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Home  »  Volume II: February  »  St. Nestor, Bishop and Martyr

Rev. Alban Butler (1711–73). Volume I: January. The Lives of the Saints. 1866.

February 27

St. Nestor, Bishop and Martyr

 
EPOLIUS, whom the emperor Decius had appointed governor of Lycia, Pamphylia, and Phrygia, sought to make his court to that prince by surpassing his colleagues in the rage and cruelty with which he persecuted the meek disciples of Christ. At that time Nestor, bishop of Sida in Pamphylia, (as Le Quien demonstrates, not of Perge, or of Mandis, or Madigis, as some by mistake affirm,) was distinguished in those parts for his zeal in propagating the faith, and for the sanctity of his life. His reputation reached the governor, who sent an Irenarch to apprehend him. The martyr was conducted to Perge, and there crucified, in imitation of the Redeemer of the world, whom he preached. His triumph happened in 250. His Latin Acts, given by the Bollandists, are to be corrected by those in Greek, found among the manuscript acts of saints, honoured by the Greeks in the month of February, in the king’s library at Paris, Cod. 2010, written in the tenth century.  1