The martyrdom of Fructuosis, Eulogius, and Augurius. Fructuosis was the bishop of Tarragon, martyred with his deacons in 259 AD under the persecutions of Valerian. The abbey of Moissac had extensive land holdings in the diocese of Toulouse, where there was a church dedicated to Fructuosis (Favereau, p. 165).
The narrative is non-Biblical.

Inscribed: Governor Emile, Lyre musician (?) : Martyrs in flames, Deacon Augurius, Deacon Eulogius : Augurius, Fructuosis, Eulogius : alpha and omega

East View: The Governor Emile
Inscribed: [E]MILIANVS PRE[SES] IDCEN

South View: The martyrs are consigned to the fire.
Inscribed: MARTIRES IN FLAMIS AVGVRIVS DIACO[NUS] EVLOGIVS DI[ACONUS]

West View: Apotheosis of the martyrs.
Inscribed: A ‡

North View: The future martyrs preaching.
inscribed: AVGVRIVS FRVCTV EVLOGIVS OSVS EPI SCOPVS

DETAILS

East view: detail


Related capitals:

Martyr Capitals:
Capital 1: John the Baptist Capital 6: Stephen
Capital 20: Peter and Paul
Capital 24: Lawrence
Capital 35: Saturnin (Sernin)
Non-Biblical Capitals:
Capital 20: Martyrdom of Peter and Paul
Capital 24: Martyrdom of Lawrence
Capital 35: Martyrdom of Sernin
Capital 42: Miracles of Benedict
Capital 49: Crusaders before Jerusalem
Capital 54: Miracles of Martin
Capital 75: Ascension of Alexander

Inscriptions based on Robert Favereau, Jean Michaud, and Bernadette Leplant, Corpus des Inscriptions de la France Medievale. Vol. 8, Ariege, Haute-Garonne, Hautes-Pyrenees, Tarn-et-Garonne. Paris: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1982.