Veneration and Legacy
Paraskevi's veneration spread widely among the Eastern Slavs, where she became known as 'Paraskeva-Pyatnitsa' — 'Pyatnitsa' meaning Friday in Russian — fusing her commemoration with the day for which she was named.
In the Russian context her veneration overlapped with older pre-Christian traditions associated with the goddess Mokosha, to whom women had traditionally dedicated Friday afternoons. She came to be regarded as a patroness of traders, fairs, and marriage, and as a protectress of fields and cattle. Numerous Eastern Slavic churches bear her name.
Scholars have noted that her attributes became blended with those of other saints sharing the name Paraskevi and with pre-Christian figures, and have raised the question of whether she reflects a historical Christian woman or a personification of Friday itself.