Historical Context
The martyrdom is set in Caesarea of Cappadocia under the emperor Trajan (reigned 98–117), a period in which Christians could be required to demonstrate loyalty by sacrificing to the Roman gods and were liable to punishment for refusing. The synaxarion frames the death of Theodotus and Theodotia precisely on this refusal to sacrifice to idols.
Some liturgical listings associate the pair with a companion martyr named Hyacinth at Caesarea and give the year 108. These details are recorded in calendar sources and are presented here as the tradition records them; the surviving material does not preserve a fuller narrative.