Martyr 2nd century

Martyr Laodicius the Prison-Keeper

Also known as Laodikios of Heraclea

The keeper of the prison who, beholding the divine help given to St Glyceria, himself believed in Christ and was beheaded.

Feast Day
May 13
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Laodicius the Keeper of the Prison

Life

Laodicius is venerated as a martyr of the second century, commemorated on May 13 together with the Virgin Martyr Glyceria of Heraclea. By the synaxarion's account he was the keeper of the prison in which Glyceria was confined after she was tortured for confessing Christ during the persecution under the emperor Antoninus (138-161). Beholding the divine help given to the imprisoned maiden, he himself came to believe in Christ and was beheaded for his confession.

Almost nothing is recorded of Laodicius apart from his role in Glyceria's passion. He belongs to a recurring figure in the early martyr accounts: the official charged with guarding a confessor who, witnessing the saint's steadfastness and the help she received, is himself converted and shares her death. His commemoration is kept on the same day as Glyceria's, and the sources treat the two saints as a single act of remembrance.