Martyr 4th century

Martyrs Cantidius Cantidian, and Sibelius of Egypt

4th century

Also known as Cantidius · Cantidian · Sibelius · Sobel

Three Egyptian Christians who refused to deny Christ; two were stoned and the third was shot through with arrows.

Feast Day
August 5
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Cantidius, Cantidian, and Sibelius of Egypt

Life

Cantidius, Cantidian, and Sibelius were three Christians of Egypt who, according to Orthodox tradition, were put to death in the fourth century for refusing to renounce their faith in Christ. Cantidius and Cantidian, named as brothers, were killed by stoning, while Sibelius was shot through with arrows.

Almost nothing survives of their individual lives. The Orthodox sources that commemorate them preserve only their names, their Egyptian origin, the manner of their deaths, and the fact that they suffered as Christians. No birthplace, family background, specific city, or identity of the persecuting authority is recorded. They are venerated together as a single named group, commemorated on August 5 (August 18 on the Old Calendar).

Contributions & Legacy

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Martyrdom

The surviving accounts agree on the essentials: Cantidius and Cantidian were brothers who suffered death by stoning, and Sibelius (also recorded as Sobel or Soleb) was killed by being shot with bow and arrow. The sources state plainly that all three were executed because they were Christians who would not deny Christ.

Beyond the manner of their deaths, the hagiographic record is empty. The entries that name them are very short stubs, indicating that, while their memory was preserved in the liturgical calendar, no extended life or passion account was compiled or transmitted for them.

Historical Context

The commemoration places these martyrs in fourth-century Egypt, a province that endured some of the most severe persecution of Christians under the Roman Empire. The Diocletianic Persecution (303-313) fell especially heavily on Egypt and the Thebaid; under Maximinus Daza, who governed Egypt from 305, persecution intensified around 309 with mass executions. The historian Eusebius described the sheer number of martyrs in Egypt and the Thebaid as beyond cataloguing.

Stoning and execution by arrows, while less typical of formal Roman judicial procedure, appear in accounts of mob violence and summary killings of provincial Christians. The deaths of Cantidius, Cantidian, and Sibelius fit the broader pattern of Egyptian Christian martyrdom in this period, though no source ties them to a specific event, official, or locality.

Notes

Named group commemorated as one.

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