Sabas, a Gothic martyr
Sabas (2), a Gothic martyr under Athanaric, king of the Goths towards
the end of 4th cent. His Acts seem genuine, and contain many interesting details
of Gothic life in the lands bordering on the Danube. Thus village life, with its
head men and communal responsibility, appears in c. ii. After various tortures he
was drowned in the Musaeus, which flows into the Danube. The Acts are in the form
of an epistle from the Gothic church to that of Cappadocia, whither Soranus, who
was "dux Scythiae," had sent his relics (Ruinart. Acta Sincera, p. 670;
AA. SS. Boll. Apr. ii. 88; Ceill. iv. 278; C. A. A. Scott, Ulfilas, Apostle
of the Goths, 1885, p. 80). The topography of the region where he suffered is
exhaustively treated in the Sitzungsberichte der Wiener Akad. 1881–1882,
t. xcix. pp. 437–492, by Prof. Tomaschek, of Graz University.
[G.T.S.]