22 . . . 22–28 . 978-0-8276-0198-7.
  8. Book: Runciman, Steven . Steven Runciman . 1987 . 1951 . The Reign of Antichrist . https://books.google.com/books?id=uDj9sNezWzEC&pg=PA20 . . . . 20–37 . 978-0-521-34770-9.
  9. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04359b.htm Osuna, Manuel Garcia. "Cordova." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. 18 Feb. 2014
  10. Web site: Orthodoxengland.btinternet.co.uk . https://archive.today/20120526223654/http://www.orthodoxengland.btinternet.co.uk/oecordob.htm . 2012-05-26 . dead .
  11. [Frederick George Holweck|Holweck, F. G.]
  12. Οἱ Ἅγιοι Ἰσίδωρος, Ἠλίας καὶ Παῦλος οἱ Μάρτυρες. 30 Απριλίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  13. Book: Walsh, Michael J.. A New Dictionary of Saints: East and West. 2007. Liturgical Press. 978-0-8146-3186-7. Collegeville, Minnesota. 74. 124159625.
  14. Book: Haines, Charles Reginald. Christianity and Islam in Spain (756-1031). Kegan Paul, Trench & Company. 1889. London.
  15. http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/oespain.htm Orthodox Europe: the saints of Spain