Rovinj, Croatia
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Church of Saint Euphemia, the patron saint of the town.

To have a better understanding of how this impressive church was built in Rovinj, one needs to know who was St. Euphemia, and why she became the patron-saint of the town. In the time of Tsar Diokletian many Christians were captured, persecuted and killed. Among them was a young girl called Euphemia. She was born in 290 to a well-known patrician family.

When she was fifteen years old, she was arrested by Diocletian's soldiers, and when she refused to give up Christianity, she was tortured. She still remained loyal to Christ, and was thrown to the lions who eventually killed her. She died on March 16, 304. Christians from Chalcedon preserved the body of the martyr until 620 when the town was captured by the Persians. The sarcophagus with the body of St. Euphemia was then transferred to Constantinople, and placed in a magnificent church which was built in her honour by Tsar Constantine. In 800 the Iconoclasts (icon-slashers) came to power, and the Christians were forced to remove the relics of St. Euphemia.

It's hard to say what happened next. People say that a marble sarcophagus came floating in the sea to the coast of Rovinj after a big storm at dawn of July 13, 800. It is said that many people of Rovinj tried to haul the sarcophagus to the Church of Saint George, but no one succeeded. Finally, answering to St. Euphemia's call, a small boy with two little cows managed to haul the sarcophagus up the hill.

The people of Rovinj considered it a miracle, and they proclaimed St. Euphemia the patron-saint of the town. St. Euphemia's Day is celebrated on September 16.

© E. Shatara, 2011