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St. Symphorosa
Martyred with her seven sons at Tibur (Tivoli) towards the end of the reign
of Emperor Hadrian (117-138). The story of their martyrdom is told in an old
Passio, the reliability of which is seriously questioned by many modern
hagiologists. According to this Passio, Symphorosa was a lady living at Tibur,
the widow of the tribune, Getulius, who had previously been martyred by Emperor
Hadrian at Gabii, now Torri, a town of the Sabines. When Hadrian had completed
his costly palace at Tibur and began its dedication by offering sacrifices, he
received the following response from the gods: The widow Symphorosa and her
sons torment us daily by invoking their God. If she and her sons offer sacrifice,
we promise to give you all that you ask for.
When all the emperor's attempts to
induce Symphorosa and her sons to sacrifice to the gods were unsuccessful, he
ordered her to be brought to the Temple of Hercules, where, after various
tortures, she was thrown into the river (Anio), with a heavy rock fastened to
her neck. Her brother Eugenius, who was a member of the council of Tibur, buried
her in the outskirts of the city. The next day the emperor summoned her seven
sons, and being equally unsuccessful in his attempts to make them sacrifice to
the gods, he ordered them to be tied to seven stakes which had been erected for
the purpose round the Temple of Hercules. Each of them suffered a different kind
of martyrdom. Crescens was pierced through the throat, Julian through the breast,
Nemesius through the heart, Primitivus was wounded at the navel, Justinus was
pierced through the back, Stracteus (Stacteus, Estacteus) was wounded at the
side, and Eugenius was cleft in two parts from top to bottom. Their bodies were
thrown into a deep ditch at a place which the pagan priests afterwards called
Ad septem Biothanatos.
(The Greek word biodanatos, or rather biaiodanatos, was
employed for self-murderers and, by the pagans, applied to Christians who
suffered martyrdom). Hereupon the persecution ceased for one year and six months,
(during which period the bodies of the martyrs were buried on the Via Tiburtina,
eight or nine miles from Rome.
It is difficult to ascertain how much reliability these Acts possess. The
opinion that they were written by Julius Africanus (third century) has been
almost universally rejected, since neither Eusebius nor any other historian of
that period makes the least allusion to any Acts of Roman or Italian martyrs
composed by this African writer. The Hieronymian Martyrology,
which was
compiled by an unknown author in the second half of the fifth century,
commemorates St. Symphorosa and her sons on 18 July, but here the names of her
sons are entirely different from those given in the Acts. One of the manuscripts
(codex Bernensis) of this martyrology states that the Acts of these martyrs are
extant: quorum gesta habentur
(Martyrologium Hieronymianum,
edited by De
Rossi and Duchesne in Acta SS. Novembris II, I, 93). Since here the names of
Symphorosa's sons are different from those of the Acts which we possess, there
must have existed some other Gesta
to which the author of the martyrology
refers. In the same martyrology, on 27 June, are commemorated seven
brother-martyrs, whose names are identical with those which our Acts assign to
the sons of Symphorosa. It is probable that the author of the Acts, guided by
the tradition that Symphorosa had seven sons who were martyred, made her the
mother of the seven martyrs, whom he found mentioned in the martyrology on 27
June. If this is the case, we may infer, provided Symphorosa had seven sons at
all, that their names were not those mentioned in the Acts. Whether they were
those assigned to them in the Hieronymian Martyrology
will also remain
doubtful as long as we have no certainty that the Gesta
to which the author
refers are authentic. Some hagiologists consider the seven sons of Symphorosa,
like those of Felicitas (q.v.), a mere adaptation of the seven sons of the
Maccabean Mother. In the seventeenth century, Bosio discovered the ruins of a
basilica at the place popularly called le sette fratte
(the seven brothers),
on the Via Tiburtina, nine miles from Rome. (Bosio, Roma Sotteranea,
105-9).
The Acts and the Hieronymian Martyrology
agree in designating this spot as the
tomb of Symphorosa and her sons. Further discoveries, that leave no room for
doubt that the basilica was built over their tomb, were made by Stevenson. The
remains were transferred to the Church of S. Angelo is Pescaria at Rome by
Stephen (II) III in 752. A sarcophagus was found here in 1610, bearing the
inscription: Hic requiescunt corpora SS. Martyrum Simforosae, viri sui Zotici
(Getulii) et Filiorum ejus a Stephano Papa translata.
The Diocese of Tivoli
honours them as patrons and the whole Church celebrates their feast 18 July.
ALLARD, Hist. des Persecutions pendant les deux premiers siecles (Paris, 1903), 276-92; ACHELIS, Die Martyrologien, ihre Geschichte u. ihr Wert (Berlin, 1900), 159-62; STEVENSON, Scoperta delta basilica di santa Sinforosa e dei suoi sette figli al nono miglio della via Tiburtina, I (Rome, 1878), 502-5; BUTLER, Lives of the Saints, 18 July; Acta SS. Julii IV, 350-9.
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