St. Apollonia Medals
St. Apollonia patron saint medals honor one of the most courageous martyrs of the early Church — an Alexandrian deaconess who endured the extraction of every tooth as an act of persecution before giving her life for Christ in 249 AD. Because her torture centered on her teeth and jaw, the Church has long recognized Apollonia as the patron saint of dentists, dental patients, and all who suffer from toothache or dental disease. Her feast day falls on February 9, and Catholics around the world invoke her intercession whenever they face dental procedures, dental anxiety, or oral illness. Her story is not merely one of suffering — it is one of absolute, unshakable faith that transformed even physical agony into a declaration of love for God.
Catholics wear a St. Apollonia medal as a daily reminder that their work — or their suffering — is united to something eternal. For practicing dentists and dental hygienists, her medal is a professional emblem worn with quiet pride, connecting the clinical precision of modern dentistry to a tradition of sacred care stretching back nearly two millennia. Dental school graduates receiving their diplomas in May find her medal a deeply personal gift that marks the beginning of a vocation, not just a career. Patients facing oral surgery, root canals, or extended dental treatment also seek her intercession, and a medal from a loved one can carry real comfort into the treatment chair.
Every St. Apollonia medal in our collection is crafted in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing and backed by a lifetime guarantee. Choose from sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold in a range of sizes and chain lengths to find the right expression of this devotion. Browse our full selection of patron saint medals or explore our St. Blaise medals for another beloved patron of healing and physical protection. Free shipping on all orders over $40.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is St. Apollonia the patron saint of?
St. Apollonia is the patron saint of dentists, dental hygienists, dental patients, and all who suffer from toothache or tooth decay. Her patronage of dentistry arose directly from her martyrdom: during her persecution in Alexandria in 249 AD, her torturers extracted or knocked out all of her teeth before threatening to burn her alive, and she chose death rather than renounce Christ. Because her suffering was so specifically tied to the teeth and jaw, the Church recognized her as the natural intercessor for dental pain and for the profession dedicated to relieving it. Her feast day is celebrated on February 9, and her name has been invoked for toothache relief since at least the early medieval period.
Why is St. Apollonia specifically the patron of dentists and not just toothache sufferers?
St. Apollonia's patronage extends to dentists as a profession because her martyrdom made her the defining saint associated with teeth, and by extension with those who work on them. Over the centuries, as dentistry developed from a trade into a licensed medical profession, dental guilds and later dental schools adopted her as their patron, placing her image in clinics and offices as a symbol of the vocation's dignity. The medal she is depicted on typically shows her holding a tooth — the instrument of her suffering — which serves as a professional emblem for dentists in the same way that the caduceus functions as a medical symbol. Many dental schools formally invoke her intercession at graduation ceremonies, and her feast day on February 9 is observed by Catholic dental associations around the world.
What is the story of St. Apollonia's martyrdom?
St. Apollonia was an elderly deaconess in Alexandria, Egypt, when anti-Christian mob violence broke out in 249 AD, a year before the Decian persecution made such attacks official Roman policy. She was seized by a crowd that demanded she deny Christ and repeat blasphemous words; when she refused, they struck her face and systematically extracted all of her teeth. Even after this torture, she would not apostatize, so her captors built a bonfire and threatened to burn her alive. According to a letter written by Bishop Dionysius of Alexandria — who witnessed or had direct knowledge of the events — Apollonia asked for a brief pause, then broke free and leaped voluntarily into the flames, dying immediately. The Church has always interpreted this not as suicide but as a Spirit-prompted act of total self-offering, and she was venerated as a martyr from the earliest period.
Is a St. Apollonia medal a good gift for a dental school graduation?
A St. Apollonia medal necklace is one of the most fitting gifts you can give a dental school graduate precisely because the connection between the saint and the profession is specific, historical, and deeply meaningful rather than generic. When a new dentist or dental hygienist receives a St. Apollonia medal at graduation, they are being given something that links their career to nearly two thousand years of Catholic tradition honoring the same vocation. Sterling silver medals are a popular choice for graduation because they are substantial enough to feel like a real keepsake without requiring the investment of solid gold, though 14kt gold filled and 14kt solid gold options are available for a more elevated gift. All medals at rosarycard.net are USA-made by Bliss Manufacturing and arrive in gift-ready packaging with free shipping on orders over $40.
When is St. Apollonia's feast day?
St. Apollonia's feast day is February 9, observed annually in the Roman Catholic Church. The date commemorates her martyrdom in Alexandria in 249 AD and has been kept since at least the fourth century, when Bishop Dionysius of Alexandria's account of her death was widely circulated among Christian communities. February 9 is a natural occasion for dental professionals to mark the day — some Catholic dental associations hold Masses or blessings on or near her feast day — and it is also a meaningful date to give a St. Apollonia medal as a gift to a dentist, dental hygienist, or anyone suffering from dental illness who might find comfort in her intercession.
