Historical Context
Helen lived in Sinope, an ancient city of Pontus on the Black Sea coast of Asia Minor, during the 18th century under Ottoman rule. In this period Greek Orthodox communities maintained their faith and language under pressure, and education was often conducted in secret schools. According to her life, her uncle taught at one such clandestine Greek school in Sinope, where she received her instruction in Orthodoxy, Greek, and history.
Her account belongs to the broader category of the New Martyrs venerated by the Orthodox Church for confessing the faith and refusing apostasy under Ottoman rule. The community elders associated with the Greek School of Sinope are said to have intervened in her case, persuading her father to surrender her in order to avert a threatened massacre of the local Christians.
Relics & Shrines
According to her life, after her body was recovered from the sea, her remains were divided: her body was reportedly sent to Russia, while her head remained in Sinope's Church of the Panagia, where it was venerated. Tradition holds that the relic was reported to cure ailments, headaches especially.
Following the 1924 Greek-Turkish population exchange, a man named Christos Kafaropoulos is said to have carried her skull to Greece. It is now preserved and venerated in the Church of the Holy Great-Martyr Marina in the Ano Toumba quarter of Thessaloniki. The place in the sea where her relics were recovered became known as Agiasmata, associated by tradition with fresh water of miraculous properties.
Miracles & Traditions
Traditional Accounts: According to her life, the governor's repeated attempts to violate her were each repelled by an unseen force, including on an occasion when she recited the Six Psalms and other prayers. After her martyrdom her body, sewn into a sack and cast into the sea, is said to have floated beneath a heavenly light until it sank at a place called Geai (Gaei); Greek sailors, drawn by a light shining from the seafloor, then recovered her remains, with the nail still embedded in her skull.
Traditional Accounts: The site of her relics' recovery, known as Agiasmata, is associated by tradition with fresh water of miraculous properties, and her skull relic in Thessaloniki is reported in tradition to continue producing fragrance and miracles. A monk named Gerasimos of Mount Athos composed the church service (akolouthia) in her honor. No formal glorification date is recorded in the sources consulted; she appears to have been venerated by local tradition from the time of her martyrdom.