Martyr 4th century

Virgin-Martyrs Ennatha Valentina, and Paula of Palestine

died c. 308, Caesarea in Palestine

Also known as Ennatha · Valentina · Paula of Caesarea

Three Christian virgins of Palestine who suffered scourging, fire, and beheading at Caesarea during the persecution of Maximinus in 308.

Feast Day
February 10
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Commemorated as

The Holy Virgin-Martyrs Ennatha, Valentina, and Paula of Palestine

Life

Ennatha, Valentina, and Paula were three Christian virgins of Palestine who were put to death at Caesarea during the persecution of the early fourth century, and who are commemorated together on February 10. The Orthodox tradition records that they suffered in the year 308, under the emperor Maximian (Galerius), when the governor Firmilian presided over the trials of Christians in the province.

According to the account, Ennatha came from the city of Gaza in the south of Palestine, while Valentina was a native of Caesarea and Paula came from the surrounding region of that city. Brought before the tribunal, each of the three refused to renounce her faith or offer sacrifice to the pagan gods, and all three were condemned to death. The events of the persecution at Caesarea in these years were recorded by the contemporary historian Eusebius of Caesarea, who was an eyewitness to the suffering of Christians in the province.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 305-311 Reign of Maximian (Galerius) The martyrdoms are placed within the persecution of Christians under the emperor Maximian (Galerius), during whose reign Firmilian governed Palestine.
  2. c. 308 Martyrdom at Caesarea Ennatha of Gaza, Valentina of Caesarea, and Paula of the region of Caesarea are tried before the governor Firmilian, refuse to sacrifice to the pagan gods, and are put to death after scourging, fire, and beheading.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Persecution at Caesarea

The tradition places the deaths of the three virgins in 308, during the persecution associated with the emperor Maximian (Galerius), whose reign is given as 305 to 311. The governor of Palestine at this time was Firmilian, before whom Christians of the province were brought to trial and pressed to demonstrate their loyalty to the state cult by offering sacrifice.

Caesarea, the Roman administrative capital of Palestine, was the setting for many of these trials. The historian Eusebius, himself a resident of Caesarea, documented the executions of this period, and the commemoration of Ennatha, Valentina, and Paula belongs to this body of accounts of the Palestinian martyrs.

The Three Martyrs

Ennatha, of Gaza, was the first of the three to be brought to trial. Before the governor Firmilian she openly declared herself a Christian; according to the account she was beaten, then suspended from a pillar and scourged, and was sentenced to be beheaded.

Valentina, a native of Caesarea, was accused of refusing to worship the gods and was led to a temple to offer sacrifice. The account relates that she instead hurled a stone at the sacrifice and turned her back on it. After being beaten, she was condemned to be beheaded together with Ennatha.

Paula, of the region of Caesarea, was brought to trial last and was subjected to many torments, which the account says she endured with patience and courage. Giving thanks before her death, she was put to death by the sword. The commemoration thus records that the three virgins suffered scourging, fire, and beheading before their deaths at Caesarea.

Sources and Tradition

The suffering of Christians at Caesarea in Palestine in this period is described by Eusebius of Caesarea, a contemporary and eyewitness, whose account is the principal historical witness to the martyrs of the province. Later Greek and Slavic liturgical books preserve the commemoration with some variation in names and details, and the surviving traditions differ in certain particulars of the three martyrs' origins and the manner of their deaths.

Notes

One commemoration of three named virgin-martyrs.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org)