Martyr 4th century

Martyr Ia of Persia and 9 000 Martyrs with her

died c. 362-363

Also known as Ia

A Christian woman arrested with thousands of Christians under Shapur II who refused apostasy and was martyred with the great company.

Feast Day
September 11
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Ia of Persia and the 9,000 Martyrs with Her

Life

Ia was a Christian woman of the Sasanian Persian frontier who, by tradition, suffered martyrdom together with a great company of some nine thousand Christians during the persecution of Christians under the Persian king Shapur II (reigned 309-379). She is commemorated in the Orthodox calendar on September 11. The persecution under Shapur intensified in the decades after the conversion of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great, when Persian Christians came to be regarded with suspicion as potential sympathizers of the Christian Roman Empire, and it continued until Shapur's death in 379.

According to the tradition preserved in the synaxarion, the multitude of Christians with whom Ia was taken were captives carried off when Shapur's forces seized a frontier stronghold and deported its Christian population deeper into Persia. The Greek sources give Ia's name the meaning "violet." Brought before the authorities, she was pressed by the chief of the Persian magi to renounce Christ and to worship the elements of fire and water honored in Persian religion, but she refused and confessed her faith.

For her steadfastness Ia was subjected to repeated and prolonged tortures and a long imprisonment before she was finally beheaded. By tradition, extraordinary signs accompanied her death: the light of the sun was darkened and the air was filled with a sweet fragrance. She is venerated as one of the many martyrs of the Church of Persia who perished in the fourth-century persecution, her own witness standing for the great anonymous company that suffered with her.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 309-379 Reign of Shapur II The Persian king under whose persecution of Christians Ia and her companions suffered.
  2. c. 362-363 Martyrdom of Ia and the 9,000 Ia is beheaded after prolonged torture and imprisonment, together with the great company of Persian Christians.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Arrest and the Company of Martyrs

The accounts relate that Ia was arrested together with about nine thousand Christians and brought into Persia, to a city the OCA synaxarion names Bisada. The fuller tradition recorded in the Greek sources identifies her as an older woman taken from the captured frontier fortress of Bet-Zabde and deported with other prisoners, among them clergy and ascetics, into the interior of the Persian realm. In her place of exile she is said to have taught the Christian faith to the local women, and when she was denounced to the king she was brought to trial.

Because so vast a number suffered together, the Church commemorates Ia and the nine thousand as a single company on one feast, with Ia herself remembered by name as their representative. The details of her interrogation center on the demand, made by the chief of the magi, that she abandon Christ and conform to the worship of fire and water.

Martyrdom

Refusing to apostatize, Ia endured a succession of severe torments over a long captivity before her execution. The tradition describes her being scourged by several tormentors, beaten, and otherwise cruelly afflicted across repeated sessions, and held in prison for an extended period, after which she was put to death by beheading. The synaxarion relates that at the hour of her martyrdom the sun was darkened and a sweet fragrance filled the air, signs understood as a testimony to the holiness of her death. A later tradition holds that her relics were translated to Constantinople.

Notes

Named numerical group kept as one row.

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