Saints
Nunilo and Alodia – Protect us from the Islamists
Saints Nunilo and Alodia (died c. 842/51) were a pair of
child martyrs from Huesca. Born of a mixed marriage, they eschewed the Islam of
their father in favor of their mother's Christianity. They were executed by the
Muslim authorities of Huesca in accordance with sharia law as apostates. Their
feast day is 22 October.
The girls were arrested during the persecutions conducted by
Abd ar-Rahman II, the emir of Córdoba in Spain. When they refused to disavow
their faith they were placed in a brothel and later beheaded. Their relics were
revered at Leyre in the tenth and eleventh centuries, when a portal was
fashioned bearing their image, which still survives.
The Translatio sanctarum Nunilonis et Alodiae, a short
account of the translation of their relics to the monastery of Leyre in 851,
survives in two tenth-century manuscripts. The children's relics were
translated from Huesca to Leyre by Oneca, the wife of Íñigo Arista, King of
Navarre. There are some discrepancies between the account of the martyrdom in the
Translatio and that recorded by Eulogius of Córdoba.
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