Sergius and Bacchus
 for refusing to offer sacrifices to pagan deities, having been appointed to high military positions despite their secret adherence to Christianity.[1][2] According to hagiographical accounts, Bacchus was flogged to death in Barbalissos, after which Sergius, refusing to recant, was beheaded in nearby Rusafa (Rasafa).[1][3] These events, dated around 303 AD amid the Diocletianic Persecution, are preserved primarily through early martyrological traditions and the Passion of Sergius and Bacchus, a Syriac text emphasizing their companionship and steadfast faith, though direct historical corroboration beyond ecclesiastical records remains sparse.[4] Venerated as military saints and patrons of soldiers in the Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Oriental Orthodox Churches, their cult spread widely, inspiring dedications such as the sixth-century Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus in Constantinople, constructed by Emperor Justinian I as a precursor to Hagia Sophia.[5][6]