Death and Relics
The tradition places Hyacinth's death at Rome, early in the second century, under Trajan. His relics are recorded as having been translated afterward to his native Caesarea. In the Western Church a body identified as his is venerated in the abbey church of the former Cistercian Abbey of Fuerstenfeld in Bavaria, where a reliquary is labelled 'S. HYACINTHUS M.'; the circumstances and date of that body's arrival there are not securely known.
Alongside Hyacinth the synaxarion for July 3 commemorates Saints Diomedes, Eulampius, Asclepiodotus, and Golinduc as having suffered with him. He is venerated as a martyr by both the Eastern Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Churches; on Crete he is regarded by local custom as a patron of those in love.