Martyrdom
According to the Passio, the three daughters endured multiple forms of torture: they were burned over an iron grating, thrown into a red-hot oven, and cast into a cauldron filled with boiling tar. Love, the youngest, was additionally tied to a wheel and beaten with rods until her body was covered with bloody welts.
All three were finally beheaded, and the account relates that they bent their necks beneath the sword. Sophia was spared physical torture; instead she was forced to witness her daughters' suffering, her spiritual agony serving as her own form of martyrdom.
Sophia buried her daughters along the Via Appia. The tradition relates that she sat by their graves for three days and then gave up her soul to the Lord, and so she is reckoned to have received a martyr's crown though she shed no blood.