Agathius Explained

Honorific Prefix:Saint
Acacius
Birth Date:late-3rd century
Death Date:~303
Feast Day:7 May (formerly 8 May); 16 January (translation of relics)
Venerated In:Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church[1]
Birth Place:Cappadocia
Death Place:Byzantium
Titles:Holy Helper, Martyr
Patronage:soldiers, Squillace, Guardavalle, invoked against headache
Major Shrine:Cathedral of Squillace, Italy[2]

Saint Acacius (Greek: Ἅγιος Ἀκάκιος; died 303), also known as Agathius of Byzantium, Achatius, or Agathonas to Christian tradition, was a Cappadocian Greek centurion of the imperial army, martyred around 304. A church existed in Constantinople associated with Acacius and possibly named after him: the Church of St Acacius.[3]

History

Agathius was arrested on charges for being a Christian by Tribune Firmus in Perinthus, Thrace, tortured and then brought to Byzantium where he was scourged and beheaded, being made a martyr because he would not renounce his Christian faith.

The date of his martyrdom is traditionally 8 May, when his feast was observed. It was later moved to 7 May.[4]

Veneration

His relics were relocated ca. 630 to a spring at Squillace, close by the Vivarium, the monastery founded in the previous century by Cassiodorus in the heel of Italy.[5] He was known in Squillace as San Agario. A relic of his arm was brought to Guardavalle in 1584 by the bishop of Squillace, Marcello Sirleto, hence Agathius' patronage of this city. Relics from Squillace were also brought to Cuenca and Ávila in Spain, where he is known as San Acato.[6]

St. Agathius is also venerated in Slovenia, where numerous churches and chapels are dedicated to him; this popular veneration goes back to the 16th century, when he was considered the patron saint of the fighters against the Ottoman Turks.[7] For the same reason he became popular among the Maniots, inhabitants of the Mani Peninsula in Greece, who took up his confrontation of the Pagan Roman authorities as a symbol of their own long lasting resistance of the Ottoman Empire's rule.

St. Achatius is one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers or Auxiliary Saints in Roman Catholic tradition.

References

  1. Ὁ Ἅγιος Ἀκάκιος ὁ Μάρτυρας ὁ κεντυρίων. 7 Μαΐου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  2. Web site: CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Squillace. www.newadvent.org.
  3. Woods. David. 2001. The Church of "St." Acacius at Constantinople. Vigiliae Christianae. 55. 2. 201–207. 10.2307/1584527. 1584527 . 0042-6032.
  4. Web site: Martyr Acacius the Centurion at Byzantium . 2024-08-16 . www.oca.org.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20110708132053/http://centreleonardboyle.com/otherlinks.html Barnish, Samuel J., "Select Abstracts"
  6. Web site: Sant' Agazio (Acacio) su santiebeati.it. Santiebeati.it.
  7. Web site: Koledar svetnikov - Ahacij in tovariši. www.druzina.si.

External links