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Sts.
Cyprian and Justina
Christians
of Antioch who suffered martyrdom during the persecution of Diocletian
at Nicomedia, 26 September, 304, the date in September being afterwards
made the day of their feast. Cyprian was a heathen magician of Antioch
who had dealing with demons. By their aid he sought to bring St. Justina,
a Christian virgin, to ruin; but she foiled the threefold attacks of the
devils by the sign of the cross. Brought to despair Cyprian made the
sign of the cross himself and in this way was freed from the toils of
Satan. He was received into the Church, was made pre-eminent by
miraculous gifts, and became in succession deacon, priest, and finally
bishop, while Justina became the head of a convent. During the
Diocletian persecution both were seized and taken to Damascus where they
were shockingly tortured. As their faith never wavered they were brought
before Diocletian at Nicomedia, where at his command they were beheaded
on the bank of the river Gallus. The same fate befell a Christian,
Theoctistus, who had come to Cyprian and had embraced him. After the
bodies of the saints had lain unburied for six days they were taken by
Christian sailors to Rome where they were interred on the estate of a
noble lady named Rufina and later were entombed in Constantine's
basilica. This is the outline of the legend or allegory which is found,
adorned with diffuse descriptions and dialogues, in the unreliable
"Symeon Metaphrastes", and was made the subject of a poem by
the Empress Eudocia II. The story, however, must have arisen as early as
the fourth century, for it is mentioned both by St. Gregory Nazianzen
and Prudentius; both, nevertheless, have confounded our Cyprian with St.
Cyprian of Carthage, a mistake often repeated. It is certain that no
Bishop of Antioch bore the name of Cyprian. The attempt has been made to
find in Cyprian a mystical prototype of the Faust legend: Calderon took
the story as the basis of a drama: "El magico prodigioso". The
legend is given in Greek and Latin in Acta SS. September, VII. Ancient
Syriac and Ethiopic versions of it have been published within the last
few years.
Other
links to Cyprian of Antioch:
The
Life of Cyprian and Justina --from the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of
Australia
The
Death of Cyprian and Justina--from
the Greek Orthodox Information Center
Biografia de São Cipriano
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