Life and Martyrdom
According to her synaxarion, Seraphima was a native of Antioch who came to live at Rome in the reign of Emperor Hadrian. She attached herself to Sabina, a woman of a prominent senatorial family, and won her to Christ; Orthodox and Western accounts agree that the conversion of her mistress is central to her story.
When she refused to honor the Roman gods during the persecution, she was condemned. One account relates that she was handed over to two men to be defiled, but her assailants were struck down senseless, and the authorities attributed her deliverance to sorcery. After further attempts on her life, she was beaten with rods and beheaded by the sword.
Sources differ on incidental details: the judge who condemned her is named Virilus in one account, and her death is placed around the year 119. The anchor record classes her simply as a martyr of the second century from Syria.