St. Gayane,
St. Hripsime and Their Companions
According to tradition, the Hripsimian sisterhood was home to 37 virgins who lived as
hermits in a Roman monastery around 300 A.D. The Roman emperor saw a
painting of Hripsime and fell desperately in love
with her, vowing to make her his wife.
Not wanting to break her vows by
being forced to marry the emperor, Hripsime and the
other sisters followed their leader, Gayane, out of
The Roman emperor asked
Armenian soldiers found the women,
but instead of sending Hripsime back to
Instead of pushing Hripsime toward marriage, Gayane
told her to stand firm in her faith and vow of chastity. So, King Drtad had Gayane tortured.
Still, she refused to encourage Hripsime to marry.
Because she continued to decline
marriage, the King's forces cruelly tortured and eventually killed Hripsime as well as the other sisters. The Armenian
forces cut out their tongues, pinned them to the ground, burned their bodies,
tore them open with stones, and pierced their eyes.
The martyrdom of these women took
place in the last year of St. Gregory the Illuminator's imprisonment in the
deep pit. When St. Gregory was released, he immediately picked up their
relics, buried them, and built a church at the site.