Martyr 2nd century

Martyr Tryphaena of Cyzicus

A senator's daughter of Cyzicus who offered herself for Christ and was martyred.

Feast Day
January 31
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Tryphaena of Cyzicus

Life

Tryphaena (also rendered Tryphaina or Tryphaine) was an early martyr of Cyzicus, a city on the Hellespont in Asia Minor. By tradition she was the daughter of a senator and was raised in the Christian faith by her mother. The synaxarion presents her not as a passive victim of persecution but as one who openly confessed Christ and worked to turn her neighbors away from idolatry. She is commemorated in the Orthodox Church on January 31.

According to the tradition recorded in the synaxarion, Tryphaena was subjected to a series of tortures, each of which she survived by what the sources describe as the grace of Christ: she was cast into a fiery furnace and emerged unharmed, thrown from a height onto a bed of iron nails, and exposed to wild beasts that did not devour her. She finally died after being gored by a maddened bull.

Her veneration is closely tied to a spring of water that, by tradition, welled up at the place where her blood was shed. The synaxarion relates that women who had difficulty nursing were able to produce milk after drinking from it, and for this reason she came to be invoked by nursing mothers.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Life and Witness

The synaxarion locates Tryphaena at Cyzicus, an ancient city on the Hellespont, and describes her as the daughter of a senator who was brought up as a Christian by her mother. Rather than awaiting arrest, she is said to have confronted the surrounding pagan cult directly, criticizing idolatry and urging her hearers to turn to faith in Christ.

Her boldness brought her before the authorities, and when neither threats nor inducements moved her, she was put to torture. The traditions agree on the general sequence of her trials, though they are reported in the manner typical of early martyr accounts.

Martyrdom

By tradition, Tryphaena was first thrown into a fiery furnace and emerged unscathed. She was then cast from a height onto a bed of iron nails, and afterward given to wild beasts, which did not harm her. She received the crown of martyrdom when she was gored by a maddened bull.

The synaxarion relates that a spring of clear water welled up at the place where her blood was shed. Women who could not nurse their children were said to recover their milk after drinking from it, and on this account Tryphaena is invoked by mothers who have difficulty nursing.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 31