Hieromartyr Unknown

Hieromartyr Vitalius Bishop of Ravenna

Also known as Vitalius of Ravenna

A bishop of Ravenna venerated as a martyr; few details of his life are preserved.

Feast Day
July 23
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Vitalius, Bishop of Ravenna

Life

Saint Vitalius (Vitalis) of Ravenna is venerated in the Orthodox calendar as a hieromartyr and bishop of Ravenna, a city in the Flaminia region of Italy, commemorated on July 23 together with Hieromartyr Apollinaris, who is traditionally counted among the earliest bishops of that see. Almost nothing of his life is preserved: the Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion records his title and feast but supplies no biography, noting only that no information is available.

What little the liturgical tradition relates connects him with the early Christian community of Ravenna and with the cluster of martyrs honored alongside him there. The historicity of a separate 'Bishop Vitalis' of Ravenna is uncertain, and the surviving accounts are intertwined with those of the famous martyr Vitalis associated with the city; the entry is therefore best treated as an honest commemoration rather than a documented life, and the dataset's standing caveat that pre-schism Western and lesser-known saints require source and clergy review applies here.

Contributions & Legacy

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Commemoration and Associated Martyrs

Vitalius is commemorated on July 23 alongside Apollinaris, the two being listed together in the Orthodox synaxis as bishops of Ravenna. The tradition associated with this commemoration honors Vitalis 'from time immemorial' together with the martyrs Valeria, Gervasius, Protasius, and Ursicinus, and connects his name with the building of a major basilica in the city.

Ravenna venerates a Saint Vitalis as its principal patron, and the celebrated octagonal Basilica of San Vitale stands on the purported site of his martyrdom. In the better-documented historical accounts this Vitalis appears not as a bishop but as a layman — described as a wealthy citizen of Milan and perhaps a soldier — who by legend accompanied the judge Paulinus to Ravenna, encouraged the martyr Ursicinus at his execution, and was himself put to death by being cast into a deep pit and covered with stones and earth. That figure, husband of Valeria and traditionally father of Gervasius and Protasius, is commemorated on April 28, and scholars note that the narrative is partly legendary. The relationship between that martyr and the 'Bishop of Ravenna' honored on July 23 is not clearly resolved in the available sources.

Notes

Pre-schism Western saint; OCA gives no detail. Honest stub.

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