Martyr Unknown

Martyr Anthusa

Also known as Anthousa

A martyr commemorated by the Church, of whom no detailed life survives.

Feast Day
August 27
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Anthusa

Life

Anthusa is an Orthodox martyr commemorated on August 27. In the liturgical tradition she is also styled Anthousa the New, a designation that distinguishes her from other saints of the same name. Almost nothing of her life is recorded: the Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion preserves her commemoration but notes that no biographical details survive.

What the tradition does relate is the manner of her death. Liturgical sources describe her as having been put to death by drowning, cast into a well for confessing the faith of Christ. Beyond this account of her martyrdom, the date and place of her suffering are not specified in the available sources.

Anthusa is one of many early martyrs whose name and feast the Church has retained while the narrative of their life has been lost. She should be distinguished from other saints bearing the name Anthusa, including Anthusa of Mantinea and Anthusa of Constantinople, who are commemorated on other days.

Contributions & Legacy

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Commemoration and the Loss of Her Life

The Orthodox Church in America's Lives of the Saints retains Anthusa's commemoration on August 27 but records that no information about her survives. The orthodox.net Menaion for the day likewise lists her among the commemorations without further detail. Her entry is therefore an honest stub: the Church continues to keep her memory even where the account of her life has not been handed down.

Liturgical witnesses that name her as Anthousa the New describe her martyrdom by drowning, recording that she was cast into a well for the faith of Christ. This brief notice is the only narrative element attached to her name in the available sources.

Notes

Honest stub; OCA gives no life details.

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