Saints Trasilla and Emiliana | |
|---|---|
| Died | 6th century |
| Venerated in | Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church |
| Feast |
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Trasilla (also calledTarsila, Tharsilla, Thrasilla[1][2]) andEmiliana (also calledAemiliana, Emilie, Æmiliana[1][3]) were aunts ofPope Gregory I and are venerated asvirgin saints of the sixth century. They appear in theRoman Martyrology, Trasilla on 24 December, Emiliana on 5 January.[4][2]
Trasilla and Emiliana were sisters who came from an ancient Roman noble family, the gens Anicia. Their brother, Senator Gordian, was a rich patrician who owned "a magnificent villa on theCaelian Hill and large estates in Sicily",[1] and who became the father ofPope Gregory I.[4] They had another sister, Gordiana (also called Gordia), who was much younger.[2] Their grandfather wasPope Felix III andPope Agapetus I was probably an ancestor. Their mother,Silvia, was also a saint.[1] Gregory wrote that his father had three sisters, who vowed themselves to God and lived a life ofvirginity, fasting, and prayer in their father's home on theClivus Scauri inRome. Even though they did not live in a monastery, they were consecrated and lived according to a rule. Gordiana eventually left to marry the manager of her estates,[1][2][4] although Gregory said that she "went to perdition".[5] According to hagiographer Agnes Dunbar, "[Trasilla] was so constant at her prayers that her knees became hard like those of a camel".[2] Hagiographer Sabine Baring-Gould says that "with great satisfaction",[5] the story was confirmed by Gregory.
Tradition states that "after many years of service",[4] Felix III, appeared to Trasilla, showed her "a throne prepared for her",[2] and ordered her to enter heaven; "seeing Jesus beckoning"[4] and struck with a fever, she died onChristmas Eve. A few days later, Trasilla appeared to Emiliana, inviting her to celebrateEpiphany in heaven; she died the day before, on January 5.[1][2][6][4] Most of what is known about their life, visions, and death are from Gregory, who spoke about them from his 38thhomily on theGospel of Matthew and hisDialogues.[1]
According to tradition, theirrelics and those of their mother, Silvia, are in the Oratory of Saint Andrew on theCaelian Hill.[4]