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      • Prisca (died 315) was a Roman empress as the wife of the emperor Diocletian. According to the Latin writer Lactantius, Prisca and her daughter Valeria were "forced to be polluted" by sacrificing to the Roman gods during the Great Persecution of 303.
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  2. Prisca (died 315) was a Roman empress as the wife of the emperor Diocletian. According to the Latin writer Lactantius , Prisca and her daughter Valeria were "forced to be polluted" by sacrificing to the Roman gods during the Great Persecution of 303 . [2]

  3. Prisca (empress) - Biography. Biography. Nothing is known of her family background. Although she was a Christian or favorably disposed to Christianity, she was forced to sacrifice to the gods during the Great Persecution of 303. The faces of Diocletian and his wife can be made out on the busts in the medallions of the frieze inside the ...

  4. Prisca (died 315) was a Roman empress as the wife of the emperor Diocletian. According to the Latin writer Lactantius, Prisca and her daughter Valeria were "forced to be polluted" by sacrificing to the Roman gods during the Great Persecution of 303.

  5. Galeria Valeria (died 315) was the daughter of Roman Emperor Diocletian and wife of his co-emperor Galerius. Biography [ edit ] Born as Valeria to Diocletian and Prisca , she married Galerius in 293, when her father elevated him to the position of Caesar . [1]

  6. The holy, glorious and right-believing Martyr Alexandra the Empress (also known as Prisca) was married to Emperor Diocletian in the late third and early fourth centuries. She is honored with feast days on April 21 and April 23 (the latter being St. George 's day).

  7. Aurelia Prisca (died 315) was the Empress of Rome (286–305) and wife of Emperor Diocletian. According to the Latin writer Lactantius, Prisca and her daughter Valeria were "forced to be polluted" by sacrificing to the Roman gods during the Great Persecution of 303.

  8. May 16, 2017 · 3 Greet Prisca and Aquila, who work with me in Christ Jesus, 4 and who risked their necks for my life, to whom not only I give thanks, but also all the churches of the Gentiles. 5 Greet also the church in their house. (NRSV) Prisca and Aquila were a married couple engaged in ministry together in the early church.

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