Seven Robbers
The Seven Robbers (Latin: [Septem latrones] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) were martyrs on the island of Corcyra (Corfu) in the 2nd century AD. Their names were Saturninus, Insischolus (Jakischolus), Faustianus, Januarius, Marsalius, Euphrasius, and Mammius.
Seven Robbers | |
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Martyrs | |
Died | 2nd century Corfu |
Honored in | Eastern Orthodox Church; Roman Catholic Church |
Feast | April 27, April 28 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics), April 29, April 20 (Catholic Calendar) |
Life
editThe Greek menologia (calendars of the saints) inform us that Sts. Jason and Sosipater, who had been instructed in Christianity by the Apostles or by Jesus himself, came to the island of Corcyra to preach Christianity. After making numerous conversions they were cast into a dungeon where the above-named seven robbers were imprisoned. They succeeded in converting the robbers who were then taken outside the city and martyred by being cast into cauldrons that were filled with seething oil and pitch.
Commemoration
editSome Greek menologies mention them on April 27, others, on April 29. In the Roman martyrology they are commemorated on April 20.
References
edit- Attribution
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2058: attempt to index a boolean value. That entry was written by Michael Ott.
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