Historical Context
Ariadne's vita sets her in Prymnessus, a city of Phrygia in Asia Minor, during a persecution associated with an edict attributed to the emperors Hadrian and Antoninus Pius. As a slave in the household of Tertullus, she occupied the lowest social rank, which gives her refusal to conform a particular weight in the tradition.
By her account she declined to participate in the rituals marking the birthday of Tertullus's son. The matter was referred to the provincial governor, named Gordios, before whom both Ariadne and Tertullus were summoned. Tertullus was acquitted, while Ariadne was condemned. The vita relates that the people of Prymnessus intervened to secure her three days for repentance, during which she fled into the nearby mountains and, pursued by the Roman authorities, was delivered when the earth opened and received her.