The provisions of the edict are known …

Years: 303 - 303
July

The provisions of the edict are known and enforced in Palestine by March or April (just before Easter), and is in use by local officials in North Africa by May or June.

The earliest martyr at Caesarea is executed on June 7; the edict is in force at Cirta from May 19.

The first edict is the sole legally binding edict in the West.

In the East, however, progressively harsher legislation is devised.

In the summer of 303, following a series of rebellions in Melitene (Malatya, Turkey) and Syria, a second edict is published, ordering the arrest and imprisonment of all bishops and priests.

In the judgment of historian Roger Rees, there was no logical necessity for this second edict; that Diocletian issued one indicates that he was either unaware the first edict was being carried out, or that he felt it was not working as quickly as he needed it to.

Following the publication of the second edict, prisons begin to fill—the underdeveloped prison system of the time cannot handle the deacons, lectors, priests, bishops, and exorcists forced upon them.

Eusebius writes that the edict netted so many priests that ordinary criminals were crowded out, and had to be released.

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