Martyr 4th century

Virgin Martyr Theodora and Martyr Didymus the Soldier

died c. 304, Alexandria

Also known as Theodora of Alexandria · Didymus

When the virgin Theodora was condemned to a house of shame at Alexandria for confessing Christ, the soldier Didymus entered in disguise and changed clothes with her that she might escape; discovered, the two were beheaded together under Diocletian.

Feast Day
May 27
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Theodora the Virgin and Didymus the Soldier, of Alexandria

Life

Theodora and Didymus were martyrs of Alexandria who suffered during the persecution under the emperor Diocletian, traditionally dated to the year 303 or 304. Theodora, by tradition a noblewoman of the city, was brought before the prefect Eustratius and confessed herself a Christian, declaring that she had dedicated herself to God and intended to remain a virgin for the name of Christ.

According to the account preserved in their acts and retold by later writers, the prefect threatened to send Theodora to a brothel if she would not renounce her faith. A Christian soldier named Didymus entered the place in disguise, exchanged his military garb for her clothing, and so enabled her to escape. When the deception was discovered, Didymus was condemned to death; Theodora came forward to share his sentence, and the two were executed together. They are commemorated jointly in the Eastern Orthodox Church on May 27.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 303-304 Trial before the prefect Eustratius Standing trial at Alexandria during the Diocletianic persecution, Theodora confessed herself a Christian and, asked why she had not married, said she had consecrated herself to God as a virgin for the name of Christ. The prefect Eustratius imprisoned her for three days and threatened to send her to a house of shame if she persisted.
  2. c. 303-304 The exchange of clothing When the threat was carried out, the soldier Didymus, himself a Christian, entered in his military attire, drove off those who had gathered, and exchanged clothes with Theodora so that she could leave disguised as a soldier while he remained behind in her place.
  3. c. 303-304 Martyrdom Didymus disclosed how he had freed the virgin and was sentenced to death. Theodora appeared at the place of execution declaring that she wished to die with him, and the prefect ordered both put to death. Theodora was the first to bow her neck beneath the sword, and Didymus followed; their bodies were afterward burned.

Contributions & Legacy

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Sources and Legacy

The earliest narrative of the two martyrs survives in a set of acts dated to the fourth century, and the episode was recounted by Saint Ambrose of Milan in his writing on virginity, which helped spread their story in the Western Church.

The account later attracted literary and musical treatments, including a tragedy by Pierre Corneille (1645) that transferred the setting to Antioch, a prose romance by Robert Boyle published in 1687, and George Frideric Handel's oratorio Theodora (1749). A closely parallel story of a soldier rescuing a condemned virgin by exchanging clothes is told of the martyrs Antonina and Alexander.

Notes

Named pair commemorated as one.

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