Great Martyr 4th century

Great Martyr Irene

4th century

Also known as Penelope · Irene of Magedon

Born Penelope, the daughter of a pagan ruler, she came to faith in Christ and endured many torments and deliverances, by which great numbers were converted; she is honored as a great martyr.

Feast Day
May 5
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Commemorated as

The Holy, Glorious Great-Martyr Irene of Magedon

Life

The Holy Great-Martyr Irene was, by the synaxarion's account, born in the city of Magedon in Persia during the fourth century. At birth she was named Penelope, and she was the daughter of Licinius, a pagan ruler of a small kingdom, and his wife Licinia. Tradition relates that her conversion to Christ and the long series of torments she endured and was delivered from led great numbers of pagans to the faith, on account of which she is honored in the Orthodox Church as a great martyr.

Because Penelope was very beautiful, her father shut her away from the age of six in a high tower, together with thirteen young companions, so that she would be kept apart from the Christian faith. He appointed an aged tutor named Apellian to educate her; but Apellian was himself a Christian, and through his lessons the girl learned of Christ the Savior and of the Christian virtues. By tradition she received a vision of a dove bearing an olive branch, an eagle with a wreath of flowers, and a raven carrying a snake, which Apellian interpreted as signs of grace, of victory, and of the sufferings she would undergo.

Refusing the marriage her father had arranged, Penelope was baptized by the priest Timothy, who gave her the name Irene, meaning "peace," and she broke her father's idols to pieces. The accounts of her passion describe a succession of rulers who tried to compel her to sacrifice and who subjected her to torments from which she was repeatedly delivered, so that thousands were converted at each deliverance before she was finally put to death.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 4th century Birth in Magedon as Penelope According to the synaxarion, Penelope was born in Magedon in Persia, daughter of the pagan ruler Licinius and his wife Licinia.
  2. From age six Confined in a tower and taught by Apellian Her father isolated her in a high tower with thirteen young companions and a tutor, Apellian, who was secretly a Christian and instructed her in the faith.
  3. Adolescence Baptism and the name Irene Refusing marriage, Penelope was baptized by the priest Timothy, who named her Irene, and she destroyed her father's idols.
  4. After her confession Tortures and the conversion of her father By tradition she was thrown beneath wild horses; one horse turned on Licinius and injured him, and through Irene's prayer he was restored. The synaxarion relates that Licinius and Licinia, with great numbers of others, were then baptized.

Contributions & Legacy

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Conversion and the breaking of the idols

The tradition preserved in the Orthodox synaxarion makes Irene's own conversion the spring of everything that follows. Shut away in the tower so that she would marry well and remain in the old religion, she was instead catechized in secret by her Christian tutor Apellian and was baptized by the priest Timothy, taking the name Irene in place of Penelope. Her first public act of confession was to break the idols her father kept, which set in motion the conflict between father and daughter that the passion narrative recounts.

Torments, deliverances, and the conversion of many

The synaxarion relates that Irene passed through the hands of several rulers who tried in turn to make her sacrifice. She was bound and cast before wild horses that would not move against her; she was shut for ten days in a pit of vipers and serpents; and, in the account of King Numerian at Callinicus, she was enclosed within heated bronze oxen and emerged unharmed. At each of these deliverances the tradition records that great numbers of onlookers came to faith in Christ — by one reckoning some five thousand in Magedon, and thousands more elsewhere — so that her sufferings became the occasion of widespread conversion. It is from this fruit of conversions, rather than from a single death alone, that she is honored with the title of great martyr.

Death and relics

The accounts describe Irene as travelling and preaching through several cities before her repose. She is commemorated as a martyr, and her relics are venerated in the Orthodox world, with traditions placing them at the Monastery of Kykkos on Cyprus and in the Greek church of Saint George in Venice. There are several saints named Irene in the Orthodox calendar; this Great-Martyr Irene, formerly Penelope of Magedon, is to be distinguished from them.

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