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Mark the Evangelist

Mark the Evangelist

?68 CE · Cyrene

John Mark, companion of Peter and Paul and cousin of Barnabas (Col 4:10), is traditionally identified as the author of the second Gospel and a central figure in the earliest generation of Christian mission. He appears in Acts as a co-worker of Barnabas and Paul, accompanied them on the first missionary journey, and later traveled separately with Barnabas to Cyprus after a dispute with Paul (Acts 15:39). Papias, preserved by Eusebius, identifies Mark as Peter's interpreter in Rome and the one who committed Peter's preaching to writing as the Gospel of Mark. Eusebius further records that Mark founded the church in Alexandria and served as its first bishop, making him the founding figure of African Christianity. Paul's later request in 2 Timothy 4:11 for Mark to be brought to him attests to a subsequent reconciliation. Mark's martyrdom in Alexandria is reported by late patristic sources and is the bedrock of the Coptic Church's identity; the traditional date is c. 68 CE, though Eusebius's notice of his successor Annianus taking office in Nero's eighth year (~61–62 CE) introduces some ambiguity.

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Stop 1 of 610–25Born

Cyrene

What they did here

Coptic tradition and African patristic memory consistently hold that Mark was born in Cyrene (Pentapolis, Libya) to a Jewish family that later migrated to Jerusalem; this is traditional and inferential rather than documentary, as the NT does not name his birthplace.

About Cyrene

Cyrene was a Greek colony in Cyrenaica, in modern eastern Libya near Shahhat, founded by settlers from Thera in the seventh century BC. It was the birthplace of Aristippus, a follower of Socrates and founder of the hedonistic Cyrenaic school of philosophy, which took its name from the city.

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In the same place & time

Sages whose lives overlapped with Mark the Evangelist’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.

The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Mark the Evangelist’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.