Life and Martyrdom
According to her vita, Markella was raised at Volissos by her mother, a devout Christian; her father served as the village mayor. After her mother died while Markella was still young, she continued to study Scripture, pray, and live a life of fasting and Christian virtue.
Orthodox accounts relate that when she reached about the age of eighteen, her father was seized with an unnatural, incestuous lust for her. Horrified, Markella fled to a nearby mountain to preserve her chastity, hiding herself in a bush. Her father, aided by a local herdsman, set fire to the bush; Markella escaped and ran toward the sea, where her father wounded her with an arrow. By tradition the rocks opened to conceal her body but not her head, and her father beheaded her and cast her head into the sea.
Sources and Chronology
The historical record of Markella's life is sparse and uncertain. The synaxarion of 1810 noted that information about her life and martyrdom was unknown, and documentation from 1868 supplied only limited details of her veneration on Chios. The scholar Leo Allatius mentioned her in 1648 without full attribution.
The chronology is correspondingly debated. The most widely received tradition, supported by Orthodox sources such as OrthodoxWiki, places her in the 14th century at Volissos; some 19th-century accounts instead estimated her birth around 1500. Two variant explanations of her flight also survive: one describes her father as an idolater pressing her toward paganism — judged anachronistic, since paganism was long extinct in 14th-century Greece — while the account considered more credible by Orthodox sources holds that her father was consumed with incestuous desire, from which she fled in horror.
Relics & Shrines
By local tradition Markella's severed head floated upon the sea to Komi beach, where it was discovered by the crew of an Italian (Genoese) warship. The account relates that they saw the head floating in the water, lit by upright floating candles, recognized the sight as miraculous, and carried it to their homeland in Italy.
A church was built at the cave and martyrdom site. The rock there is believed to spring holy water, and the place draws many pilgrims, especially on July 22.
Miracles & Traditions
Traditional Accounts: Local tradition holds that Markella's blood dyed the rocks of the martyrdom site red, and that this blood becomes visible each year on her feast day. The rock is said to spring holy water; during the July 22 commemoration services the water in the rock-pool is reported to boil in the presence of a priest and to feel extremely warm to the touch, and the sea is said to boil. By tradition a pilgrim of strong faith finds the rock-pool water warm. The icon of Saint Markella is among the most revered on Chios and is held to be miraculous.