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Great Martyr · 4th century

Irene the Great Martyr

Commemorated as

The Holy, Glorious Great-Martyr Irene of Thessaloniki

4th century (traditional)

Also known as Irene of Thessaloniki

A royal convert who brought many to Christ before her martyrdom.

Life

Saint Irene the Great Martyr is an early Christian martyr commemorated on May 5, traditionally placed in the fourth century. According to her vita she was born with the name Penelope, the daughter of a pagan ruler, and was raised in isolation before converting to Christianity, taking the name Irene — meaning 'peace' — and leading many to baptism before her own martyrdom.

Her recorded life is largely hagiographical in character and survives in differing recensions: the synaxarion accounts set her story in Persia, while a parallel Western tradition associates her with Lecce in southern Italy. The anchor tradition followed here records her as a royal convert who brought many to Christ before her martyrdom, invoked for peace and concord.

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Timeline

  1. 4th century Birth and early seclusion By tradition she was born Penelope, daughter of a pagan ruler, and was confined to a tower from the age of six on account of her beauty, where a Christian tutor instructed her in the faith.
  2. 4th century Baptism and renaming Following a symbolic vision, she refused marriage, was baptized by the priest Timothy, and took the name Irene, 'peace'; she then destroyed her father's pagan idols.
  3. 4th century Conversion of her family After surviving an attempted execution by trampling, during which her father was harmed and then restored through her prayer, the vita relates that her father, her mother, and a large number of others were baptized.
  4. 4th century (traditional) Martyrdom The synaxarion relates that after enduring repeated tortures she was beheaded by order of a Persian king; by tradition an angel raised her up and she afterward reposed in peace and was buried by her teacher.

Contributions & Legacy

Life and Conversion

According to the synaxarion, Irene was born in Magedon in Persia during the fourth century, the daughter of a pagan ruler named Licinius and his wife Licinia, and was given at birth the name Penelope. From the age of six she was raised in isolation in a tower, where her tutor Apellian instructed her in the Christian faith.

The vita relates that after a symbolic vision — involving a dove bearing an olive branch, an eagle, and a raven with a serpent — she refused marriage, was baptized by the priest Timothy, and took the name Irene, meaning 'peace.' She then destroyed her father's pagan idols.

A parallel Western tradition, recorded under the name Irene of Lecce, agrees that she was born Penelope to a ruler named Licinius and locked in a tower at the age of six on account of her beauty, that she was baptized and renamed Irene, and that she destroyed the idols set before her.

Martyrdom and Miracles

The synaxarion relates a series of tortures Irene is said to have survived. When her father discovered her conversion, he ordered her bound to wild horses to be trampled; instead one horse attacked Licinius and bit him fatally, after which Irene prayed over him and he was restored to life. Following this, the account states that Licinius, his wife Licinia, and approximately three thousand others were baptized.

The vita further relates that she survived ten days in a pit filled with vipers and serpents, protected by an angel; that a commander named Sapor who blinded an army had its sight restored through her prayer, while Sapor himself was struck by lightning; and that she survived being placed inside three progressively heated bronze oxen.

By tradition she was eventually beheaded by order of the Persian king Sapor — identified in some accounts with Shapur II, around 330 — after which an angel is said to have raised her up; she then reposed in peace and was buried by her teacher Apellian. The Western recension records instead that she was beheaded after refusing to renounce the faith before a governor, and likewise names her executioner as a Persian king (Shapur I or Shapur II), placing her death in the Constantinian period.

Relics & Shrines

Her skull is venerated at Patras in Greece. Relic fragments are venerated at Kykkos Monastery in Cyprus and at the Greek church of Saint George in Venice.

A holy monastery dedicated to her stands at Apoikia on the island of Andros in Greece, and a veneration site known as Hagia Eirene by the Sea is located at Perama.

Veneration and Legacy

Irene is honored in Orthodox tradition as a Holy Great Martyr and early Christian martyr. Churches bearing her name were dedicated in Constantinople as early as the fifth century, including the Hagia Eirene. She is venerated in Eastern Orthodox, Greek, and Russian traditions, and historically in the Coptic tradition.

In the Western tradition associated with Lecce, the seventeenth-century church of Sant'Irene (built 1591–1639) was constructed in her honor, and she served as patron saint of Lecce until 1656.

A liturgical verse for her reads, in translation: 'By a sword you were killed and unusually brought to life, / Anew you died in peace, O Irene.'

Sources: Synaxarion