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148:. The monks received her and she became a member of the community, and was set to work in the garden. After about three years, Bassianus realized the ruse and Matrona returned temporarily to Susanna. But as her husband continued to search for her Bassianus suggested that she go to a woman's monastery in Emesa, where she eventually became abbess. She became famous for her miraculous gift of healing. Her husband subsequently found her and followed her to Jerusalem, Syria, and Beirut, where she lived as an ascetic in an ancient pagan temple.
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When
Bassianus learned of this he decided to establish a small monastery for Matrona and others not far from his own. The nuns under the leadership of Matrona were granted a unique privilege by Bassianus, "He did not give her woolen girdles and veils such as women were accustomed to wear, but men's
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about 430. Pious and charitable, she was married to
Domitianus. They had one daughter. She persuaded Domitianus to move to Constantinople, where she would visit the churches. When she would attend night vigils, her jealous and suspicious husband accused her being a prostitute. Wishing to lead an
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Afraid her husband would find her, she cut her hair, dressed in men's clothes, and presented herself at the monastery of St. Bassionus as a
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ascetic life, she abandoned her home and stayed with an acquaintance, Susanna, to whom she entrusted her daughter.
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wide black leather belts and men's white mantles. And these they wore continuously".
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thought the text to be of dubious value.<ref name="Holy Women of
Byzantine">
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to avoid her husband after she decided to live following the sentence in
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205:"Holy Women of Byzantium: Ten saints lives' in English translation"
214:. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. Archived from
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The
Cambridge History of Medieval Monasticism in the Latin West
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whose author and exact time period remains a mystery.
124:, "those who have wives be as if they had none".
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191:The Life of St. Matrona of Perge, d.c. 510
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163:. St Matrona died at the age of 100.
320:Late Ancient Christian female saints
100:: Ματρώνα) of the 6th century was a
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122:First Epistle to the Corinthians
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282:vita prima, Medieval Sourcebook
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155:She is known for opposing the
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300:6th-century Christian saints
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39:An illustration from the
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241:Byzantine Garden Culture
310:Byzantine female saints
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76:Eastern Orthodox Church
159:policy of the emperor
108:known for temporarily
41:Menologion of Basil II
325:Cross-dressing saints
51:unknown (6th century)
203:Talbot, Alice-Mary.
193:. Fordham University
132:Matrona was born in
172:Hippolyte Delehaye
120:, verse 29 of the
305:6th-century women
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72:Venerated in
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221:on 13 May 2014
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223:. Retrieved
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161:Anastasios I
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112:as the monk
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225:19 November
157:Monophysite
294:Categories
178:References
168:vita prima
87:November 9
58:Asia Minor
212:doaks.org
118:chapter 7
102:Byzantine
146:Babylos
114:Babylos
104:female
67:unknown
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144:named
142:eunuch
219:(PDF)
208:(PDF)
134:Perge
106:saint
98:Greek
83:Feast
54:Perge
23:Saint
267:ISBN
246:ISBN
227:2014
128:Life
64:Died
48:Born
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210:.
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96:(
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