New Martyr Modern

New Martyr Angelos of Chios

died December 3, 1813

Also known as Angelos

A new martyr of Chios commemorated by the Church, of whom no detailed life survives.

Feast Day
December 3
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Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy New Martyr Angelos (Angelis) of Chios

Life

Angelos, also called Angelis, was a physician of Argos in the Peloponnese who suffered martyrdom on the island of Chios on December 3, 1813, during the period of Ottoman rule over the Greek lands. He is numbered among the New Martyrs, the Orthodox Christians who confessed the faith and died at the hands of the Ottoman authorities in the centuries after the fall of Constantinople. He is commemorated on December 3.

The Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion preserves only his name, title, and feast day, giving no detailed life. The fuller account of his life is transmitted in the Greek neomartyrological tradition, where he is remembered as the physician of Argos. According to that tradition he was pious, quiet, and obedient in character, and was moved to seek martyrdom after an encounter that tested his faith publicly.

By the account of the Greek tradition, Angelis fell into a religious dispute with a French traveller who mocked the Christian faith. He challenged the man to a public contest, agreeing to face him armed only with a stick while the Frenchman bore full arms; when his opponent withdrew, Angelis was reckoned the victor. Stirred by this, he abandoned his medical practice and closed his shop to devote himself wholly to God.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 1813 The contest with the Frenchman After a public dispute, Angelis prevails when the Frenchman withdraws, and he leaves his medical practice.
  2. Saturday of Lazarus, 1813 Lapse and banishment In a state of intoxication he professes Islam and is banished to Chios, where he repents.
  3. December 3, 1813 Martyrdom on Chios After confessing Christ at a customs house, he is beaten, imprisoned in the Castle of Chios, and beheaded.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Apostasy and Repentance

The tradition relates that on the Saturday of Lazarus in 1813, in a state of intoxication and following an incident at Nafplion, Angelis professed conversion to Islam. The sources present this lapse as a fall from which he afterward bitterly repented; for it the authorities banished him to the island of Chios.

On Chios, the account states, he wept daily in repentance and resolved to confess Christ openly. He is said to have deliberately violated Muslim observances, and at length entered a customs house and declared himself a Christian before the soldiers and officials gathered there, reckoning his earlier denial as a thing to be undone by open confession.

Martyrdom

For his confession the Turkish authorities seized Angelis, beat him severely, and imprisoned him in chains in the Castle of Chios. He was beheaded on December 3, 1813. The tradition relates that his remains were cast into the sea.

His account is recorded in the Greek collections of the lives of the New Martyrs under Ottoman rule; it is included, among other places, in Nomikos Michael Vaporis's compilation 'Witnesses for Christ.'

Notes

Honest stub; OCA gives no details.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints