Historical Context
The martyrdom belongs to the Tetrarchic persecution of Christians in the eastern Roman Empire in the early fourth century. The sources place it under the emperor Maximian and date the executions to the year 308.
The transfer of these Egyptian Christians to Palestinian Caesarea reflects a documented pattern of the period, in which Egyptian Christians were moved into Palestine for punishment; sources note that confessors from the Thebaid region of Egypt were sent to mines in Palestine. Both burning alive and beheading are recorded as execution methods used in the eastern empire during the early-fourth-century persecutions.