The reasons for the Diocletian persecution, which …

Years: 304 - 304

The reasons for the Diocletian persecution, which had begun in February 303, are uncertain, but various explanations have been advanced.

One is the possible influence of Galerius, a fanatic follower of the traditional Roman religion.

Another is the desire to restore complete unity, without tolerance of a foreign cult that is seen as separatist and of men who are forming a kind of state within the state; yet another is the influence of anti-Christian philosophers such as Porphyry and governors such as Hierocles on the scholarly class and on the imperial court.

Other explanations posit the fear of an alienation of rebellious armies from emperor worship; or perhaps the disturbances provoked by the Christians themselves, who are agitated by doctrinal controversies.

At any rate, some or all of these factors have led Diocletian to publish the four edicts of 303-304, promising all the while that he will not spill blood.

His vow goes unheeded, however, and the persecutions spread through the empire with an extreme violence that does not succeed in annihilating Christianity but causes the faith of the martyrs to blaze forth instead.

In one instance, the Christian twin brothers Cosmas and Damia, who reportedly practice medicine without accepting payment and hence become known as the "silverless ones," are supposedly martyred in Syria during the persecutions.

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