Cosmas (1) and Damianus, silverless martyrs
Cosmas (1) and Damianus, brothers, physicians, "silverless" martyrs.
They became types of a class, the ἀνάργυροι,
"silverless" martyrs, i.e. physicians who took no fees, but went about curing
people gratis, and claiming as their reward that those whom they benefited should
believe in Christ. They were certainly not earlier than the last quarter of the
3rd cent., and the legends of martyrs of that time, whose fame is known only by
popular tradition, seem in many cases to succeed naturally to the place of those
heathen myths that were slowest to die. For Hercules, Christopher; for Apollo, Sebastian;
for Diana, Ursula; for Proserpine, Agnes. Cosmas and Damian take the place of Aesculapius,
in whose story heathenism made the nearest approach to Christianity. The Greeks
distinguished three pairs of these brothers. (1) July 1, in the time of Carinus;
(2) Oct. 27, Arabs, with their brothers, Anthimus, Leontius, and Euprepius, martyred
under Diocletian; (3) Nov. 1, sons of Theodote. (Menol.) For the legends
connected with them see D. C. B. (4-vol. ed.). The names were early inserted
in the Canon of the Mass.
[E.B.B.]