Saint Theodota was a Christian woman of Asia Minor in the third century — placed by various recensions of the saints' lives in Mesopotamia or in Cilicia — remembered chiefly as the mother and teacher of the Holy Unmercenary Physicians Cosmas and Damian, among the most beloved healer-saints of the Christian East.
According to Orthodox tradition she was widowed while her children were still young, and after her husband's death took on alone the raising of her sons in the Christian faith, at a time when the Church remained vulnerable to persecution within the Roman Empire.
The accounts emphasize her work as educator and spiritual guide. She saw that her sons received both learning and religious formation, and joined to their training in the healing arts the principles of mercy, compassion, and service to the poor. When Cosmas and Damian became physicians who took no payment for their care — the 'Unmercenaries,' Anargyroi — tradition credited their mother's teaching and example as a chief influence on that vocation.
Little is recorded of her later years; some traditions say she reposed in peace before her sons, while others preserve no detail of her death. Unlike many women saints of the age she is remembered neither for public ministry nor for martyrdom, but for her hidden work as a Christian mother who formed future saints through education, discipline, and example. Her veneration grew up alongside that of Cosmas and Damian, and the Church honors her as a righteous woman whose influence helped shape two of Christianity's most celebrated healers.