Baucalis
Baucalis, also called Boukolou,
Coptic Church tradition holds that the city of Alexandria was evangelized for the first time by St. Mark. The first Christians there built a church for Mark at Baucalis. According to tradition, St. Mark was attacked by a crowd of pagans on Easter Sunday 68 AD in the Church at Baucalis, dragged through the streets and martyred. His followers were able to save his body and place it in a tomb under the altar of the church.[5] The Acts of St. Mark report that the church of Baucalis was "built in the area beside the sea under the crags called 'Boukolou'." There is some indication that the church was built on the site of an earlier shrine to Serapis.[6]
Coptic tradition also tells that his body was still at Baucalis as late as 311 AD, when
Pope Peter of Alexandria was martyred at the same site.[7] According to the Martyrdom of St. Peter (Acta or Passio Sancti Petri), the tribunes who would later have him beheaded allowed him to first visit the tomb of St. Mark at "the place called Boukolou." He prayed to St. Mark for his intercession, that he might be martyred joyously. After exiting the tomb, the tribunes beheaded him in an area just south of Mark's martyrium.[2]
Later, Patriarchs of Alexandria were elected at the Church of Baucalis, as the oldest church in the city.[8] The original church of Baucalis was abandoned around the fifth century, and its exact historic location is unknown. Some speculation centers on the area around the current location of the 1920s era College of St. Mark.[2]
Eusebius of Caesarea.[9]
References
- ISBN 0-8018-8541-8. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-567-02610-1, retrieved 2013-01-30
- ISBN 978-0-300-11555-0, retrieved 2013-01-30
- JSTOR 1583805
- ISBN 978-0-307-42394-8, retrieved 2013-01-30
- ISBN 978-3-11-022471-9, retrieved 2013-01-30
- ISBN 9789772014965, retrieved 2013-01-30
- JSTOR 1508784
- ^ CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Arius Retrieved 17 January 2013.