Anastasia of Sirmium


Anastasia
Modern Orthodox Christian icon of Saint Anastasia the Holy Great-Martyr
Virgin and martyr
Born281 AD
Rome
DiedDecember 25, 304 AD
Pannonia Secunda (modern Serbia) or Palmaria
Venerated inCatholic Church
Oriental Orthodox Churches
Eastern Catholic Churches
Eastern Orthodox Church
CanonizedPre-Congregation
Major shrineCathedral of St. Anastasia, Zadar
FeastDecember 25 (Catholic)
December 22 (Greek Orthodox) September 28 (Syriac Orthodox)[1]
PatronagePharmacists, Doctors, apothecaries, healers

Saint Anastasia (died December 25, 304 AD) is a Christian saint and martyr who died at Sirmium in the Roman province of Pannonia Secunda (modern Serbia).[2] In the Eastern Orthodox Church, she is venerated as St. Anastasia the Pharmakolytria, i.e. "Deliverer from Potions" (Ἁγία Ἀναστασία ἡ Φαρμακολύτρια).[3] This epithet is also translated as "One who Cures (Wounds)" in Lampe's A Patristic Greek Lexicon.[4]

Concerning Anastasia, little is reliably known, save that she died in the persecutions of Diocletian;[5] most stories about her date from several centuries after her death and make her variously a Roman or Sirmian native and a Roman citizen of patrician rank. One legend makes her the daughter of a certain Praetextatus and the pupil of Saint Chrysogonus. Catholic tradition states that her mother was St. Fausta of Sirmium.

Anastasia has long been venerated as a healer and exorcist.

She is one of seven virgins and martyrs who, along with Blessed Virgin Mary, are commemorated by name in the Roman Canon of the Mass.[6]

  1. ^ Curtin, D. P. (July 2015). Jacobite Arab Synaxarium- Volume I. Dalcassian Publishing Company. ISBN 9781088061237.
  2. ^ Butler, Alban; Burns, Paul (1 January 1995). Butler's Lives of the Saints. A&C Black. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-86012-261-6.
  3. ^ "St. Anastasia, the Deliverer from Potions". Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese.
  4. ^ G. H. Lampe, A Patristic Greek Lexicon, , Oxford (Clarendon Press), 1961, p. 1472.
  5. ^ Smith, Philip (1867). "Anastasia". In William Smith (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 1. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. p. 158.
  6. ^ 1976 Ordinary of the Mass in the Ambrosian Rite.

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