Martyr 4th century

Martyrs Paul Chionia, and Alevtina

died 308

Also known as Paul · Chionia · Thea · Alevtina · Valentina

Egyptian Christians — a man and two sisters — who were taken to Caesarea in Palestine and there confessed Christ and were martyred under Maximian.

Feast Day
July 16
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Paul, Chionia, and Alevtina were early-fourth-century Christians from Egypt who, during the persecution under the emperor Maximian (305-313), were taken to Caesarea in Palestine, where they confessed Christ and were put to death. They are commemorated together as a single group on July 16.

According to the sources, Chionia and Alevtina were sisters; the relationship of Paul to the two women is not explicitly stated in all accounts. Chionia is also recorded under the name Thea, and Alevtina under the name Valentina.

By the sources, the three confessed themselves followers of Christ without fear. In the year 308 the sisters Alevtina and Chionia were burned to death, while Paul was beheaded.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 305-313 Persecution under Maximian During the persecution against Christians under the emperor Maximian, Paul, Chionia, and Alevtina, Christians from Egypt, are taken to Caesarea in Palestine.
  2. 308 Martyrdom at Caesarea Having confessed Christ without fear, the sisters Alevtina and Chionia are burned to death, and Paul is beheaded.

Contributions & Legacy

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Historical Context

The martyrdom belongs to the Tetrarchic persecution of Christians in the eastern Roman Empire in the early fourth century. The sources place it under the emperor Maximian and date the executions to the year 308.

The transfer of these Egyptian Christians to Palestinian Caesarea reflects a documented pattern of the period, in which Egyptian Christians were moved into Palestine for punishment; sources note that confessors from the Thebaid region of Egypt were sent to mines in Palestine. Both burning alive and beheading are recorded as execution methods used in the eastern empire during the early-fourth-century persecutions.

Martyrdom

The sources relate that the three confessed Christ without the slightest fear after being brought to Caesarea. Their executions took different forms: the sisters Alevtina and Chionia were burned to death, while Paul was beheaded.

The Orthodox Church commemorates them annually on July 16, with assigned Troparion and Kontakion texts.

Notes

Named group commemorated as one.

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