They are venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church and more specifically in the Church of Cyprus as martyrs on 19 May. The story of their martyrdom is partially recounted in a hagiographic text dating from the 1270s called the Narratio of the Thirteen Martyrs.
The event and the execution of the thirteen monks are known in part through a text written around 1270,[1] called the "Narratio of the Thirteen Martyrs",[2] as well as through letters exchanged between the Patriarch of ConstantinopleGermanus II and Pope Gregory IX, where they discussed the event.[2] Later Dominican sources also mentioned the events, notably by criticizing the thirteen monks.[3]
Apart from these sources, there are other relatively numerous occurrences in the literature of the period. The event and the martyrdom are considered historical by historians, although hagiographic accounts may sometimes be questioned.[4]
They were aided by the forced exile of a large majority of Orthodox bishops from the island, usually leaving only the Orthodox monasteries in the forefront, among which the Machairas monastery and the Kantara monastery stood out, to resist against royal and papal authority.[5]
Gregory IX was known as a particularly uncompromising and violent pope; in 1231, the same year as the death of the monks, he issued the bull "Excommunicatus", confirming that the punishment for heretics was death.[3]
Pope Gregory IX took measures to convert the island to Catholicism; he ordered that no position be given to anyone who did not recognize Latin practices.[5] Subsequently, he sent a Dominican emissary to the island, Andrew, who engaged in a policy of persecutions targeting the Orthodox population.[5][7]
Between 1231 and 1233, a series of persecutions befell the Orthodox clergy of Cyprus.[2] In particular, thirteen monks from the Kantara Monastery were persecuted for their refusal to use unleavened bread for the Eucharist.[2][3][8][9] This element indicates that the main point of conflict was the liturgical question, primarily. They underwent an inquisition trial for heresy and were then imprisoned for three years[1][10] by order of the high-court of the Kingdom, composed of Frankishbarons and Roman Catholic clergy.[11]
The monks were subsequently tortured,[3] at least once in public.[1] One of them died during imprisonment and was not executed.[1]
Since they weren't changing their minds,Gregory IX directly instructed[3][12] the Roman Catholic archbishop of the island, Eustorgus, to consider them as heretics,[1] they were then killed[2][13][14][15] by being burned alive.[5][10][16] The execution took place in May 1231.[3] Their bones were then mixed with those of animals to avoid producing relics.[12]
Monasteries became the centers of Orthodox resistance on the island, and tensions remained violent and strained between the two communities until 1260 when Pope Alexander IV issued the Bulla Cypria. This sought a position of coexistence, although heavily favoring the Roman Catholic Church,[21] and helped alleviate tensions to some extent.[5]
The fact that certain Western Catholic researchers, such as Louis de Mas Latrie, avoided mentioning the event in their studies on the history of Cyprus, has been criticized in more recent studies, for example, by A. Nicolaou-Konnari.[22]
^ abcdefSmith, Damian J., ed. (2023). Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241): power and authority. Church, faith and culture in the Medieval West. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. ISBN978-90-485-5460-7.
^Bádenas, Pedro (1988), Balard, Michel; Ducellier, Alain (eds.), "Le choc des mentalités pendant l'occupation Franque de Chypre", Le partage du monde : Échanges et colonisation dans la Méditerranée médiévale, Byzantina Sorbonensia (in French), Paris: Éditions de la Sorbonne, pp. 335–344, ISBN979-10-351-0598-3, archived from the original on 2023-10-27, retrieved 2024-02-02
^Jeffreys, Elizabeth; Haarer, Fiona K., eds. (2006). Proceedings of the 21st International Congress of Byzantine Studies: London 21 - 26 August 2006. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN978-0-7546-5740-8.
^Theofanous, Konstantinos (2020-05-19). "Οι 13 μάρτυρες της Καντάρας". Εκκλησία της Κύπρου (in Greek). Archived from the original on 2024-02-02. Retrieved 2024-02-02.