Life and Martyrdom
According to the synaxarion, Theodota was a Christian native of the city of Nicaea in Bithynia who lived under the emperor Diocletian. Left a widow, she maintained a pious life and brought up her three sons in the faith, and she is remembered for a spiritual friendship with Saint Anastasia, known as the Deliverer from Potions.
When persecution of Christians arose, the holy women were arrested. A dignitary named Leucadius, attracted by Theodota's beauty, brought her into his home with the intention of marrying her; she, however, kept herself in purity and would not yield to either his threats or his inducements. His anger at her resistance led him to hand Theodota and her children over to the governor Nicetas in Bithynia.
At the interrogation her eldest son, Evodus, openly confessed the faith, declaring that Christians do not fear tortures but rather fear being forsaken by God; for this the boy was beaten brutally in his mother's sight. When officials then attempted to assault Theodota, the account relates that an angel of the Lord restrained all who tried to approach her. Taking this for sorcery, the judge condemned Theodota together with her three children to death by fire.