Martyr 4th century

Martyr Polychronia

Also known as Polychronia, mother of Saint George

Honored in the tradition surrounding the Great Martyr George as his mother, who confessed Christ and died a martyr.

Feast Day
April 23
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Polychronia

Life

Polychronia is venerated as a martyr of the early fourth century and is known in Orthodox tradition as the mother of the Great Martyr George the Trophy-bearer. According to the synaxarion, she came from the city of Lydda, also called Diospolis, in Palestine, and belonged to a renowned and noble family. Her husband was Gerontios, who is remembered as an idolater, while Polychronia herself lived as a Christian, devoting herself to reading the Scriptures, to prayer, and to a disciplined life of fasting and self-restraint.

The tradition surrounding her places her death during the persecution of the Emperor Diocletian, alongside the witness of her son. She is commemorated on April 23, the feast of Saint George. Because her account is preserved chiefly within the larger tradition of George's life, the historical record concerning her is limited, and the details are transmitted hagiographically rather than from independent documentary sources.

Contributions & Legacy

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Tradition and Martyrdom

By the synaxarion's account, Polychronia raised her son George in the Christian faith and remained close to him throughout his imprisonment and trial, strengthening him by bringing him Holy Communion. When the emperor questioned who she was, she is said to have answered openly that she was a Christian like her son, declaring that the punishments inflicted on George were in fact preparing a heavenly crown for him.

The tradition relates that Diocletian then ordered her to be tortured: she was suspended and her body torn, her wounds burned with lit candles, and, in some retellings, red-hot iron shoes placed upon her feet. She endured these torments steadfastly and surrendered her soul, after which Christians are said to have recovered and buried her remains. A parallel account names her husband as Gerontios, an officer from Cappadocia who was himself martyred, and records a secondary commemoration on November 4.

Notes

Known from the tradition of St George's life; flagged for source review.

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