Persecution and Martyrdom
When Kyriake declined the marriage proposal of a wealthy magistrate, declaring that she had dedicated herself to Christ, the rejected suitor reported her family to the emperor Diocletian as Christians who refused to sacrifice to the idols. According to the accounts, her father Dorotheus was beaten, and her parents were exiled to Melitene, on the eastern border between Cappadocia and Armenia, while Kyriake was sent for interrogation to Maximian at Nicomedia.
Maximian is said to have offered her wealth and marriage to one of Diocletian's relatives if she would worship the pagan gods. When she refused, she was flogged; the synaxarion relates that the soldiers administering the punishment grew tired and had to be replaced three times. Shamed by his failure, Maximian sent her to Hilarion, the eparch of Bithynia, at Chalcedon, where she was suspended by her hair for several hours while soldiers burned her body with torches. After Apollonius succeeded Hilarion as eparch, she was subjected to fire and wild beasts before being condemned to death by the sword. Permitted to pray beforehand, she is said to have given up her soul in peace.