Martyrdom and Veneration
Juliana's commemoration as a martyr rests not on a confession of faith before persecutors but on the defense of her chastity and her marriage vow, for which the tradition honors her as a passion-bearer in the line of Rus' rulers venerated for purity and courage. The account ties her death directly to her refusal of Prince Yuri and her resistance to his violence.
According to the tradition, Prince Yuri did not escape the consequences of his crime: troubled by conscience, he fled to the Tatars and eventually settled in the Ryazan wilderness, where he is said to have died in 1408. Juliana's veneration grew at Torzhok around her burial place and the later Savior-Transfiguration cathedral, culminating in the formal uncovering of her relics and glorification in 1819.