Hieromartyr Byzantine

Hieromartyr Marcellus of Trier

Also known as Marcellus, Bishop of Trier

A bishop of Trier venerated as a martyr

Feast Day
September 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Marcellus, Bishop of Trier

Life

Marcellus of Trier is an early bishop and martyr commemorated on September 4. He is known almost entirely from a single line in the Roman Martyrology, which records for that day, "At Treves, St. Marcellus, bishop and martyr." Treves is the older form of Trier (the ancient Augusta Treverorum on the Moselle), one of the principal Roman cities of the Rhineland and an early center of Christianity in the German lands. Beyond this bare notice, no narrative of his life or martyrdom survives.

Because the surviving record is so brief, the details of Marcellus's episcopate cannot be reconstructed with confidence. The standard accounts of the early bishops of Trier name a succession beginning with Eucharius, Valerius, and Maternus, followed by later figures such as Agritius, Maximin, and Paulinus; a bishop named Marcellus does not appear among these traditionally listed names, and his place within the see's history is therefore uncertain.

Marcellus of Trier should not be confused with another martyr of the same name commemorated on the very same day, September 4: the Marcellus venerated at Chalon-sur-Saone in Gaul, traditionally a Christian of Lyon who fled the persecution of 177 and was put to death the following year. The two are distinct commemorations — one located at Treves and the other at Chalon — and only the Gallic figure carries a developed legend. The carrying of the same name and feast day by two saints in neighboring regions is a recognized source of confusion in the calendars.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Sources and Identity

The whole of the documentary tradition for Marcellus of Trier rests on the September 4 entry of the Roman Martyrology, where he is named simply as bishop and martyr at Treves. No account of his episcopate, the manner of his death, or the persecution under which he suffered has come down, and his name is absent from the commonly cited lists of the bishops of Trier. He belongs, in consequence, to the large class of early martyrs whose veneration is securely attested while their history is effectively lost.

As with all entries of this kind, the bare martyrology notice is the limit of what can be responsibly asserted. The most that the calendar affirms is that a bishop named Marcellus was venerated at Trier as a martyr; the title Hieromartyr reflects this combination of episcopal rank and martyrdom.

Sources: Roman Martyrology