Name and Scriptural Witness
In the canonical Gospels, Pilate's wife appears only once. Matthew 27:19 records that, as Pilate sat on the judgment seat, she sent to him saying that she had 'suffered many things' in a dream because of the righteous man on trial. Scripture does not name her.
The name by which she is known in tradition — Procula or Prokla — does not appear in the New Testament. It is supplied by later sources: the apocryphal Gospel of Nicodemus, which provided her name, and the chronicle of John Malalas. The fuller form 'Claudia Procula' is attested from the late fourth or early fifth century and was carried into Western tradition. Other variant names recorded for her include Procle, Longina, Livia, and Pilatessa.
Veneration and Tradition
The Eastern Orthodox Church venerates Pilate's wife as Saint Procla, keeping her feast on October 27; the Orthodox Church in America includes her among the saints. Eastern Christianity has generally regarded Pilate himself more favorably than the Western tradition did.
Apocryphal and traditional sources expand her brief Scriptural appearance. The Acts of Paul claims that she received baptism from the Apostle Paul. Traditional accounts hold that after Pilate refused to release Christ, she embraced Christianity and dedicated her remaining years to goodness and piety. The traditions diverge on her end: some describe a peaceful death after a devout life, while others remember her as a martyr.
The Gospel of Nicodemus depicted her sending a messenger to Pilate rather than addressing him directly. The fifth-century Greek text known as the Paradosis Pilati portrayed both spouses as martyrs.
Historical Assessment
The Western Church never canonized Pilate's wife. Augustine and Jerome acknowledged a divine origin for her dream while declining to recognize her as a saint, whereas medieval Western theologians such as Bede, Rabanus Maurus, and Bernard of Clairvaux interpreted the dream as demonic in origin. The earliest references to her conversion to Christianity derive from Origen.
Modern scholars, including Helen Bond, Alexander Demandt, and Jean-Pierre Lémonon, regard the Matthew account as legendary rather than strictly historical, and Raymond E. Brown suggested it follows a recognizable literary pattern in which a noble pagan woman is shown favorable toward the truth. In the 1920s a lead sarcophagus discovered in Beirut held two bracelets inscribed 'Claudia Procula' in Greek; the scholar Jill Carington Smith dated the artifact to the final three quarters of the first century but acknowledged that its identification with Pilate's wife remained speculative.