Venerable-Martyr 8th century

Martyr Anna disciple of Stephen the New

8th century

Also known as Anna

A noblewoman who gave away her possessions, became a nun under Saint Stephen the New, and endured persecution for the icons.

Feast Day
November 28
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Anna

Life

Anna was an eighth-century noblewoman of the Byzantine world who, having sold her possessions and distributed the proceeds to the poor, embraced the monastic life under Saint Stephen the New, a foremost defender of the holy icons during the iconoclast persecution. Tonsured a nun and placed in the women's monastery of Trichinarion, she became entangled in the campaign against Stephen when the iconoclasts, unable to break his resolve, fabricated a charge of immorality between him and Anna. She refused to bear false witness against her spiritual father and was beaten with rods for her steadfastness, dying as a martyr. She is commemorated on November 28 among the companions of Stephen the New.

Contributions & Legacy

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Renunciation and monastic life

Anna was a noblewoman who sold all her possessions and gave the proceeds to the poor. She received monastic tonsure from Saint Stephen the New while he was living on Mount Auxentius in Bithynia, and afterward was sent to live in the women's monastery called Trichinarion. The setting of her life was the reign of the iconoclast emperor Constantine V (Copronymus), under whom the veneration of holy icons was persecuted and Stephen the New stood out as a leading defender of the images.

False accusation and martyrdom

When the iconoclasts failed to turn Saint Stephen from venerating the holy icons through flattery, bribery, and threats, they accused him of visiting the Trichinarion monastery by night and of sinning with the nun Anna. Although her own maidservant testified against her, having been promised her freedom and marriage to a nobleman, Anna denied any guilt. Soldiers seized her and brought her before the emperor, but she refused to lie about Saint Stephen. In anger he had her stretched out on the ground and beaten with rods, during which she maintained her innocence. The soldiers continued to beat her until she was near death, and she died a martyr, accounted to have received the crowns of virginity and martyrdom.

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