By Fr. George Dorbarakis
1. Saint Basiliskos lived during the reign of Emperor Maximian (3rd century) and came from the village of Choumalia in Amaseia of Pontus. He was the nephew of the Holy Great Martyr Theodore the Recruit. Although at first he was tortured together with the fellow soldiers of Saint Theodore, Eutropios and Kleonikos, those two were perfected through martyrdom for Christ, while Basiliskos himself was left in prison. But because he had a great desire to complete the course of martyrdom himself, he prayed to God for this, and he was granted a vision of the Lord, Who commanded him to go and bid farewell to his family, and then, when he arrived at Comana, he would receive the martyr’s crown.
The Saint was therefore released from prison by the soldiers, and together with them he went to his home. After bidding farewell to his mother and brothers, exhorting them to remain steadfast in the faith of Christ, he stayed with them for a short time. But the governor Agrippas, having learned of his release, sent other soldiers, who arrested him. They bound him and put sandals on his feet that had nails driven through them, and thus they led him by force along the road to Comana — the place where his martyrdom awaited him. Arriving at the village of the Daknoi, they were hosted in the house of a woman named Traiane, while the Saint was tied to a dry plane tree with his hands bound behind him. The Saint prayed, and the plane tree sprouted and put forth many leaves. Moreover, a spring of water burst forth from its roots, at the very place where the Saint had been tied. When the soldiers and the woman saw this miracle, they declared that they believed in Christ and loosed the Saint from his bonds.








