In Part Iย of this discussion, we saw how imprisonment in Byzantine martyr narratives could become a spiritual threshold. Confinement was not merely punishment; it could mark transformation.
But what happens when confinement is not imposed โ when it is actively sought?
The Greek Life of St. Matrona of Perge, written in the mid-sixth century or later, offers a striking answer. Unlike martyrs forced into prison, Matrona repeatedly chooses enclosure. Yet she must move constantly in order to find it.
Her story unfolds across cities โ Constantinople, Emesa, Jerusalem, Beirut โ and is marked by flight, disguise, and pursuit. Beneath this movement, however, lies a single, persistent aim: isolation for the sake of God.
Movement Toward Enclosure
Matrona begins as a married woman who longs for a more ascetic life. In Constantinople, she takes the dramatic step of disguising herself as a eunuch and entering the male monastery of Bassianos. There she lives for three years in disciplined seclusion. The monastery becomes her first chosen confinement โ a space of radical self-redefinition.
When her identity is discovered, she is compelled to leave. What follows is not freedom, but further searching. Her husband pursues her from city to city. Each escape becomes a new attempt at enclosure.
The most revealing episode occurs in Beirut.
A Deserted Temple at the Edge of the City
After a series of perilous journeys, Matrona settles in a deserted pagan temple on the edge of the city. It is an abandoned structure โ neither fully urban nor truly wilderness. This marginal setting becomes the stage for her most intense confrontation with space.
Here, the narrative slows down. The rapid sequence of travels pauses, and attention shifts to the place itself.
One night, while chanting psalms, Matrona hears voices responding to her, though no one is present:
Now, it happened once, as she performed the nightly psalmody, that demons sang most fervently in response, for she heard the voices of many men singing. Taking fright and fortifying herself with the sign of the cross, she completed the psalmody, considering within herself and saying: โthis place is deserted and the house unhallowed; there is no populated place in this area, nor have any passers-by approached; whence, then, come these voices?โ
(trans. Featherstone and Mango 1996: 35)
The temple is empty โ yet inhabited. In late antique imagination, abandoned pagan sites were not neutral ground. They were associated with demons, remnants of displaced gods. By choosing this place, Matrona does not withdraw into safety. She enters contested territory.
Soon a demon appears in the form of a woman and urges her to leave: this is no place for you; return to the city, where there is comfort, hospitality, and provision.
The temptation is subtle. The demon does not threaten; it invites. The argument is pragmatic: ascetic isolation is unnecessary, even dangerous. The city offers order and security. Why remain in desolation?
Matrona refuses.
Yet the text carefully preserves tension. The temple, including its environs, is described in two sharply contrasting ways. On the one hand, it is hostile, demonic, barren. On the other, it miraculously sustains her, โsupplying her with daily nourishment, as if by tributeโ (cf. trans. Featherstone and Mango 1996: 36). The very space that appears lifeless becomes productive.
Confinement in Matronaโs Life is thus presented as both threat and gift. The place resists her presence, yet it also yields to it. The demon attempts to drive her away; the environment sustains her perseverance.
The temple is not merely a backdrop. It becomes an active participant in her ascetic formation.
By remaining in the temple, she affirms that isolation is necessary for spiritual concentration. Confinement becomes a deliberate narrowing of focus. The deserted temple is thus transformed into a workshop of holiness.
What makes Matrona especially compelling is that she is not a desert solitary; she remains largely within urban settings. Even her most radical isolation occurs at the margins of a city. Her holiness is shaped not by geographical remoteness, but by deliberate withdrawal within inhabited worlds.
Movement, paradoxically, enables enclosure. Each journey strips away a former identity โ wife, mother, and disguised monk. Each new space intensifies her spiritual focus.
Return, Foundation, and Spatial Memory
After years in Beirut, Matrona eventually returns to Constantinople. The narrative comes full circle. The city she once fled becomes the site of her lasting foundation: she establishes her own monastic community and dies as its revered abbess.
The woman who once concealed herself within male walls now builds her own.
A later reworking of her Life from the tenth century adds a striking spatial detail. It specifies the precise location of her convent in Constantinople: the place โhad the sea on the right side, and on the other, it neighbored the monastery of Bassianosโ (cf. trans. Bennasser 1984: 148).
This detail is remarkable. In the end, Matrona is situated between the two elements that shaped her identity: the monastery of Bassianos โ her first place of confinement in male disguise โ and the sea, the medium of her repeated journeys from one city to another. Movement and enclosure, which structured her life, are now fixed in geography.

Matronaโs story suggests that holiness in Byzantine narrative is not achieved through static withdrawal alone. It is forged through negotiation with space โ through choosing where to remain, where to depart, and where to resist departure.
In Part I, prison was a threshold imposed by others. In Matronaโs Life, enclosure becomes intentional. She enters it again and again, not because she is forced, but because she recognizes its power.
Confinement, in her life, is not a boundary. It is a method.
And perhaps that is why her story endured: it proposes that spiritual transformation does not always require distant deserts. Sometimes it begins at the edge of the city โ in a place others have abandoned โ when someone decides to remain.
For Matrona, holiness is not found by fleeing walls, but by deciding which walls to inhabit โ and why.
Christodoulos Papavarnavas
Visiting Assistant Research Professor
Medieval Institute
University of Notre Dame
Papavarnavas, Christodoulos. “Confinement in Byzantine Narrative, Part I: Martyrs and the Threshold of Holiness“. Medieval Studies Research Blog. Medieval Institute: University of Notre Dame (October 15, 2025).


