Martyr 3rd century

Martyr Potamiaena of Alexandria

died early 3rd century

Also known as Potamiani · Potamiana

A Christian slave-woman of Alexandria who, guarding her purity and her faith, was tormented and killed with boiling pitch under Maximian; the soldier Basilides who pitied her was soon converted and martyred himself.

Feast Day
June 7
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Potamiaena of Alexandria

Life

Potamiaena was a young Christian woman of Alexandria in Egypt who was put to death for her faith during the persecutions of the early third century. She is remembered above all for enduring severe torture in defense of her chastity and her confession of Christ, and for the prolonged manner of her execution. The Orthodox tradition received by the synaxarion describes her as a slave-woman who guarded both her purity and her faith. She is commemorated on June 7.

The earliest and fullest account of her martyrdom is preserved by the historian Eusebius of Caesarea in his Church History, who sets her death in the persecution at Alexandria during the time the magistrate Aquila governed the city. Eusebius relates that, after she had been subjected to torments throughout her body and had refused the demands made of her, she was condemned to death, and that burning pitch was poured little by little over various parts of her body, from the soles of her feet to the crown of her head. According to his account her mother, Marcella, suffered alongside her in the same manner.

Bound up with Potamiaena's passion is the conversion of the soldier Basilides, who was charged with leading her to execution. As the crowd pressed in to insult and mock her, Basilides drove back her tormentors and treated her with pity and kindness. In gratitude she promised that after her departure she would entreat her Lord on his behalf and that he would soon be rewarded for the kindness he had shown her. Not long afterward Basilides openly confessed himself a Christian; he was imprisoned, baptized, and beheaded, and is venerated as a martyr in his own right.

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The Account in Eusebius

Potamiaena's story survives chiefly because Eusebius gathered it into Book 6 of his Church History, among the martyrs connected with the catechetical school of Alexandria in the time of Origen. Eusebius praises her for the many struggles she endured for the preservation of her chastity and virginity, and reports that she was finally handed over to a cruel death after refusing the judge Aquila.

The detail that has fixed her in memory is the means of her death: rather than a swift execution, burning pitch was applied gradually over her body, beginning at her feet and rising to her head. The same source records that her mother Marcella died with her. Because Eusebius wrote within living memory of the events and drew on the testimony surrounding Origen's circle, his narrative is treated as the primary witness to her martyrdom.

The Conversion of Basilides

The soldier Basilides forms the second half of the tradition. Detailed to conduct Potamiaena to the place of execution, he shielded her from the abuse of the mob and showed her unexpected compassion. Moved by this, she pledged to remember him before God once she had departed this life.

By the received account, three nights after her death Potamiaena appeared to Basilides in a vision and placed a crown upon his head. Soon after, when his fellow soldiers required him to swear an oath, he declared that he could not, because he was a Christian. He confessed his faith before the authorities, was imprisoned, received baptism, and was beheaded. His commemoration is joined to hers in the early martyrologies.

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