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Sts. Nereus and Achilleus, Domitilla and Pancratius
The commemoration of these four Roman saints is made by the Church on 12 May,
in common, and all four are named in the Proper of the Mass as martyrs. The old
Roman lists, of the fifth century, and which passed over into the Martyrologium
Hiernoymianum, contain the names of the two martyrs Nereus and Achilleus, whose
grave was in the Catacomb of Domitilla on the Via Ardeatina; in the same
calendar was found the name of St. Pancratius, whose body rested in a catacomb
on the Via Aurelia. The notice in the more complete version given by the Berne
Codex, runs as follows: IIII id. Maii, Romae in coemeterio Praetextati natale
Nerei et Achillei fratrum, et natale sci. Pancrati via Aurelia miliario secundo
(On 12 May at Rome in the cemetery of Praetextatus [an evident error for
Domitilla] the natal day of Nereus and Achilleus, and the natal day of St.
Pancratius, on the Aurelian Way at the second milestone
; ed. de Rossi-Duchesne,
Acta SS., Nov., II, [59]). In the invocation of the Mass for their feast, in the
Sacramentarium Gelasianum
, the names of Nereus and Achilleus alone are
mentioned, and this is because only their invocation in the Mass was entered in
the collection, the feast of St. Pancratius being celebrated in the church built
over his grave on the Via Aurelia. In the Mass of his festival, the formula of
which is unknown to us, his name, without doubt, was alone mentioned. In the
fourth and following centuries there was celebrated on 12 May in both places, at
the grave of Saints Nereus and Achilleus on the Via Ardeatina, and at that of St.
Pancratius on the Via Aurelia, a special votive Mass. The Itineraries of the
graves of the Roman martyrs, written in the seventh century, are unanimous in
their indication of the resting-place of these saints (de Rossi, Roma
sotterranea
, I, 180-83). The church which was erected in the fourth century
over the grave of St. Pancratius, stands today in somewhat altered style. The
legend describing the martyrdom of the saint is of later origin, and not
reliable historically; it is probable that he was put to death in the
persecution of Valerian (257-58) or in that of Diocletian (304-06).
The church built over the grave of Sts. Nereus and Achilleus in the Via
Ardeatina, is of the latter part of the fourth century; it is a three-naved
basilica, and was discovered by de Rossi in the Catacomb of Domitilla. Amongst
the numerous objects found in the ruins were two pillars which had supported the
giborium ornamented with sculptures representing the death of the two saints by
decapitation; one of these pillars is perfectly preserved, and the name of
Achilleus is carved on it. There was also found a large fragment of a marble
slab, with an inscription composed by Pope Damasus, the text of which is
well-known from an ancient copy. This oldest historical mention of the two
saints (Weyman, Vier Epigramme des h. Papstes Damasus
, Munich, 1905; de Rossi,
Inscriptiones christianae
, II, 31; Ihm, Damasi epigrammata
, Leipzig, 1895,
12, no. 8) tells how Nereus and Achilleus as soldiers were obedient to the
tyrant, but suddenly being converted to Christianity, joyfully resigned their
commission, and did the martyr's death; as to the date of their glorious
confession we can make no inference. The acts of these martyrs, legendary even
to a romantic degree, have no historical value for their life and death; they
bring no fewer than thirteen different Roman martyrs into relation, amongst them
even Simon Magus, according to the apocryphal Petrine Acts, and place their
death in the end of the first and beginning of the second centuries. These Acts
were written in Greek and Latin; according to Achelis (see below) the Greek was
the original text, and written in Rome in the sixth century; Schaefer (see below)
on the other hand holds the Latin to have been the older version, and seeks to
prove that it emanated from the first half of the fifth century; so remote a
date is improbable, and the sixth century is to be preferred as the source of he
Acts. According to these legends Nereus and Achilleus were eunuchs and
chamberlains of Flavia Domitilla, a niece of the Emperor Domitian; with the
Christian virgin they had been banished to the island of Pontia, and later on
beheaded in Terracina. The graves of these two martyrs were on an estate of the
Lady Domitilla near the Via Ardeatina, close to that of St. Petronilla.
The author of this legend places the two saints quite differently from Pope Damasus, in his poem: as Nereus and Achilleus were buried in a very ancient part of the catacomb of Domitilla, built as far back as the beginning of the second century, we may conclude that they are among the most ancient martyrs of the Roman Church, and stand in very near relation to the Flavian family, of which Domitilla, the foundress of the catacomb, was a member. In the Epistle to the Romans, St. Paul mentions a Nereus with his sister, to whom he sends greetings (Rom., xvi, 15), perhaps even the martyr was a descendant of this disciple of the Apostle of the Gentiles. Owing to the purely legendary character of these Acts, we cannot use them as an argument to aid in the controversy as to whether there were two Christians of the name of Domitilla in the family of the Christian Flavian, or only one, the wife of the Consul Flavius Clemens (see FLAVIA DOMITILLA). As to other martyrs of he name Nereus, who are especially noted in the old martyrologies as martyrs of the faith in Africa, or as being natives of that country (e.g., in the Martyrologium Hieronymianum, 11 May, 15 or 16 October, 16 Nov.) though there is one of the name in the present Roman Martyrology under date of 16 Oct., nothing more is known.
On Sts. Nereus and Achilleus; Acta SS., May, III, 6-13; MOMBRITIUS, Sanctuarium, I, 238-40; II, 159 sqq., 201; Bibliotheca hagiographica latina, II, 883 sqq.; Bibliotheca hag. graeca, 2nd ed., 185; WIRTH, Acta SS. Nerei et Achillei (Leipzig, 1890); ACHELIS, Acta SS. Nerei et Achellei in Texte und Untersuchungen, XI, 2 (Leipzig, 1892); SCHAEFER, Die Akten der hl. Nereus und Achilleus in Romische Quartalschrift (1894), 89-119; DUFOURCQ, Les Gesta Martyrum Romains, I (Paris, 1900), 251-55, 305-07; URBAIN, Ein Martyrologium der christl. Gemeinde zu Rom (Leipzig, 1901), 143-44; ALLARD, Histoire des persecutions, I (2nd ed., Paris, 1892), 168 sq.; DE ROSSI in Bulletino di archeologia cristiana (874), 5 sqq., 68 sqq. (1875), 5 sqq.; MARUCCHI, Guide des catacombes romaines (Rome, 1903), 97 sq. On St. Pancratius: Acta SS., May, III, 21; Analecta Bollandiana, X, 53-56; DUFOURCQ, Gesta Martyrum Romains, I, 235- 57; MARUCCHI, Guide des catacombes romaines, 43-46.
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