Confession and Martyrdom
The surviving account, drawn from the Synaxarion of the Monastery of the Holy Cross, records that Salome lived at a women's monastery in Jerusalem and was seized by the Muslim authorities on account of her open and outspoken confession of Christ. The Orthodox Church in America's listing describes her as having been tortured and beheaded for the faith, with her relics afterward thrown into the fire.
The hostile power named in the source is rendered as Persian or Muslim; in the thirteenth-century setting of the Holy Land this language refers broadly to the dominant Muslim forces of the period rather than to a specifically ethnic-Persian group. The exact circumstances and date of her death have not come down to us in detail, the synaxarion preserving only the essential memory of her witness.
The Georgian Presence in Jerusalem
Salome's life belongs to the wider history of Georgian monasticism in the Holy Land. By the thirteenth century the Georgians maintained a substantial ecclesiastical presence in Jerusalem, with eight monasteries listed in the city at the height of their influence. Chief among these was the Monastery of the Cross, in the Valley of the Cross, originally built by the Georgian monk Prochorus the Iberian during the reign of King Bagrat IV in the eleventh century. Its library housed Georgian manuscripts and its interior bore Georgian inscriptions.
Georgian rulers actively defended these foundations. After Saladin's conquest of Jerusalem in 1187, Queen Tamar of Georgia sent envoys to seek the return of confiscated Georgian monastic possessions, an effort the sources indicate was largely successful, and Georgian monks subsequently enjoyed special privileges including free passage into the city with their banners unfurled. This sustained patronage explains the existence of the women's monastery in which Salome lived and the Georgian manuscript tradition that preserved her memory.
The period was a turbulent one for Georgian Christian communities. The Mongols launched a full conquest of Georgia in 1236, and Georgia acknowledged Mongol overlordship in 1243. The monks of the Monastery of the Cross were themselves executed under Sultan Baybars after being accused of spying for the Ilkhanate, and only in 1305 did an ambassador of the King of Georgia successfully negotiate the monastery's repossession from Sultan Al-Nasir Muhammad. It was amid this instability of the Georgian Christian presence in the Holy Land that Salome bore her witness.
Sources and Identity
The Orthodox Church in America identifies her as Martyr Salome the Georgian, commemorated on July 20 alongside the Prophet Elijah, Venerable Abramius of Galich, Martyr Ilia Chavchavadze, and Righteous Aaron. She should not be confused with Salome of Ujarma, a fourth-century figure who was the wife of Rev II and a companion of Saint Nina, commemorated on January 15 — a distinct person.
Salome is genuinely obscure: no independent encyclopedia article exists for her, and her full life survives only within the Georgian manuscript tradition of the Synaxarion of the Monastery of the Holy Cross. The English-language summary preserved by the Orthodox Church in America is the most complete account readily available.