Trial and Martyrdom
The surviving Acts record an exchange between Crispina and the proconsul Annius Anullinus at Theveste in December 304. Pressed to sacrifice in accordance with Diocletian's edict, she answered that she would obey only the command of her Lord Jesus Christ. The proconsul ordered that her head be shaved and that she be held up to public humiliation, a measure intended to break her resolve through shame.
The account relates that she remained unmoved, neither swayed by the threat of execution nor by the weeping of her children. She was sentenced to death and beheaded by the sword. Later tradition counts her death among those that followed the fourth and most severe edict of Diocletian's persecution.