Martyr 4th century

Martyrs Kyriaina and Juliana

Late 3rd–early 4th century

Also known as Kyriaina of Tarsus · Juliana of Roso

Christian women of Cilicia known for charity toward orphans, widows, and the poor, who were arrested under Maximian Galerius and martyred.

Feast Day
November 1
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Life

Kyriaina and Juliana were two Christian women of Cilicia in Asia Minor who, by tradition, devoted themselves to charitable works — caring for orphans, comforting poor widows, and providing free medical care to the sick — and drew pagans to Christianity through the Gospel and their own patience and goodness. Kyriaina came from Tarsus and Juliana from the city of Rosos (Roso), both in Cilicia.

They lived during the persecutions of the early fourth century. Arrested by the regional governor and ordered to renounce Christ, they refused; according to the synaxarion they were subjected to humiliation and ultimately burnt alive at Rosos. The two are kept as a single commemoration, observed on November 1.

The sources place their martyrdom under Maximian Galerius, though one recension dates them to the reign of Maximian (286–305); the slight divergence reflects the early-fourth-century persecution context rather than a settled chronology.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. Late 3rd century Lives in Cilicia Kyriaina of Tarsus and Juliana of Rosos live as Christian women in Cilicia, devoting themselves to charitable works toward orphans, widows, and the sick.
  2. c. 305–311 Arrest and interrogation During the persecution under Maximian Galerius, the governor of Cilicia — named Marcian in one account — arrests the two women and demands they renounce Christ. They refuse.
  3. c. 305–311 Martyrdom by fire at Rosos By tradition Kyriaina is subjected to public humiliation at Tarsus; both women are then taken to Rosos and burnt alive, maintaining their faith to the end.

Contributions & Legacy

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Lives and Charitable Work

According to the synaxarion, the two women gave themselves to philanthropic activity: caring for orphans, comforting poor widows, and providing medical care to the sick without charge. They are also remembered for bringing pagans to Christianity through the preaching of the Gospel and through the example of their own patience and goodness.

Kyriaina is identified with Tarsus in Cilicia, and Juliana with the city of Rosos (also given as Roso or Rosos) in the same region.

Martyrdom

When the governor of Cilicia — named Marcian in one account — arrested the two women and demanded they renounce Christ, they refused. The tradition relates that Kyriaina was first humiliated: her hair and eyebrows were shaved and she was forced to walk naked through the streets of Tarsus.

Both women were afterward taken to the city of Rosos, where they were burnt alive. The accounts emphasize the steadfastness and self-denial with which they endured. Commemorative verses preserved with their feast recall that Kyriaina 'in fire breathed her last,' and that Juliana likewise bore the flame.

Sources and Identification

The pair appears in the Menologion of Basil II, a medieval Byzantine manuscript, and is commemorated on November 1. Associated liturgical texts, including a Troparion and Kontakion, exist for the feast.

Some scholarship notes that these saints are probably the same as a pair commemorated as Cyprian and Juliana, suggesting that the names Kyriaina (also rendered Cyrenia) and Kyprianos (Cyprian) may have been confused or miscopied in the manuscript tradition.

Historical Context

Tarsus in Cilicia, the birthplace of the Apostle Paul, was a major early Christian city with a community established by the third century and an early recorded bishop, Helenus. Owing to its importance, many martyrs were put to death there in the early centuries — among them Pelagia of Tarsus, Boniface of Tarsus, Diomedes, and Quiricus and Julitta — situating Kyriaina's origins within a well-attested local tradition of Christian martyrdom.

Notes

Named pair kept as one row.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints