The answer is found in Fox's Book of Martyrs. It can be found online easily through a search engine.
i don't no. prolly a lot.good question!
None, because it's all a fairy tale.
Please be more specific in your question. There were many early church fathers and Christian martyrs.
Yes, if it was a Celtic Christian saint, of he is. Christianity came to the British isles in the Celtic Era and there were many Celtic Christian Martyrs, who are called as saints.
There are many that have died for their belief in God.
That number might not be possible to determine. Not all who die for Christ's sake are recognized or made note of as a public matter. Voice of the Martyrs discusses this question in an article listed here in link below:
A martyr was known as a witness, but later in history it has became known as a person who has proved his/her faith in Christ by undergoing a violent death. Stephen in Acts 6:8-15 through Acts 7:1-60 (specifically 7:54-60) was the church's first known martyr.
The third-century Church Father, Origen, writing (Contra Celsum, 3.8) of the total of Christian martyrs up to his own time, in Rome and elsewhere, states that there were not many - and that it was easy to count them.From the history of Eusebius, Edward Gibbon (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) establishes that only nine bishops were punished with death. He says that no more than ninety-two Christians were martyred in Palestine and that the total number of Christian martyrs in the entire empire never exceeded two thousand.
The First Century was comprised of, as with all other centuries, 100 years.
Scholars have difficulty in determining exactly when various works were written, so long in the past. Even some of the New Testament canon is now regarded as actually written in the second century. This includes the pseudo-Pauline Pastoral epistles (1 Timothy, 2 Timothy and Titus), John's Gospel and possibly Luke's Gospel.The Gospel of Thomas is widley believed to have been written in the first century, and may have been one of the earliest Christian writings. The hypothetical 'Q' document was clearly written in the first century, as it was used by the authors of Matthew and Luke as a source for many of the sayings attributed to Jesus.Some say that Hermas' Pastor, The Didacheand The Letter of Barnabas are first century Christian works. Many modern scholars date 1 Clement in the 90s because of the evidence of Eusebius, the church historian who wrote in the fourth century, but some rely on internal evidence to place it a little later.
It was finished in AD 80 so it is very old and many things have happened to it. During the middle ages it was used as a fort and from the 15th century it was used as a source for building materials for Rome's palaces. People took the iron fittings and used them as well. By the 1700's it was a ruin and since 1750 it has been dedicated to Christian martyrs killed there. Conservation began in the 19th century and is ongoing.
There are many female Muslim martyrs or Shaheeda. The first martyr of Islam was a woman, Sumayyah bint Khayyat.
2002
Christians faced far fewer persecutions than later tradition asserts: the third-century Church Father, Origen, writing of the total of Christian martyrs up to his own time, in Rome and elsewhere, states that there were not many - and that it was easy to count them. (Contra Celsum, 3.8).The greatest persecutions, and the greatest use of torture, came during the Middle Ages, when Christian leaders sought to eliminate all traces of the former pagan beliefs.