Katherine the Great
Martyr of Alexandria
November 25
Apolytikion in the
Plagal of the First Tone
Let us praise the most
auspicious bride of Christ, the divine Katherine,
protectress of Sinai, our aid and our help. For, she
brilliantly silenced the eloquence of the impious by
the sword of the spirit, and now, crowned as a
martyr, she asks great mercy for all.
Kontakion in the
Second Tone
O friends of martyrs,
now divinely raise up a renewed chorus, praising the
all-wise Katherine. For, she proclaimed Christ in
the arena, trampled on the serpent, and spat upon
the knowledge of the orators.
Saint
Katherine, who
was from Alexandria, was the daughter of Constas (or
Cestus). She was an exceedingly beautiful maiden,
most chaste, and illustrious in wealth, lineage, and
learning. By her steadfast understanding, she
utterly vanquished the passionate and unbridled soul
of Maximinus, the tyrant of Alexandria; and by her
eloquence, she stopped the mouths of the so-called
philosophers who had been gathered to dispute with
her. She was crowned with the crown of martyrdom in
the year 305. Her holy relics were taken by Angels
to the holy mountain of Sinai, where they were
discovered many years later; the famous monastery of
Saint Katherine was originally dedicated to the Holy
Transfiguration of the Lord and the Burning Bush,
but later was dedicated to Saint Katherine.
According to the ancient usage, Saints Katherine and
Mercurius were celebrated on the 24th of this month,
whereas the holy Hieromartyrs Clement of Rome and
Peter of Alexandria were celebrated on the 25th. The
dates of the feasts of these Saints were
interchanged at the request of the Church and
Monastery of Mount Sinai, so that the festival of
Saint Katherine, their patron, might be celebrated
more festively together with the Apodosis of the
Feast of the Entry of the Theotokos. The Slavic
Churches, however, commemorate these Saints on their
original dates.