Are the St. Apollonia medals at rosarycard.net made in the USA?
Yes — every St. Apollonia medal necklace sold at rosarycard.net is manufactured in the United States by Bliss Manufacturing, and each piece carries a lifetime guarantee against defects. Bliss has been producing Catholic medals domestically for decades, and their craftsmanship is evident in the detail of the imagery, the weight of the metal, and the durability of the finish across sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold options. Buying a USA-made medal means you are supporting American manufacturing while giving or wearing a piece that will hold up to daily devotional use for years. Free shipping is included on all orders over $40, and gift-ready packaging is standard.
The Story of St. Apollonia
St. Apollonia was an elderly deaconess living in Alexandria, Egypt, during the reign of Emperor Philip when a wave of anti-Christian mob violence swept through the city in 249 AD — a year before the formal Decian persecution began. A pagan prophet had stirred the crowds against Christians, and Apollonia was seized by rioters who demanded she renounce Christ and repeat blasphemous words. She refused. Her persecutors responded with calculated cruelty: they struck her face repeatedly and then extracted or knocked out every one of her teeth, one by one. Even after this torture, she would not apostatize. The mob built a bonfire and threatened to throw her in alive unless she spoke against Christ. According to the account preserved by Bishop Dionysius of Alexandria — an eyewitness who wrote about her death in a letter — Apollonia asked for a moment's pause, then broke free from her captors and leaped voluntarily into the flames, dying instantly. The Church has never interpreted this as suicide but as a Spirit-led act of total self-offering, and Pope Clement I confirmed her veneration. She was canonized by the early Church and her feast day, February 9, has been observed since the fourth century.
Why Catholics Wear a St. Apollonia Medal
The connection between St. Apollonia and dentistry is direct and historically grounded: because her martyrdom involved the deliberate destruction of her teeth, she became the natural intercessor for those who work on teeth professionally and for those who suffer dental pain. Dentists, oral surgeons, dental hygienists, and orthodontists have worn her medal as a professional patron for centuries, in the same way that physicians wear St. Luke medals or lawyers wear St. Thomas More medals. A St. Apollonia medal typically depicts the saint holding a large tooth — her most recognizable attribute — sometimes alongside a pair of pincers representing the instrument of her torture, and often with a palm branch symbolizing her martyrdom. Some versions show her with a torch or flame referencing her death by fire. Wearing this medal is an act of professional dedication: a quiet acknowledgment that the care of human bodies is a vocation with a spiritual dimension, and that Apollonia's courage in the face of physical suffering is a model for those who spend their careers alleviating exactly that kind of pain in others.
Our St. Apollonia Medal Collection
Every St. Apollonia medal necklace at rosarycard.net is manufactured in the United States by Bliss Manufacturing, a company with decades of experience producing Catholic medals to the highest standards of craftsmanship. Our collection is available in three metals: sterling silver for an enduring classic look, 14kt gold filled for a warm, substantial finish at an accessible price, and 14kt solid gold for a heirloom-quality piece meant to last generations. Medals come in small, medium, and large sizes, and chains are available in standard lengths to suit different necklines and preferences. Every piece carries a lifetime guarantee — if anything is ever wrong with your medal, we make it right. Orders over $40 ship free. If you are looking for other medals honoring saints associated with healing and the body, explore our Guardian Angel medals for protection, our St. Blaise medals for throat and illness intercession, and our dedicated patron saint of dentists collection for the full range of options available for dental professionals.
Giving a St. Apollonia Medal as a Gift
The single most meaningful gift occasion for a St. Apollonia medal is dental school graduation — typically held in May — when a new dentist or dental hygienist crosses the threshold from student to practitioner. A sterling silver or gold filled St. Apollonia necklace given at that moment carries the weight of both professional pride and spiritual blessing, and it is the kind of gift that gets worn for decades. A second major occasion is passing the dental board examination, a high-stakes milestone that many dental graduates describe as more stressful than graduation itself; a medal ordered in advance and presented when results arrive is a deeply personal gesture. Dental hygiene program pinning ceremonies — a tradition modeled on nursing's pinning ceremony — are a third natural moment, particularly because the pinning ritual already carries a ceremonial, almost sacred character. Finally, February 9, St. Apollonia's feast day, is a natural occasion for dental offices to mark the day with a small gift to staff or colleagues. All orders arrive in gift-ready packaging, and free shipping applies to orders over $40.








