[1] A tomb containing his bones was found together with the remains of Saint Pantaleon and Bruno the Great when construction of Saint Pantaleon's Church began in 966 on the spot of an earlier Benedictine monastery.
In c. 1170–1180, a richly decorated shrine was built to house the relics, which remains in the church to this date.
[1][2][3] His relics were translated to Church of Saint Mary, Our Lady of Peace in the Schnurgasse in Cologne in 1820.
According to the inscription on his original tomb, he died a martyr's death in the porch of the monastery church on 10 June.
The body in the tomb bore traces of torture and a violent death.