After her death, the jailers put Helen's body in a sack and threw it into the
Black Sea. However, the sack floated away with what the Turks described as a heavenly light shining on it. According to Orthodox Resources, a light coming from the bottom of the sea alerted a crew of Greek sailors to Helen's resting place. Expecting to find gold, the sailors dove down to the source of the light and found the sack. After they retrieved her remains, a
divine revelation showed them to be a source of healing. Helen's body was sent to Russia, but her head was returned to Sinope, where it was
venerated in the Church of the
Panagia. This
relic was said to be a source of
miracles, especially for those suffering from headaches. When the
Turkish army drove the ethnic Greek population from Sinope in 1924, the refugees brought the relic with them to Greece. It is venerated today in the Church of St. Marina in the Ano Toumbas quarter of
Thessalonika. ==References==