Maximilian of Tebessa
🗓️ Mar 12th
Mandatory Fun:
For God and Country (in that order), page 67
David Woods has translated BHL 5813
Butler’s Lives of the Saints, Vol. III. See below.
Butler (1866)
HE was the son of Victor, a Christian soldier in Numidia. According to the law which obliged the sons of soldiers to serve in the army at the age of twenty-one years, his measure was taken, that he might be enrolled in the troops, and he was found to be of due stature, being five Roman feet and ten inches high, 1 that is, about five feet and a half of our measure. But Maximilian refused to receive the mark, which was a print on the hand, and a leaden collar about the neck, on which were engraved the name and motto of the emperor. His plea was, that in the Roman army superstitions, contrary to the Christian faith, were often practised, with which he could not defile his soul. Being condemned by the proconsul to lose his head, he met death with joy in the year 296. See his acts in Ruinart. 1
Note 1. See Tr. sur la Milice Romaine, t. 1.