Euphemia and the Goth is a romance text of Syriac literature. It is set at Edessa in Mesopotamia in 396 AD but the story appears to have been written in the fifth century AD. The text is known to have survived in two Syriac manuscripts (the earlier of the 9th century) and in a Greek translation.
The narrative pertains to a Gothic soldier in the Roman army stationed at Edessa to help repel the Huns. He is billeted with a widow named Sophia, and wishes to marry her only daughter Euphemia. Sophia takes him to the tombs of the Confessors Shmona, Gurya, and Habib, where she makes him promise to protect Euphemia.[1]
The Goth takes Euphemia to his home only to have her enslaved to his Gothic wife. Euphemia's infant is then poisoned by the wife, but Euphemia revenges when she kills the wife by using the same poison. Euphemia is then shut in the tomb of the wife, but after praying to the Confessors, she is instantly transferred back to tombs of the Confessors and returns to her mother Sophia in Edessa.
The Goth sometime later returns to Edessa and is confronted by Euphemia and Sophia. Both make an affidavit against him concerning Euphemia's affliction, and though the bishop of Edessa Eulogius intervened, the Stratelates of Edessa has the Goth beheaded.
The story is seen as a Hagiographical tale, written to celebrate the miraculous works of the martyrs Shmona, Gurya and Habbib.[2] Although the story may have been based on historical events, the actual bishop of Edessa in 396 was Cyrus; Eulogius died in 387.[3] Many sources state that Habib died in the early fourth century.[4]