By Fr. George Dorbarakis
1. This glorious martyr of Christ, Basil (or Basileus) of Amasea, was Bishop of the Metropolis of Amasea (which is situated on the Black Sea), in the time of Licinius, who, as the brother-in-law of Constantine the Great through his sister Constantina, was sent by Constantine against Maximinus Daia, who had rebelled and had held as a tyrant certain parts of the East.
Licinius, therefore, was found in Nicomedia, since the revolt had ended, and he offered sacrifices to the idols. He even ordered that Saint Basil be brought to him from Amasea together with a young woman named Glaphyra. This Glaphyra was a servant of Licinius’s wife Constantina, and she had perceived that Licinius was raging with passion for her, something which she reported to her mistress Constantina. Then Constantina gave her money and sent her to the East, until, going from place to place, she arrived in Amasea.
Licinius, however, learned where she had gone and that the money his wife had given her had been given to the Bishop of Amasea in order to build a church; therefore he ordered that both be seized and brought before him. But Glaphyra had already departed from this life, while the blessed bishop Basil was led to Nicomedia to the emperor and received death by the sword, after confessing his faith in Christ and spitting upon the delusion of the so-called gods and their vanity.








