Life and Martyrdom
According to his vita, Mamas was born to Theodotus and Rufina, themselves commemorated as martyrs alongside their son on September 2, while they were confined in prison for their Christian faith. Following the death of his parents in captivity, the boy was raised by Ammia, a wealthy Christian widow.
Tradition holds that he was silent for five years after birth and first spoke the word "Mama," which gave him his name. As a youth he lived in the mountains as a shepherd, gaining a reputation for spiritual power and a remarkable gentleness toward wild animals.
At roughly fifteen he was arrested for his faith. The sources record that he survived a succession of torments — beating with rods, being weighted with lead and cast into the sea, burning in a furnace, and exposure to wild beasts — before dying after being pierced through his inward parts with an iron spear or trident.
The Lion
The most distinctive element of Mamas's tradition is his association with a lion, which became his enduring iconographic attribute; the earliest depictions show him riding a lion striding to the right with its tail upright.
A Cypriot tradition describes his capture: when local authorities sought to tax him and dispatched soldiers, Mamas — encountering a lion attacking a lamb — rescued the lamb and rode the lion back into town, and was granted exemption from the tax in recognition of his bravery. Other accounts simply relate that a lion from the fields remained with him as a companion.
Veneration and Legacy
Ammia is said to have built a church in Mamas's honor, where Gregory the Theologian delivered a panegyric in 383, and Basil the Great testified to the saint's intercessory power for healing; both Cappadocian fathers composed encomiums praising him.
His cult, originally centered at Caesarea, spread widely. By the second half of the fifth century a suburb of Constantinople was already named for him; its growth may correlate with an influx of Isaurian soldiers in the fifth and sixth centuries. In 469 the emperor Leo I took refuge there during a conflagration in the capital and subsequently built a palace, harbor, hippodrome, and church dedicated to the saint at the site (the modern Beşiktaş). A French pilgrim later remarked that "no other Martyr's name resounded as much among the people" of Constantinople.
He remains an especially popular saint in Cyprus, where tradition places his hermitage in a cave near Morphou (Güzelyurt), and he is invoked there as an intercessor for those in danger. His liturgical hymns ask that he "crush the invisible and fierce enemies."
Relics & Shrines
A monastery honoring Saint Mamas was founded near the Xylokerkos Gate of Constantinople (the modern Belgrad Kapı); one tradition attributes its founding to Farasmanis, a chambermaid of Justinian. Saint Symeon the New Theologian later served as its abbot for twenty-five years. The monastery was rebuilt during the reign of Isaac II Angelos (1185–1195), at which time the saint's skull was placed there, having been brought to Constantinople by a monk in 1067 following the fall of Caesarea to the Seljuks.
His skull was subsequently transferred in 1209 to Langres, France, where it is preserved in a silver reliquary; the Cathédrale Saint-Mammès in Langres is dedicated to him and he is the chief patron of the diocese. A head relic is also claimed by the parish church of Santa María Magdalena in Zaragoza, Spain.
By tradition, the emperor Julian the Apostate and his brother Gallus each attempted to build a church to the saint, and Julian's portion repeatedly collapsed.