Christina (Syriac: ܟܪܣܛܝܢܐ, Kresṭīnā),[1] born Yazdoi (fl. 6th century), was a Sasanian Persian noblewoman and Christian venerated after her death as a virgin martyr.


Christina of Persia
Icon of Saint Christina of Persia
Virgin martyr
Bornc. 6th century
Sasanian Empire
DiedSasanian Empire
Venerated inChurch of the East, Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodoxy,
Oriental Orthodoxy
CanonizedPre-Congregation
Feast13 March (Catholic Church, Syriac Orthodox Church)
14 March (Eastern Orthodoxy)

Christina was from Karka d'Beth Slokh in the region of Beth Garmai.[2][3] Her father, Yazdin, son of Mihrzbiroi, was the governor of Nisibis. She converted from Zoroastrianism to the Church of the East. She was killed for refusing to consummate her marriage to a nobleman, and was venerated as a virgin martyr.[2][4] According to a Greek martyrology, she was beaten to death with rods.[2] The exact date of her death is unknown, but it was probably during the reign of Khosrau I (531–579).[3][5]

Not long after her death, Babai the Great (died 628) wrote her biography in Syriac. Today only the preface survives. Since Babai lists all the hagiographical works he had written up to that point in his biography of George of Izla (martyred 615), he must have written Christina's biography after that date.[4][3] According to Babai, she was called Yazdoi "when she was pagan", but "in her new birth of adoption as a token of life, chose to be called Christina, a name that shall not pass".[1]

Christina is commemorated on 13 March in the Catholic Church and the Syriac Orthodox Church.[2] The Roman Martyrology describes her as follows: "In Persia, Saint Christina, martyr, who was flogged with rods and concluded the witness of martyrdom under King Chosroes I of the Persians."[6] In the Georgian Orthodox Church, her feast day was 15 March in the early 7th century. Some versions of the 10th-century church calendar of Ioane-Zosime, however, give it as 14 March.[7] The Synaxarion of Constantinople of the Eastern Orthodox Church also gives 14 March.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Jeanne-Nicole Mellon Saint-Laurent et al., "Christine Yazdouy (text) — ܟܪܣܛܝܢܐ ܝܙܕܘܝ " in Bibliotheca Hagiographica Syriaca Electronica (2015).
  2. ^ a b c d e Jean Maurice Fiey, Saints Syriaques (Darwin Press, 2004), pp. 59–60.
  3. ^ a b c Gerrit J. Reinink, "Babai the Great's Life of George and the Propagation of Doctrine in the Late Sasanian Empire", Portraits of Spiritual Authority (Brill, 1999), p. 172n.
  4. ^ a b David Wilmshurst, The Martyred Church: A History of the Church of the East (East and West Publishing, 2011), p. 87.
  5. ^ Wilmshurst (2011), p. 494, puts her death around 600, but Fiey (2004) proposes she died much earlier (around 363).
  6. ^ "Martyrologium Romanum" (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2001 ISBN 88-209-7210-7)
  7. ^ Christina-Yazdoi, martyr in Persia, The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity (University of Oxford, 2017).

Further reading

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  • P. Bedjan, ed., Acta Martyrum et Sanctorum, IV (Paris, 1894), pp. 201–207. An edition of Babai's fragmentary biography.