Martinian and Processus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saints Martinian and Processus
Image:Stprocessusmartinian.jpg
Martyrs
Born unknown, Rome
Died unknown, Rome
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church (limited to local calendars since 1969); Eastern Orthodox Church
Major shrine St. Peter's Basilica, Rome
Feast July 2
Attributes N/A

Saints Martinian and Processus (Italian: Martiniano and Processo) were Christian martyrs of ancient Rome. The dates of these martyrs are unknown, as well as the circumstances of their deaths.

Contents

[edit] Burial

The Martyrologium Hieronymianum (ed. G. B. de Rossi-L. Duchesne, 85) gives under July 2 their names. The Berne manuscript of the Martyrology also gives their burial-place, viz. at the second milestone of the Via Aurelia, or at the catacombs of St. Agatha on the Via Aurelia. The old catalogues of the burial places of the Roman martyrs likewise mention the graves of both these saints on this road (De Rossi, "Roma sotterranea", I, 182-3). Other sources state simply that they were buried in the cemetery of Damasus.

[edit] Legend

A legend makes them imperial soldiers assigned as the warders of Saint Peter and Saint Paul in the Mamertine Prison (Richard Lipsius, Apokryphe Apostelgeschichten und Apostellegenden, II, Brunswick, 1887, 92, 105 sqq., 110 sq.). It cannot be shown how the legend came to give them this identification.

The legend states that they were converted and baptized by Peter after a spring flowed miraculously in the prison, and the two wardens were baptized in the miraculous waters. They were martyred along with Paul after being arrested and tortured. They were beheaded by order of the emperor Nero.

After their martyrdom, a woman called Lucina is said to have buried them in her own cemetery. However, Delehaye writes that the cemetery of Damasus was their resting-place.

[edit] Veneration

They were publicly venerated in Rome from the fourth or perhaps the third century. They were buried in the cemetery of Damasus. In the fourth century a church was built over their tomb. At this church, St. Gregory the Great preached a homily on their feast day, "in which he referred to the presence of their bodies, to the cures of the sick, to the harassment of perjurers, and the cure of demoniacs there."[1] This church no longer exists. They are mentioned by Bede, and their feast was thus known to have been celebrated in early medieval England.

Pope Paschal I (817-24) translated the bones of the two martyrs to a chapel in the old basilica of St. Peter. They still rest under the altar dedicated to them in the right (south) transept of the present St. Peter's Basilica. Their relics, originating in their apostolic era cemetery along the Via Aurelia, after being moved to various other locations, were placed in 1605 in a porphyry urn under the altar at St. Peter's, which is flanked by two antique yellow columns. The hemi-sphere has three roundels with scenes from the life of St. Paul.

Their feast, confined to local calendars since 1969, is celebrated on July 2.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^  David Hugh Farmer, The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1978), 337.

[edit] Sources

  • David Hugh Farmer, The Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1978), 337.

[edit] External links

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.