Martyr 4th century

Martyr Boniface and Righteous Aglaia of Rome

died c. 307

Also known as Boniface of Tarsus · Aglaia

Boniface was servant to Aglaia, and both repented of a sinful life; Boniface was martyred at Tarsus, and Aglaia later lived in repentance and charity.

Feast Day
December 19
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Boniface of Rome, who suffered at Tarsus, and the Righteous Aglaia

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Life

Boniface and Aglaia are commemorated together as a pair whose lives turned from dissipation to sanctity. Boniface was a servant in the household of Aglaia, a wealthy woman of Rome, and the two lived together in an immoral manner before both came to repentance.

By tradition Aglaia, wishing to obtain the relics of martyrs for the protection and blessing of her household, sent Boniface eastward to Tarsus in Cilicia during a time of persecution against Christians. There Boniface openly confessed Christ, was tortured, and was beheaded around the year 307. His own remains were carried back to Rome as the relics that had been sought.

His death moved Aglaia to embrace the Christian faith. She gave away her wealth to the poor, built a church at the place where Boniface was buried, and spent the remainder of her life in repentance within a monastery. The two are jointly commemorated on December 19.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. Before conversion In the household of Aglaia Boniface served as a steward in the house of Aglaia, a wealthy Roman woman, and the two lived together in a dissolute manner. Despite this, Boniface was known for kindness toward the poor and the unfortunate.
  2. During persecution Sent to Tarsus for relics Aglaia, having learned of the spiritual benefit of venerating the relics of holy martyrs, commissioned Boniface to travel east to Tarsus in Cilicia to obtain such relics for the household.
  3. c. 307 Confession and martyrdom at Tarsus Arriving in Tarsus during the persecution, Boniface witnessed Christians suffering, confessed his own faith in Christ, and refused to worship idols. After enduring severe tortures he was beheaded with the sword.
  4. After the martyrdom Aglaia's repentance and charity Boniface's relics were brought back to Rome. Aglaia, converted by his death, distributed her wealth to the poor, built a church over his burial place, and withdrew into monastic life, where she lived for some fifteen years.

Contributions & Legacy

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From Dissipation to Repentance

The shared life of Boniface and Aglaia is remembered above all as an account of conversion. Both began in a manner the tradition describes frankly as sinful, yet both are said to have been troubled in conscience and to have desired spiritual cleansing.

The synaxarion preserves a striking detail: before setting out for Tarsus, Boniface is said to have remarked, half in jest, that if he could find no relics he might bring back his own body instead. The remark, which Aglaia is said to have rebuked as irreverent, was taken in the tradition as an unwitting foreshadowing of his martyrdom.

Martyrdom at Tarsus

Boniface suffered at Tarsus in Cilicia, where he had gone to seek the relics of martyrs. Confessing Christ publicly amid the persecution, he was subjected to severe tortures before being beheaded with the sword, traditionally dated to about the year 307.

The fuller synaxarion accounts relate that he was suspended and beaten, that needles were driven beneath his fingernails, and that molten tin was poured into his mouth; that he was cast into a cauldron of boiling tar from which, by tradition, he was preserved unharmed; and that at his beheading the onlookers were moved to faith. These vivid details belong to the traditional martyr-account rather than to independent record.

Relics & Shrines

The relics of Boniface were carried from Tarsus back to Rome. By tradition Aglaia built a church at the place of his burial; this is associated with the Roman church later known as Santi Bonifacio e Alessio. Aglaia was in time buried alongside him.

Veneration

The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates Boniface and Aglaia together on December 19. In the West, Boniface of Tarsus was historically observed on May 14, though his commemoration was removed from the Roman calendar in the 1969 revision on the grounds that his Acts are largely legendary.

In popular Orthodox devotion the pair is invoked by those struggling against intemperance and a dissolute life, on account of their own conversion from such a life.

Notes

Named pair kept as one row; invoked in popular devotion against intemperance.

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