Martyr 4th century

Virgin Martyr Pelagia of Tarsus

early 4th century (reposed c. 301-305)

Also known as Pelagia of Tarsus

A young Christian virgin of Tarsus in Cilicia who refused marriage to the emperor's son for the sake of Christ and was martyred under Diocletian.

Feast Day
May 4
Also Oct 7
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Virgin-Martyr Pelagia of Tarsus

Life

Pelagia of Tarsus was a young Christian woman of Tarsus in Cilicia, in southeastern Asia Minor, traditionally placed in the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian (284-305) and martyred in the early fourth century. She is venerated in the Orthodox Church as a virgin-martyr, and her memory is also kept in the Roman Catholic tradition.

According to her legend, Pelagia refused a marriage proposed by the emperor's son, declaring that she had consecrated her virginity to Christ; when she likewise rejected the emperor himself she was put to death by burning. Historians note that the elaborated narrative has little historical foundation and that the enduring core is the commemoration of a martyr named Pelagia at Tarsus.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. Late 3rd century Life at Tarsus Pelagia lived at Tarsus in Cilicia during the reign of the emperor Diocletian (284-305). She is remembered as a young Christian woman who had devoted herself to Christ.
  2. c. 301-305 Martyrdom By tradition Pelagia refused marriage and was condemned to death by fire. She is commemorated as a virgin-martyr who reposed in the early fourth century.
  3. Early 4th century Veneration of her relics Tradition holds that, after the legalization of Christianity, the emperor Constantine the Great built a church at the reputed site of her remains.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

The Account of Her Martyrdom

The surviving account of Pelagia is a hagiographical legend rather than a documented biography. As it is related, the son of the emperor Diocletian fell in love with Pelagia and sought to marry her. She refused, saying that she had sworn to preserve her virginity and was wedded to Christ; in despair, the emperor's son is said to have taken his own life.

Pelagia was then sent to Rome by her pagan mother. When Diocletian himself proposed marriage and was rejected, with Pelagia calling the emperor insane, he ordered her execution. By tradition she was burned to death, some accounts placing her death within a heated brazen bull. The narrative relates that as her flesh melted a fragrance of myrrh spread through the city, and that lions afterward guarded her remains from being devoured. For this reported fragrance she is counted among the myrrh-streaming saints.

Historical Note

Modern accounts observe that there is little historical basis for the embellished legend. In particular, Diocletian is recorded as having a daughter, Valeria, but no sons, which undercuts the central episode of the emperor's son. Scholars suggest the developed story grew up around the commemoration of a genuine historical martyr named Pelagia at Tarsus, whose memory the Church has preserved.

The dataset records her era as Pre-Nicene and her region of origin as Asia Minor, consistent with a martyrdom under the Diocletianic persecution in Cilicia.

Relics & Shrines

By tradition her relics were recovered and honored after the persecutions ended. Accounts associate the bishop Linus with the recovery of her remains, and report that Constantine the Great constructed a church at the reputed site of her burial.

Veneration

Pelagia is commemorated in the Eastern Orthodox Church on May 4 and on October 7 (October 8 in some calendars). She is also venerated in the Roman Catholic tradition, where her feast is kept on May 4.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints