Martyr 4th century

Martyr Cyrilla of Cyrene

Also known as Cyrilla of Cyrene · Cyprilla

A Christian widow of Cyrene in Libya who suffered martyrdom for confessing Christ.

Feast Day
July 5
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Cyrilla of Cyrene

Life

Cyrilla, also recorded as Cyprilla, was a Christian widow of Cyrene in Libya who suffered martyrdom for refusing to sacrifice to the pagan idols. She is commemorated on July 5.

Her death is placed in the persecution of the emperor Diocletian (reigned 284-305), and accounts associate her with the city of Cyrene in North Africa, where she was both born and put to death around the year 300.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Martyrdom

The surviving accounts describe Cyrilla as an elderly widow of Cyrene. One tradition relates that she had been widowed for many years, her husband having died early in their marriage.

When she was arrested during the persecution of Diocletian and refused to offer sacrifice to the idols, her torturers attempted to compel an act of worship by force: they placed lit coals and incense in her bare hands so that, when she dropped the burning mass onto the altar, it would count as an offering. Rather than let the coals fall, she is said to have gripped them firmly and refused to cooperate.

When this stratagem failed, she was tortured to death. The accounts describe her flesh being torn with metal hooks, and she died of these torments.

Companions

A number of sources connect Cyrilla with the Hieromartyr Theodore, Bishop of Cyrene, naming her among the holy women Cyprilla, Aroa, and Lucia who attended the bishop during his imprisonment under the governor Dignianus. By this tradition she visited Theodore in prison and was healed of a severe ailment through his prayers, and after his death she too was seized and martyred.

These traditions relate that, following Cyrilla's burial, the women Lucia and Aroa were beheaded. The connection of Cyrilla with this group is noted in the sources but is not uniformly attested, and her own commemoration is kept on July 5.

Miracles & Traditions

Historically Documented: The sources offer no independently documented miracles.

Traditional Accounts: By one tradition, when Cyrilla was raised upon wood and her flesh torn, blood flowed from her wounds together with milk from her breasts. The same tradition relates that she had earlier been cured of a severe headache through the prayers of Bishop Theodore of Cyrene.

Notes

Possibly the Cyprilla numbered among the companions of Hieromartyr Theodore of Cyrene (Jul 4, OS-1471). Flagged for review.

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