A flight to preserve chastity
The account of Glaphyra is bound up with the persecution under Licinius, who in the years before his defeat by Constantine renewed pressure against Christians in Pontus and the surrounding cities. The synaxarion relates that when the emperor conceived a passion for Glaphyra, she confided in the empress Constantia, who arranged her escape rather than expose her to dishonor.
Dressed as a man and given money for the journey, Glaphyra travelled to Pontus and was received at Amasea by Bishop Basil. There she devoted the funds she carried to the construction of a church and sought additional support from the empress by letter. When that letter fell into the emperor's hands, he demanded that both the bishop and the maidservant be sent to him; Glaphyra's death intervened before the order could be carried out.