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Tatiana of Rome

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Feast
  
January 12

Died
  
Rome, Italy

Role
  
Name
  
Tatiana Rome

Patronage
  
students


Tatiana of Rome Saints who destroyed religious images A Reader39s Guide

Venerated in
  
Roman Catholic ChurchEastern Orthodox Church

Attributes
  
Shown holding a martyr's cross, or a plate with two eyes on it

Similar People
  
Pope Leo I, Pope Clement I, Pope Sixtus III, Pope Honorius III, Pope Anicetus

The life of the holy martyr tatiana of rome


Saint Tatiana was a Christian martyr in 3rd-century Rome during the reign of Emperor Alexander Severus. She was a deaconess of the early church.

Contents

Tatiana of Rome MYSTAGOGY The Skull of Saint Tatiana the Martyr of Rome

According to legend, she was the daughter of a Roman civil servant who was secretly Christian, and raised his daughter in the faith, and she became a deaconess in the church. This was dangerous, and one day the jurist Ulpian captured Tatiana and attempted to force her to make a sacrifice to Apollo. She prayed, and miraculously, an earthquake destroyed the Apollo statue and part of the temple.

Tatiana of Rome Saint Tatiana39s Feast Italian Slow Walks

Tatiana was then blinded, and beaten for two days, before being brought to a circus and thrown into the pit with a hungry lion. But the lion did not touch her and lay at her feet. This resulted in a death sentence being pronounced, and after being tortured, Tatiana was beheaded with a sword on January 12, around AD 225 or 230.

Tatiana of Rome Saint Tatiana of Rome Deaconess and Martyr Russian icon

Saint tatiana of rome january 12


Veneration

Tatiana of Rome Martyr Tatiana of Rome and those who suffered with Her Orthodox

Tatiana is venerated as a saint, and her feast day is on January 12 (for those churches which follow the traditional Julian Calendar, January 12 currently falls on January 25 of the modern Gregorian Calendar). The miracles performed by Saint Tatiana are said to have converted many people to the fledgling religion. Saint Tatiana is patron saint of students. In Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine, Tatiana Day is semi-formally celebrated as "Students Day".

The similarity of her life with those of Martina and Prisca has led some to question whether they may even all be the same person, or if perhaps similar hagiographies were assigned to them posthumously. There is no early evidence of veneration of either Martina or Tatiana in Rome, and Prisca (or Priscilla) is hard to identify.

References

Tatiana of Rome Wikipedia


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