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Great Martyr · 4th century

Anastasia the Deliverer-from-Potions

Commemorated as

The Holy, Glorious Great-Martyr Anastasia the Deliverer-from-Potions

c. 281 – 304

Also known as Anastasia Pharmakolytria

A noblewoman who nursed imprisoned confessors before her own martyrdom.

Life

St. Anastasia, surnamed the Deliverer-from-Potions (Greek: Pharmakolytria), was an early-fourth-century martyr venerated as a Great Martyr in the Eastern Orthodox Church, with her feast kept on December 22. According to her hagiography she was a Roman noblewoman who devoted herself to nursing imprisoned confessors and ministering to the poor before suffering martyrdom during the persecution of Diocletian.

Her surname reflects the tradition that, through her intercessions and prayers, she healed many from the effects of potions, poisons, spells, and other harmful substances. The accounts surrounding her are largely hagiographic in character; what is most firmly attested is that a martyr named Anastasia gave her life at Sirmium and that her memory was preserved there. Her own name carries the meaning 'resurrection.'

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Timeline

  1. c. 281 Birth in Rome By tradition Anastasia is born into a prominent Roman family, to her father Praetextatus and her Christian mother Fausta.
  2. Early adulthood Marriage and widowhood She is married to a pagan, Publius Patricius, who mistreats her; he drowns early in the marriage, leaving her a young widow who does not remarry.
  3. During Diocletian's persecution Ministry to prisoners and the poor Anastasia secretly devotes herself to the poor and to imprisoned confessors, tending wounds and offering comfort, and becomes known for healing those harmed by poisons and potions.
  4. 304 Martyrdom After many torments she is put to death — by beheading on the island of Palmaria or by fire, according to differing accounts.
  5. 5th century Translation of relics to Constantinople Her relics are translated to Constantinople, where a church is built in her honor.

Contributions & Legacy

Life and Ministry

By tradition, Anastasia was born around 281 into a prominent Roman family. Her father, Praetextatus, is described as a Roman of illustrious rank, while her mother — named Fausta — is remembered as a secret Christian who raised her daughter in the faith. She received spiritual instruction from the educated Saint Chrysogonus, who is honored as her teacher.

She was married to a pagan named Publius Patricius, who is said to have mistreated her and confined her within the household. He drowned early in the marriage, leaving Anastasia a young widow; she did not remarry. Freed from this constraint, she secretly devoted her time and means to the poor and to those held in prison, attending to them daily — tending wounds and offering comfort to the imprisoned and suffering.

The synaxarion relates that her ministry extended across the region, with accounts describing her travelling from Aquileia to Sirmium to visit and care for the faithful during the Diocletianic persecution. It was through this work, and through the healings ascribed to her intercession, that she became widely known and eventually drew the attention of the persecuting authorities.

Martyrdom

During Diocletian's persecution Anastasia was arrested and subjected to many torments. The traditional accounts of her death differ: some relate that she was beheaded on the island of Palmaria, while others say she was put to death by fire. The traditional date of her martyrdom is 304.

After her death her remains were interred in the house of a woman named Apollonia, which was afterward converted into a basilica in her honor.

Relics & Shrines

In the fifth century her relics were translated to Constantinople, where a church was built in her honor.

Later, her head and one of her hands were transferred to the Monastery of St. Anastasia the Pharmakolytria in Chalkidiki, Greece, near Mount Athos. Relics associated with the saint are also kept at Zadar Cathedral in Croatia, at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Demetrius in Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia (since 1976), and at Benediktbeuern Abbey in Bavaria, Germany.

Veneration and Legacy

In the Eastern Orthodox Church Anastasia is commemorated on December 22, where she is honored together with the Martyr Chrysogonus and others. In the Western tradition her feast falls on December 25, and her name was inserted into the Roman Canon of the Mass toward the end of the fifth century, making her one of seven women — besides the Virgin Mary — named in that canon.

Historical scholarship treats the detailed narrative of her life as legendary, resting on little firm historical foundation; the secure historical kernel is the memory of a martyr named Anastasia who died at Sirmium and whose veneration was preserved there before spreading widely across both East and West.

Sources: Synaxarion