Father Youakim Moubarac presents the life of Mart Moura as follows: Moura is a Christian from Upper Egypt married to a deacon called Timothy. When Diocletianus came to power and wanted to erase any trace of Christianity, the governor Urban invited Timothy and his wife to embrace paganism. They refused with courage, were crucified and died from slow death around 283. It is also supposed that this martyrdom took place under Decius. The Maronite calendar of saints mentions her feast day on the dates of October 10th and September 25th. It is also mentioned on the 3rd and the 7th of May. The Bollandists kept the date of May 3rd (WHIZZ, II, 381; cf. KUE, I, 151)... The martyrdom of Timothy and Moura took place in
Ansena, a city of
Upper Egypt known as
Antinoöpolis in the Roman
Thebaid. If the martyrdom of Saint Moura took place under
Decius, then it should have been prior to June 251, the date of the death of this emperor. If the martyrdom's presumed date of 283 AD is correct, it should then have taken place under the reign of
Carus or his sons
Carinus and
Numerian. ==Places of worship==