Synetus (also given as Synesius) was a third-century Roman martyr who served as a reader in the Church at Rome. His name is traditionally derived from a Greek word meaning "man of reason." The surviving accounts agree that he confessed Christ openly during a time of persecution and was put to death by beheading.
Details of his life are sparse, as is common for the obscure martyrs of the early Roman Church. He is commemorated in the Orthodox calendar on December 12.
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3rd centuryReader in the Roman ChurchSynetus served as a reader in the Church at Rome. Sources place his service in the period associated with Pope Sixtus (257-258).
c. 270-275MartyrdomFor refusing to sacrifice to idols and for his confession of Christ, he was tortured and beheaded. OrthodoxWiki dates his martyrdom to 270-275, during the reign of the emperor Aurelian; the accounts do not name the emperor with full precision.
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Sources and Uncertainty
The accounts of Synetus are brief and not fully consistent on chronology. The Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion notes his service as a reader under Pope Sixtus (257-258) but does not name the emperor under whom he suffered. OrthodoxWiki dates his martyrdom to 270-275, the reign of Aurelian. These notices preserve only his office, his manner of death, and the approximate period of his witness.