Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, heroes of a famous legend that, because it affirmed the resurrection of the dead, had a lasting popularity in all of Christendom and in Islam during the Middle Ages. According to the story, during the persecution of Christians (250 ce) under the Roman emperor Decius, seven (or eight in some versions) Christian soldiers were concealed near their native city of Ephesus in a cave to which the entry was later sealed. There, having protected themselves from being forced to do pagan sacrifices, they fell into a miraculous sleep. During the reign (408–450 ce) of the Eastern Roman emperor Theodosius II, the cave was reopened, and the Sleepers awoke. The emperor was moved by their miraculous presence and by their witness to their Christian doctrine of the body’s resurrection. Having explained the profound meaning of their experience, the Seven died, whereupon Theodosius ordered their remains to be richly enshrined, and he absolved all bishops who had been persecuted for believing in the Resurrection.
A pious romance of Christian apologetics, the legend is extant in several versions in a number of languages. Some scholars attribute a Greek account by Simeon Metaphrastes as the source of the legend. Other versions include a Latin account by St. Gregory of Tours and a Syriac version by Jacob of Serugh, from which Coptic and Georgian accounts likely arose. The story is also found in an Anglo-Norman poem and in an Old Norse fragment. Western tradition calls the Seven Sleepers Maximian, Malchus, Marcian, John, Denis, Serapion, and Constantine. Eastern tradition names them Maximilian, Jamblichus, Martin, John, Dionysius, Antonius, and Constantine. A version of the story is recounted in the Qurʾān’s 18th surah, eponymously called the “Surah of the Cave” (Sūrat al-kahf).
Their feast days are July 27 in the Roman Catholic Church (now suppressed) and August 2/4 and October 22/23 in the Eastern Orthodox Church.