Martyr 4th century

Martyrs Julian and Basilissa

died c. 313

Also known as Julian and Basilissa of Antinoe

A married couple of Antinoe in Egypt who by mutual consent lived in chastity, gave their home to the poor and sick, and were martyred under Diocletian.

Feast Day
January 8
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Julian and Basilissa of Antinoë

Come to them for
Marriage

Life

Julian and Basilissa were a married couple of Antinoë in Egypt who, by mutual consent, preserved their virginity throughout their marriage and devoted their wealth to the care of the poor and the sick. They are commemorated together on January 8 among the martyrs who suffered in the persecutions of the early fourth century.

By tradition, Julian was born at Antinoë and, to satisfy his parents, entered into marriage with Basilissa, a maiden described as noble and wealthy. The couple agreed to live in continence, and after the death of their parents they turned their inheritance to founding two monastic communities — one for men, which Julian led, and one for women, which Basilissa headed — becoming monastics themselves.

When persecution came, Julian was seized and subjected to severe torture. His endurance is said to have moved many onlookers to confess Christ, and the accounts gathered around his martyrdom include a large company who were put to death with him. The whole company is traditionally venerated as having received the crown of martyrdom by the sword.

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Marriage and Monastic Foundations

The defining feature of the couple's life in the synaxarion is their chaste marriage: though wed, they are said to have remained virginal by mutual agreement, a form of ascetic married life held up in the tradition as a witness to purity. Their shared wealth was not retained but directed outward — devoted, in the surviving accounts, to sheltering and caring for the poor and the sick.

After their parents died, Julian and Basilissa are said to have established two monasteries, one for men and one for women, and to have entered the monastic life themselves as heads of these communities. Basilissa led the women's house; some accounts relate that she reposed in peace before the outbreak of the persecution that claimed Julian, though the two are venerated jointly as martyrs.

Persecution and Martyrdom

The martyrdom is traditionally placed in the persecutions of the early fourth century, with the year given as 313 and the place as Antinoë in Egypt. The Latin and Greek traditions differ over the location — Latin accounts associate the saints with Antioch in Syria — but the commemoration kept here follows the Egyptian setting of Antinoë.

The synaxarion relates that Julian's steadfastness under torture led to a series of conversions. Among those drawn to the faith were Celsus, a youth identified as the son of his persecutor; a woman named Marcionilla; and the priest Anthony. A dead man is said to have been raised and baptized, receiving the name Anastasius, "the Resurrected." Together with these converts, a company that the tradition numbers as twenty soldiers and seven youths shared in the martyrdom, all said to have been beheaded by the sword.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 8