Martyr 3rd century

Martyr Quadratus and Companions at Corinth

died c. 251

Also known as Codratus · Cyprian · Dionysius · Anectus · Paul · Crescens

Quadratus was born near Corinth to a Christian mother who fled to the mountains during persecution. Living as a hermit and healer, he and his companions were arrested under the Decian persecution, dragged through the city, and beheaded for confessing Christ.

Feast Day
March 10
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Quadratus and Those With Him at Corinth

Life

Quadratus (also rendered Codratus) was a third-century martyr of Corinth, commemorated together with his companions on March 10. According to the synaxarion, he was born during a time of persecution to a Christian mother who had fled the city for the mountains, and after her death he was raised in the wilderness. He later became a physician and, with a small circle of fellow Christians, was arrested and put to death under the persecution of the emperor Decius (249–251).

The tradition surrounding his infancy is recounted with overtly miraculous detail: his mother, named Rufina in the sources, fled Corinth during persecution, gave birth to him in the mountains, and died soon afterward, leaving the infant to be sustained—so the account relates—by a sweet dew that fell into his mouth from a cloud. Growing to maturity, Quadratus studied grammar and medicine and was reckoned successful in the physician's art, while spending much of his time in solitude devoted to prayer.

Around him gathered a group of fellow Christians who came to him for instruction; the sources name them as Cyprian, Dionysius, Anectus, Paul, and Crescens, with some lists adding a second Dionysius. When the prefect Jason was sent to Corinth to compel Christians to apostatize, Quadratus—described as the eldest—spoke on behalf of the group and refused to deny the faith. The synaxarion relates that, when none of them could be persuaded to renounce Christ, they were bound to chariots and dragged through the city as the crowd hurled stones, and were finally beheaded by the sword.

Timeline 1 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 251 Martyrdom at Corinth Quadratus and his companions are arrested under the persecution of Decius, tortured by the prefect Jason, and beheaded after refusing to deny Christ.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Martyrdom under Decius

The accounts place the martyrdom during the reign of the emperor Decius, conventionally dated to 251. The prefect Jason, dispatched to Corinth to enforce the imperial edicts against Christians, subjected the company to torture but, according to the tradition, was unable to break their confession. Quadratus is presented as the spokesman who strengthened the others to stand firm.

The synaxarion describes successive attempts at execution—dragging the martyrs behind chariots through the streets amid a stone-throwing crowd—before they were condemned to death by beheading. Broader martyrologies for March 10 attach to this commemoration a longer list of names associated with Corinthian and related sufferings, but the core company venerated with Quadratus is the small group of his companions.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints; en.wikipedia.org