Life and Martyrdom
Michael Paknanas lived in Athens under Ottoman rule and earned his living as a gardener, a humble trade that provided only a modest income. The accounts of his life present him as a young man of simple and guileless character.
By the synaxarion's account, his sufferings began when guards at the city gates, driven by envy, falsely charged him with smuggling weapons to the armatoloi, the irregular Greek fighters of the period. He was imprisoned and, over a span of about thirty days, subjected to various torments and to repeated demands that he convert to Islam. Neither his youth nor the severity of the pressure moved him to renounce Christ.
When his accusers saw that they could not break his resolve, he was condemned to death. On July 9, 1771, he was beheaded; he was about eighteen years old. The date of his execution is attested by an inscription associated with the Temple of Olympian Zeus in Athens.