Epistle to the Philippians
Smyrna · 155
69 CE–155 CE · Rome
Polycarp (c. 69–155 AD) was bishop of Smyrna in Asia Minor and a crucial link between the apostolic generation and the later church, reportedly a disciple of the Apostle John according to Irenaeus of Lyons. He corresponded with Ignatius of Antioch and wrote an epistle to the Philippians that survives, though some scholars hold it to be a composite of two letters. Late in life he traveled to Rome to confer with Bishop Anicetus on the Quartodeciman controversy over the date of Easter. He was martyred at Smyrna at an advanced age; the eyewitness account known as the Martyrdom of Polycarp is among the earliest Christian martyrdom narratives.
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Polycarp served as bishop of Smyrna for decades and was martyred there — fire was attempted first, then he was stabbed — around 155 AD, according to the Martyrdom of Polycarp; Eusebius places the martyrdom later under Marcus Aurelius (c. 166–167), but modern scholarship largely follows the earlier date supported by the proconsulship of Statius Quadratus.
Under Roman imperial rule in the province of Asia, Smyrna hosted one of the seven churches addressed in the Book of Revelation (c. 95 CE), where John of Patmos commended its community for enduring poverty and persecution without wavering — a congregation shaped by daily pressure from the city's prominent imperial cult.
Theon Smyrnaeus, Marcus Antonius Polemon, Aelius Aristides, Galen, Irenaeus of Lyons, Ignatius of Antioch
Smyrna · 155
Smyrna · 155