Historical Context
The martyrdom of Syncletica and her daughters belongs to the persecution of the Christians of Najran, a significant Christian center in southern Arabia. The persecutor, Dhu Nuwas (real name Yusuf Asʾar Yathʾar, c. AD 450-530), ruled the Himyarite Kingdom in Yemen from about AD 522 to 530, seizing the throne around AD 522 by assassinating his predecessor. Having converted to Judaism, he issued an edict to eliminate Christianity from his realm.
In AD 523 he executed Arethas (Arabic: al-Harith ibn Ka'b), leader of the Christian community of Najran, together with a large number of followers, and dispatched an army to besiege the city in a siege that lasted six months. Christian sources record death tolls reaching into the thousands; Orthodox tradition numbers the company as the Martyr Arethas and 4,299 Martyrs of Najran. Other named women martyrs of the persecution include the noblewoman Ruhm, executed with her daughter and granddaughter, and Habsa bint Hayyan.
News of the persecution reached the Byzantine Emperor Justin I and King Kaleb (Elesbaan) of Aksum in Ethiopia. In AD 525 an Aksumite invasion defeated Dhu Nuwas, who, according to the account, rode his horse into the Red Sea to escape capture, bringing the persecution to an end.