Martyr 4th century

Virgin-Martyr Agnes of Rome

c. 291 – c. 304

A girl of Rome, barely thirteen, who refused every suitor for the love of Christ and was put to death, becoming one of the most beloved virgin-martyrs of the early Church.

Feast Day
January 21
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Commemorated as

The Holy Virgin-Martyr Agnes of Rome

Life

Agnes of Rome was a young Christian girl of the city of Rome, martyred in the persecutions of the early fourth century and commemorated on January 21. By tradition she came from an illustrious Roman family and was raised in the faith; the early sources agree above all on her extreme youth, placing her age at her death at about twelve or thirteen. She is among the most widely venerated of the early virgin-martyrs, honoured across the Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran traditions.

The accounts relate that Agnes refused the high-ranking suitors who sought her hand, having consecrated herself to Christ. Spurned, they reported her to the authorities as a Christian. When she would not sacrifice to the idols, the ruler ordered her exposed in a brothel; but, according to the synaxarion, those who approached to dishonour her were struck numb, and the protection of an angel preserved her. She was then condemned to death.

The traditions differ on the manner of her death. The Eastern synaxarion relates that she sealed herself with the sign of the Cross and entered into the fire. Western accounts hold that attempts to burn her failed and that she was beheaded by the sword. Both traditions remember her as a child who kept faith and chastity to the end, and her name became fixed in the early Roman liturgical commemoration of the martyrs.

Her tomb lies on the Via Nomentana outside Rome, beneath the altar of the basilica of Sant'Agnese fuori le mura; a skull venerated as hers is preserved at Sant'Agnese in Agone. She was already the subject of fourth-century devotion: Bishop Ambrose of Milan, Pope Damasus of Rome, and the poet Prudentius all wrote of her within a century of her death.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 291 Birth at Rome By tradition Agnes was born into an illustrious Christian family of Rome.
  2. c. 304 Martyrdom At about twelve or thirteen, she was put to death for refusing to sacrifice to the idols, during the persecutions of the early fourth century.
  3. 4th century Early veneration Bishop Ambrose of Milan, Pope Damasus, and the poet Prudentius wrote of her within a century of her death.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Martyrdom and the Brothel

The defining episode of Agnes's passion in the synaxarion is her exposure in a brothel after she refused to sacrifice to the idols. The account relates that those who approached her to do her violence were immediately struck numb, and that an arrogant man who came near fell down dead. Agnes explained that a young man clothed in white had followed and protected her, whom she named as the Angel of God; when challenged to prove this, she is said to have prayed and raised the dead man.

Following this, the tradition records her execution. The Eastern synaxarion states that she made the sign of the Cross and went courageously into the fire. Western sources, by contrast, relate that the flames did not harm her and that an officer beheaded her with the sword. The hedged and varying details reflect that the surviving narratives were composed somewhat after her death.

Veneration and the Lambs

Agnes was venerated at Rome from an early date and is one of the martyrs named in the Roman Canon. Her name was associated in tradition with the Latin agnus, lamb, and the Greek hagne, meaning pure or chaste, an association that gave rise to the lamb imagery long linked to her.

A Western custom observed on her feast is the blessing of two lambs, whose wool is later woven into the pallia conferred on metropolitan archbishops. Her relics are honoured at the basilica of Sant'Agnese fuori le mura, built over her tomb on the Via Nomentana.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 21