Refusal of Sacrifice and Trial
Under Marcus Aurelius the requirement to sacrifice to the pagan gods functioned as a loyalty test for soldiers, binding allegiance to the gods, the emperor, and the state into a single act. Victor's refusal therefore amounted to a public renunciation of that allegiance, and he was given over to torture.
His life relates that he came through all the torments unharmed. It further records two episodes during his ordeal: through prayer he overcame a sorcerer set against him — who afterward abandoned his practice and converted to Christianity — and through his intercession blind soldiers suddenly received their sight.
Martyrdom and Prophecy
Victor was eventually beheaded at the command of the commander. According to his life, before the execution he prophesied that all of his executioners would die within twelve days and that the commander would be taken captive by enemies within twenty-four days — predictions his life records as having been fulfilled.
His venerable relics, together with those of the Martyr Stephanida, were buried at Damascus.
The Martyr Stephanida
Stephanida is described as the young Christian wife of one of Victor's torturers. Having witnessed his endurance under torture, his defeat of the sorcerer, and the healing of the blind soldiers, she openly glorified Christ. For this she was condemned to death: she was bound to two palm trees that had been bent to the ground, and when the trees were released they sprang back and tore her apart. Her life records that she was fifteen years old.
Both martyrs were buried at Damascus and are commemorated together on November 11. In Western sources Stephanida appears under the names Corona (also Stephanie or Stefania).
Eastern and Western Veneration
The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates Victor and Stephanida on November 11 (Julian calendar). The same soldier-martyr is venerated in the West as Victor of Damascus, paired with the martyr Corona, with a Catholic feast day of May 14.
Western accounts describe Victor as a Roman soldier of Italian ancestry and note disagreement among the sources over the place of his death — Damascus, Antioch, Alexandria, or Sicily are variously proposed — and over its date, with the Roman Martyrology placing it in the third century rather than under Marcus Aurelius. In these accounts Corona is described either as the wife of another soldier or as Victor's own wife; the surviving passio for her account is regarded as largely legendary, and some scholars question whether she is a historical figure at all. Among Victor's reported tortures in the Western tradition is the gouging out of his eyes before his beheading.
Relics & Shrines
The relics of Victor and Stephanida were buried at Damascus. In the Western tradition the relics of Corona are reported to have been brought to Aachen Cathedral by the emperor Otto III around the year 1000; they were rediscovered during excavation work in 1910 and placed in a shrine. Corona is especially venerated in Austria and Bavaria.
Miracles & Traditions
Historically Documented: The historical record establishes Victor as a soldier-martyr venerated in both East and West, commemorated on November 11 in the Orthodox calendar and May 14 in the West. Beyond the fact of his martyrdom, the surviving sources disagree on its place and date, and the companion account of Corona/Stephanida is regarded in Western scholarship as largely legendary.
Traditional Accounts: Victor's life relates that he passed through his tortures unharmed, that through prayer he overcame a sorcerer who then converted to Christianity, and that blind soldiers received their sight through his intercession. It also records that before his beheading he foretold the death of his executioners within twelve days and the capture of the commander within twenty-four days, both said to have come to pass. The tradition surrounding Stephanida relates that she was torn apart by two released palm trees at the age of fifteen for confessing Christ.