Saint Marcus and Saint Marcellianus
Martyrs
(† 286)
Saint
Marcus and Saint Marcellianus were twin brothers of an illustrious
family in Rome, who had been converted to the Faith in their youth and
were honorably married.
When
Diocletian ascended the imperial throne in 284, the pagans raised
persecutions; the brothers were then thrown into prison and condemned to
be beheaded. Their friends obtained a delay of the execution for thirty
days, that they might prevail on them to worship the false gods.
Tranquillinus and Martia, their afflicted pagan parents, accompanied by
their sons' wives and their little babes, endeavored to move them by the
most tender entreaties and tears. But Saint Sebastian, an officer of
the emperor's household, arriving in Rome soon after their confinement,
daily visited and encouraged them.
The
issue of the conferences was the happy conversion of the father,
mother, and wives, also of Nicostratus, the public stenographer, and
soon afterwards of Chromatius, the judge, who set the Saints at liberty
and abdicating the magistracy, retired into the country. Marcus and
Marcellianus were concealed by a Christian officer of the imperial
household, in his apartments in the palace, but they were betrayed by an
apostate and reimprisoned. Fabian, a judge who had succeeded
Chromatius, condemned them to be bound to two pillars, their feet nailed
to them. In this posture they remained a day and a night, and on the
following day were stabbed with lances. Their martyrdom occurred in the
year 286. Their tomb and that of their father, Saint Tranquillinus, was
found in Rome, in 1782, in the church of Saint Cosmas and Saint Damian,
adjoining that of the martyred pope, Saint Felix II. They are honored
particularly in Spain, where the city of Badajoz escaped destruction by
their intercession.
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