These “proto-martyrs” of Rome were the first Christians persecuted en masse by the Emperor Nero in the year 64, before the martyrdom of Saints Peter and Paul.
Nero
was widely believed to have caused the fire that burned down much of
Rome in the same year.
He blamed the fire on the Christians and put
them to death, many by crucifixion, being feeding to the wild animals in
the circus, or by being tied to posts and lit up as human torches.
These
martyrs were called the “Disciples of the Apostles” and their firmness
in the face of their gruesome deaths were a powerful testimony that led
to many conversions in the early Roman Church.