Martyr 4th century

Virgin Martyr Anysia of Thessalonica

Also known as Anysia

A wealthy orphan who gave her possessions to the poor and lived in prayer, and was killed after refusing pagan worship during Maximian's persecution.

Feast Day
December 30
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Commemorated as

The Holy Virgin-Martyr Anysia of Thessalonica

Life

Anysia of Thessalonica was an early-fourth-century virgin-martyr of the Greek city of Thessalonica, commemorated on December 30. According to her vita she was born into a wealthy and devout Christian family and was orphaned while still young, inheriting her parents' considerable estate.

Rather than retain her fortune, Anysia is said to have sold her possessions and distributed the proceeds among the poor, after which she took up a strict regime of fasting, vigil, and prayer. The Orthodox accounts describe her as supporting herself by the labor of her own hands.

She was killed during the persecution of Christians associated with the co-emperor Maximian. The synaxarion relates that a pagan soldier accosted her on her way to church and tried to compel her to join a sacrificial festival; when she resisted, he ran her through with his sword. Sources differ on the year of her death.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. Late 3rd century Birth and orphaning in Thessalonica Anysia is born in Thessalonica to wealthy, pious Christian parents who raise her in the faith. They die while she is young, leaving her their wealth.
  2. Early 4th century Renunciation of wealth She sells her possessions, distributes the proceeds to the poor, and adopts a strict life of fasting, vigil, and prayer, supporting herself by her own labor.
  3. c. 298-304 Martyrdom During Maximian's persecution a soldier accosts her on her way to church and presses her to sacrifice at a festival of the sun. She refuses, and he kills her with his sword. The year is given variously as 298, 299, or about 304.

Contributions & Legacy

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The encounter and martyrdom

The Orthodox sources recount that during Maximian's persecution an edict permitted Christians to be killed without penalty. As Anysia was walking to church, a soldier stopped her and demanded that she accompany him to a pagan festival of the sun to offer sacrifice.

When the soldier seized her and tried to pull the veil from her head, she pushed him away and spat in his face, declaring her allegiance to Christ. Enraged, he thrust his sword into her side and killed her. Several accounts specify that he struck her below the ribs.

Burial and relics

Christians are said to have buried Anysia honorably near the city gate, and a church or chapel was later built over her grave. The Orthodox tradition holds that her relics are kept in the Church of Saint Demetrios in Thessaloniki.

Her death is connected by some accounts with the Gate of Cassandra in Thessalonica, though details of place and exact date vary between sources.

Sources and historical note

Anysia is venerated in both the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic traditions, with a feast on December 30; the veil and the cross are given as her attributes. The hagiographer Alban Butler observed that her story lacks independent historical confirmation, and the surviving accounts rest on hagiographical tradition rather than contemporary documentation.

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