Historical Context
The seven martyrs are described in the sources as natives of Italy who had come to Dyrrachium as refugees fleeing persecution. Dyrrachium was a major Roman city on the Adriatic coast, the western terminus of the Via Egnatia, the great Roman road that ran on toward Thessalonica and Constantinople. Christian tradition holds that the church there was founded by the Apostle Paul during his preaching in Illyria and Epirus, and by the time of the Trajanic persecutions (98–117) the city held a well-established Christian community.
Their confession arose directly from the martyrdom of Bishop Astius (Asteios) of Dyrrachium. The sources record that Astius, who had succeeded Saint Caesarius as bishop, was arrested under the Roman governor and, after being beaten, smeared with honey and exposed to bees and hornets, was crucified. The seven Italians, beholding his crucifixion, openly praised the courage and firmness of the holy confessor — and this public expression of faith led to their own arrest.