In the 6th century BC, when
Croesus's half-brother
Pantaleon failed to seize and hold the throne of the
Lydian Empire, one of his supporters was captured. According to the description given by Herodotus, Croesus tortured the life out of his captive by having him "hauled over a comb". Combing continued to be used as a means of torture during the
persecution of early Christians in the Roman Empire. The
Acts of St. Blaise, a
Greek text describing the 3rd-century
Armenian bishop Saint Blaise, recount how he was captured by the governor of
Cappadocia and beaten, combed, and beheaded for not renouncing
Christianity. Eventually becoming a popular saint in
Medieval Europe and venerated as one of the
Fourteen Holy Helpers, he became the
patron saint of wool combers and even the general wool trade, due to the iron combs throughout his
iconography. St. Antonius of Beba, a martyr venerated in the
Coptic Orthodox Church, was also tortured with iron combs before being beheaded. St. Hilaria, another Coptic martyr, survived torture by combing and other sadistic methods before finally being
dismembered, beheaded, and thrown into a fire. == See also ==