Relics & Shrines
The synaxarion states that the martyrs suffered in the second century at Damascus, where their venerable relics were buried.
A young Christian woman who witnessed Saint Victor's torments, confessed Christ, and was martyred after joining his witness.
The Holy Martyr Stephanida of Damascus
Stephanida of Damascus was an early Christian martyr commemorated by the Orthodox Church on November 11. According to the synaxarion, she suffered at Damascus in Roman Syria during the reign of the emperor Marcus Aurelius (161-180), and her witness is recounted together with that of the soldier-martyr Victor, with whom she shares a feast.
The tradition relates that Stephanida was a young Christian woman, the wife of one of the men who tormented Victor. Moved by the miracles she saw worked through Victor's prayers, she openly confessed Christ before the persecutors and was put to death. She is said to have been fifteen years old.
The synaxarion states that the martyrs suffered in the second century at Damascus, where their venerable relics were buried.
The Orthodox account followed here derives from the synaxarion as preserved in the Lives of the Saints, which places the martyrdom under Marcus Aurelius and gives Stephanida's age as fifteen.
Some Western-influenced retellings identify Stephanida with the martyr Corona ('crown') venerated in Austria and Bavaria and report differing emperors and dates; these variants are noted but not relied upon, the synaxarion's account being taken as authoritative.