Princess Sandukht

King Sanatruk of Armenia discovered that his daughter had converted to Christianity, and he pleaded with her to renounce her newfound faith and return to her native religion.

However, his efforts were unsuccessful, and the angry king proceeded to imprison both his daughter, the virgin Sandoukht, and Saint Thaddeus, subjecting them to harsh tortures.

The governor of the royal palace, an Armenian prince, also attempted to persuade Sandoukht to abandon Christianity, but instead, he too converted to the faith.

Finally, unable to tolerate the situation any longer, the king ordered the execution of both Saint Thaddeus and his own daughter Sandoukht, who were martyred in Shavarshan, the summer residence of the Armenian royal family.

[3] According to one version of the story, at the moment when a soldier plunged his sword into the heart of the holy virgin, a pleasant scent wafted through the air, and a bright light in the shape of a fiery pillar appeared in the sky, hovering over Santoukhd's body for three days and nights.

St. Thaddeus, St. Sandukht and other Christians in Sanatruk 's prison