Martyr 4th century

Virgin Martyr Manatho

died early 4th century

Also known as Manatho

A Christian virgin arrested under Maximian who was publicly humiliated, tortured, and burned alive.

Feast Day
November 6
Also Nov 13
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Virgin Martyr Manatho

Life

Manatho (also rendered Manetha and Maratho) was an early-Christian virgin martyr put to death during the Diocletianic ('Great') Persecution. According to the Orthodox Church in America's synaxarion, she was arrested as a Christian under the emperor Maximian (reigning 286–305), endured many torments, was led naked through the city and publicly mocked, and was finally burned alive.

Liturgical tradition links her closely to a group of martyrs of Caesarea in Palestine. On November 13 the OCA commemorates the 'Martyrs Nikephoros, Antoninus, Germanus, and Manetha of Caesarea,' the three men being beheaded under Maximian by the governor Firmilian; Manetha, captured with them, was tortured, paraded naked through the city, and burned alive. The anchor identifies this Manetha of Caesarea as likely the same person as the Manatho commemorated on November 6.

Her name and feast vary across recensions: she is encountered as Manatho, Manetha, and Maratho, and is venerated on more than one date (October 20, November 6, November 12, and November 13 appear across Greek and Slavic calendars), reflecting differing groupings of the same Holy-Land martyrs rather than separate persons.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 286–305 Persecution under Maximian Manatho lives during the reign of the emperor Maximian, the period the OCA assigns to her arrest and martyrdom.
  2. 303–313 The Great Persecution The Diocletianic Persecution, with Caesarea in Palestine a principal center of martyrdom under the governor Firmilian and the emperor Maximinus Daia; one resource dates the associated Caesarea martyrs to around 308.
  3. early 4th century Arrest, humiliation, and martyrdom Arrested as a Christian and tortured, Manatho is led naked through the city and mocked, then burned alive.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context

Manatho's martyrdom belongs to the Great Persecution (303–313), the last and most severe Roman persecution of Christians. The OCA situates her sufferings in the reign of Maximian (286–305); the associated Caesarea martyrs are dated by one resource to around 308.

Caesarea Maritima was the capital of Roman Palestine and a major center of martyrdom during this period. Maximinus Daia, ruling in the East from 305, made the city a base and intensified the persecution, which reached its height in 309–311. Executions there employed varied punishments, including beheading and burning alive. The historian Eusebius of Caesarea witnessed these events and recorded them in his 'Martyrs of Palestine.'

The governor named in the OCA account of the Caesarea martyrs, Firmilian, is the same official documented as responsible for executions at Caesarea during the persecution—an external correspondence consistent with placing Manatho among the Holy-Land martyrs.

Name, Feast, and Identity

The saint is recorded under several spellings—Manatho, Menetha, and Maratho—and on several dates across traditions. The OCA lists her on November 6 (as Manathó) and on November 13 (as Menetha of Caesarea). Surviving liturgical verses place a 'Pure Manatho, virgin in spirit and body' on October 20 and 'Maratho the virgin... cast into the fire' on November 12, and group her among 'Holy Martyrs Anthony, Zebinas, Germanos, Nikephoros and Manatho the Virgin.'

The anchor treats the November 13 Menetha of Caesarea as likely identical to the November 6 Manatho, noting that the multiplicity of dates and spellings reflects different calendar groupings of the same early Holy-Land virgin martyr rather than distinct saints. (A modern Belarusian saint also named Menetha, 1918–1984, is a separate person.)

Martyrdom

The OCA relates that Manatho was arrested with other martyrs and endured many torments specifically because she was a Christian. She was subjected to public humiliation—led naked through the city and mocked—and was ultimately burned alive.

The November 13 account adds that she was captured alongside the male martyrs Nikephoros, Antoninus, and Germanus, who were beheaded; her own end by fire after severe torture is consistently reported across the entries.

Notes

Nov 13 = Manetha of Caesarea (likely the same virgin martyr; verify).

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