


SAINTS PERPETUA and FELICITY
Saints Perpetua and Felicity are early Christian martyrs, among the most famous women saints of the Church.
Who they were
- Perpetua: A young noblewoman from Carthage (in modern Tunisia), well-educated, a new mother, and a catechumen (preparing for baptism).
- Felicity: Perpetua’s enslaved companion, also a catechumen, and pregnant at the time of their arrest.
Martyrdom
- They were arrested around AD 203 during persecutions under the Roman emperor Septimius Severus.
- Refusing to renounce Christ, they were condemned to die in the arena.
- Felicity gave birth in prison shortly before execution, so she could suffer martyrdom with the others.
- They were sentenced to death by wild beasts but the animals did not kill them and finally were murdered by the sword.
Why they are important
- Their story is preserved in The Passion of Saints Perpetua and Felicity, one of the earliest Christian texts written partly by a woman (Perpetua’s own prison diary).
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They are powerful witnesses to:
- Faith over family and social status
- Equality in Christ (free and enslaved, noble and poor)
- Courage, motherhood, and steadfastness under persecution
Feast day
- March 7 (in both the Roman Catholic and many Christian calendars)
In Catholic tradition
- Their names are included in the Roman Canon (Eucharistic Prayer I), a rare honor showing their importance in the early Church.
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SAINTS PERPETUA and FELICITY
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