Back to the saints / Martyrs / St Martyrs Perpetua, Felicitas, and Companions
Martyr · 3rd century

Martyrs Perpetua Felicitas, and Companions

d. c. 203

Also known as Perpetua · Felicity · Saturus · Revocatus · Saturninus · Secundulus

A group of catechumens martyred at Carthage in 203 under Septimius Severus; Perpetua, a young noblewoman, and Felicitas, a slave who gave birth in prison, went to the wild beasts together.

Life

Perpetua, Felicitas, and their companions were a group of catechumens martyred at Carthage in North Africa around the year 203, during the reign of the Emperor Septimius Severus. Vibia Perpetua was a young noblewoman of about twenty-two, recently married and nursing an infant son; Felicitas was an enslaved woman who was pregnant during her imprisonment. They suffered alongside Saturninus, Revocatus, Secundulus, and Saturus, all of them Christians under instruction who had not yet been baptized at the time of their arrest.

The group is among the most celebrated of the early African martyrs. Their memory is preserved in part through a first-person prison account attributed to Perpetua, which makes her one of the earliest surviving Christian women writers. They are commemorated in the Orthodox Church on February 1.

Explore

Timeline

  1. c. 182 Birth of Perpetua Vibia Perpetua is born into a patrician family of the Vibia gens at Carthage in Roman North Africa.
  2. c. 203 Arrest and imprisonment Perpetua, Felicitas, and their companions, all catechumens, are arrested under the decree of Septimius Severus; Perpetua is baptized after her arrest and refuses her father's plea to recant.
  3. c. 203 Felicitas gives birth in prison Felicitas, pregnant at the time of her confinement, gives birth shortly before the appointed day of execution.
  4. c. 203 Martyrdom at Carthage The company is exposed to wild beasts in the amphitheatre during imperial games and put to death by the sword; Perpetua is said to have guided the sword to her own throat.
  5. 4th century Early commemoration recorded The martyrs appear in the Philocalian Calendar, and a basilica is raised over their tomb at Carthage bearing an inscription with their names.

Contributions & Legacy

Historical Setting

The martyrdoms took place at Carthage, in Roman North Africa (in present-day Tunisia), under the Emperor Septimius Severus, who reigned from 193 to 211. According to the sources, an imperial decree forbade subjects of the empire, under severe penalty, from becoming Christians. The executions were carried out in the amphitheatre during games, traditionally associated with festivities honoring the birthday of Geta, son of Septimius Severus.

The traditional date of the martyrdom is 203, though some scholars have proposed a later date in the years 209 to 211 on the basis of the references to the imperial birthday celebrations. The Orthodox synaxarion places the commemoration on February 1; in the Western calendars the feast is kept on March 7.

The Companions

Perpetua was a noblewoman of a patrician family of Carthage, well educated and recently married. According to the sources, she came to faith in Christ and was baptized after her arrest, refusing the demands of her father that she recant. Felicitas was an enslaved woman who was pregnant during her confinement and gave birth in prison shortly before the day of execution.

Their fellow martyrs were Saturninus, Revocatus (an enslaved man), and Secundulus, together with Saturus, who is said to have presented himself voluntarily before the magistrates and proclaimed himself a Christian. The synaxarion describes the whole company as catechumens — Christians receiving instruction but not yet baptized when they were seized. The sources record that Secundulus died in prison before the day of the public spectacle.

Imprisonment and the Prison Account

A surviving text known as the Passion of Saints Perpetua and Felicity preserves what is presented as Perpetua's own prison diary, completed after her death by an editor who added an eyewitness account of the executions. The identity of this editor is uncertain, though some have proposed Tertullian. The work is counted among the most famous of the non-official Acts of the Martyrs and includes material attributed to both Perpetua and Saturus.

In the account Perpetua describes the hardships of confinement — the heat, harsh guards, and the difficulty of nursing her infant son — and relates that after the guards were bribed, conditions improved and she was able to keep her child with her. She also records a series of visions: ascending a perilous ladder set with weapons and confronting a serpent at its foot; and, on the day before her death, an image of spiritual combat in which she overcame an adversary. The text further relates a vision of her deceased brother, who had died of an illness, appearing first in distress and afterward at peace and restored. Saturus is likewise said to have recorded a vision of being carried by angels into a garden.

The Martyrdom

According to the sources, the martyrs were exposed to wild beasts in the amphitheatre and afterward put to death by the sword. The account relates that Perpetua took an active part in her own death, guiding the executioner's sword to her throat. Felicitas, having given birth only shortly before, suffered together with her.

Veneration and Legacy

A basilica known as the Basilica Maiorum was raised over the tomb of the martyrs at Carthage, where an ancient inscription bearing their names has been found. The names of Perpetua and Felicitas were commemorated by name in the Roman Canon of the Mass, and they appear in the fourth-century Philocalian Calendar, witnessing to the antiquity and breadth of their veneration.

Perpetua's prison account is regarded as one of the oldest texts authored by a Christian woman. The martyrs are honored across Christian traditions: in the Orthodox Church on February 1, and in the Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran calendars on March 7.

Notes

Among the most celebrated of the early African martyrs.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Feb 1