Martyr 3rd century

Martyrs Paul and Juliana of Syria

Also known as Paul · Juliana

A brother and sister of Ptolemais in Phoenicia who suffered under Aurelian after Paul openly confessed Christ and Juliana joined him.

Feast Day
August 17
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Paul and Juliana of Ptolemais

Life

Paul and Juliana were a brother and sister of Ptolemais in Phoenicia who, by tradition, suffered martyrdom during the reign of the emperor Aurelian (270-275). They are commemorated together on August 17, and their account is preserved as a single commemoration in the synaxarion.

According to the tradition, the occasion of Paul's arrest was the emperor's visit to Ptolemais: when Aurelian came to the city, Paul made the Sign of the Cross before him. He was seized and imprisoned, and the next day, brought to trial, openly and boldly confessed his faith in Christ, for which he was subjected to severe tortures. His sister Juliana, seeing his sufferings, reproached the emperor for his injustice and cruelty, and so was arrested and tortured alongside her brother.

The synaxarion relates that the siblings were beaten, their bodies torn with iron hooks, and burned over red-hot grates, yet their endurance could not be broken. Three of the soldiers charged with tormenting them were moved by the martyrs' courage and themselves confessed Christ; the tradition names them Quadratus, Acacius, and Stratonicus, and they too were put to death. At the last, Aurelian ordered Paul and Juliana to be beheaded, and the account relates that the brother and sister went to their execution singing.

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The Account of Their Martyrdom

The narrative preserved in the synaxarion sets the martyrdom at Ptolemais, a city of the Phoenician coast, during a visit by the emperor Aurelian. Paul's open Sign of the Cross is presented as the act that drew the persecutors' attention, after which his confession at trial confirmed him as a Christian.

The tradition further relates that the emperor sought to make Juliana renounce Christ, offering her marriage, and that on her refusal she was consigned to a brothel where, by the account, she remained unharmed. The conversion of the three soldiers during the tortures is a recurring feature of such martyr accounts, and here it is the martyrs' steadfastness under torment that is said to have moved them to faith.

Notes

Named pair kept as one row.

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