Papylus, a martyr
Papylus (Papirius or Papyrius, as Rufinus, and Ado after
him, write), April 13. In 1881 Aubé brought some new facts to light respecting this
martyr from the Greek MSS. in the Bibliothèque Nationale. Papylus is mentioned
by Eusebius (H. E. iv. 15) at the end of his account of Polycarp's martyrdom.
Ruinart (p. 27), in his preface to the Acts of Polycarp, says that according to
Eusebius Papylus and his companions Carpus and Agathonice suffered about the same
time as Polycarp. This is a mistake of the Bollandist Henschenius, arising out of
the Latin version of Eusebius, which inserts the words "sub id tempus," which have
no equivalent in the Greek original. The Acts of Papylus contained in Metaphrastes
assign his martyrdom to the Decian persecution. These Acts, however, Aubé thinks
utterly worthless. In the Revue archéologique, Dec. 1881, p. 350, he published
a Greek MS. containing Acts which he thinks may be those seen by Eusebius. Aubé
seems to agree in placing the martyrdom of Papylus in the Decian persecution. But
Lightfoot points out (Ignatius, i. 625) that in the Acts mention is made
of emperors in the plural, thence he infers that this rather points to the reign
of M. Aurelius or of Severus.
[G.T.S.]