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Her feast day is August 5. Although many different accounts of her life exist, the most widely known is The Acts of Saint Afra, which dates from the Carolingian period (8th century AD). In the opinion of most critics this is compilation of two different accounts, the story of the conversion of Saint Afra, and the story of her martyrdom.
The former is of later origin, and is merely a legendary narrative of Carlovingian times, drawn up with the intention of connecting with Saint Afra the organization of the church of Augsburg.
Afra was dedicated to the service of the goddess, Venus, by her mother, Hilaria. According to this source, she was originally a prostitute in Augsburg, having gone there from Cyprus, maybe even as the daughter of the King of Cyprus.
She is reputed either to have run a brothel in that town or worked as a hierodule in the Temple of Venus. She continued to hide the bishop from the authorities.
She refused, and was condemned to death by fire on a small island in the Lech River, with her remains being buried at a distance from the place of her martyrdom.
Her mother and her maids (viz, Ligna, Eunonia, and Eutropia) later suffered the same fate, for interring her in a burial vault. According to an alternative account in an earlier document, Afra was beheaded, rather than having been burned. The Martyrologium Hieronymianum (a compilation of martyrs) mentions that Afra "suffered in the city of Augsburg" and was "buried there".
Her feast day is August 5.
According to Carl Egger, it appears that the author of the passio blended the account of Afra with that of Venerea, a martyr of Antioch, who is mentioned on the same day in the Martyrologium Hieronymianum. Contrary to this, other ancient calendars portray Afra as a virgin.
Saint Ulrich"s and Saint Afra"s Abbey, Augsburg (German: Kloster Sankt Ulrich und Afra Augsburg) is a former Benedictine abbey dedicated to Saint Ulrich and Saint Afra in the south of the old city in Augsburg, Bavaria.