Martyr 4th century

Martyr Anthusa of Rome

Also known as Anthusa

A Roman official's wife baptized by Saint Ambrose, who refused Arian baptism and was burned for confessing Orthodoxy.

Feast Day
December 8
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Anthusa of Rome

Life

Anthusa was the wife of a Roman official who, according to the synaxarion, received Christian baptism from Saint Ambrose of Milan. She is remembered chiefly for refusing to be re-baptized by an Arian and for accepting death by fire rather than betray her Orthodox confession. She is commemorated on December 8, the day after the feast of Saint Ambrose, who is honored on December 7.

By tradition, Anthusa's confession was tested when Sunilda, the wife of the city prefect, urged her to receive baptism at the hands of an Arian rather than from an Orthodox bishop. The Arian controversy, which denied the full divinity of the Son, divided many in the late Roman world, and the pressure placed upon Anthusa reflects the standing of Arian factions among the imperial and civic authorities of her day.

When Anthusa declined, she was committed to the fire and received the crown of martyrdom. The brief account preserved in the Lives of the Saints offers few further biographical details, but it presents her as a woman of rank who held to the Nicene faith taught by Ambrose against the inducements of those favoring Arianism.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Refusal of Arian Baptism

The decisive moment in Anthusa's life, as the synaxarion relates it, was the proposal that she be baptized by an Arian. The suggestion came from Sunilda, the wife of the city prefect, a figure of civic authority. Anthusa's refusal was understood not as a rejection of baptism itself but as a refusal of the Arian confession, holding instead to the Orthodox faith into which Saint Ambrose had baptized her.

Her sentence was death by fire. The tradition records that she endured this and so received the crown of martyrdom, placing her among those who suffered for adherence to the Nicene faith during the long aftermath of the Arian controversy.

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