Ariadne of Phrygia

Ariadna was a slave woman to a certain Tertullus in Prymnessus when by an alleged edict of Hadrian and Antoninus Christianity was outlawed.

When she refused to partake in the pagan rituals on the birthday of Tertullus's son, she was punished and her case became known to the provincial governor Gordios.

The people of Prymnessus intervened on her behalf to give her three days of repentance in which she then escaped the Roman authorities, fleeing into the nearby mountains where she was saved from her pursuers by being swallowed up by the earth.

[1][2] The only source about her life is a short Greek hagiographic text, dating to the fourth or fifth century, conserved in the Vatican on a palimpsest from the ninth or tenth century.

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