Thanks - and of course I have an Italian saint for a surname.
When I lived in Winchester, I became interested in the local saint, Swithun
(usually mis-spelled Swithin everywhere else). He was bishop of Winchester
and tutor to Alfred the Great. He also built the first bridge over the River
Itchen. He only had one miracle in his lifetime: walking across the bridge,
he met a peasant woman who was so astonished at meeting the bishop that she
dropped all the eggs she was carrying to market. He picked them up and
handed them back to her, still whole. When he died, he was buried outside
the cathedral as he had requested, so the rain would fall on his grave, but
years later they decided it would be more appropriate to move his body
inside. He was so angry he made it rain for 40 days - hence the legend that
if it rains on St Swithun's Day (15 July) it will rain for 40 days
afterwards.
Haven't got to know the Welsh saints yet, St Illtud, St Teilo, St David etc.
Best wishes
Matthew
-----Original Message-----
From: E P <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
Date: 08 August 2000 08:59
Subject: Re: A Saint for Matthew
>
>
>Matthew wrote:
>
>Saints do interest me, probably because I can't understand
>>them. Matthew
>
>
>Here is some help for Matthew to understand Saints better.
>First Saint: San Matteo
>
>
>
>>Thanks, Candice. Saints do interest me, probably because I can't
>understand
>>them. The painting the poem is based on is in Southampton City Art
>Gallery -
>>a long way for you to go and see it, I know. Amazingly, I forgot to take a
>>note of the name of the painter. Can anyone help?
>>
>>Haven't read Steve's poem, as I haven't had my copy yet.
>>
>>Best wishes
>>
>>Matthew (or else Matteo)
>
>............
>Saint Matthew the Apostle, also known as the Evangelist (San Matteo, first
>Century AD))
>is the Saint Patron of the City of Salerno (my home town) in the South of
>Italy.
>It is represented - in the iconography of the kind - as having two opposite
>faces.
>(Saint Matthew or else Giano Bifronte).
>It is widely respected, but also suspected of being hypocritical (say, to
>have two different "faces"
>for different situations.) Because of this iconography, which is also on
the
>flag of the town of Salerno and on the
>local armorial bearings, Salernitan people are considered by those of other
>towns in the region has having the same
>unreliable attitude of San Matteo. Unlike San Gennaro, San Matteo makes no
>miracles. He avoids in this ways both
>fanatic veneration and vehement cursing (cursing occurs when the Saint does
>not gratify the people's expectations, like in the few cases when San
>Gennaro's blood did not melt in the cup, as it normally does twice a year.)
>San Matteo's relics lie in a crypt in the Cathedral of Salerno side by side
>with the human remains of famous
>Hildebrand di Soana (Gregory the VII, Pope from 1073 to 1085) who increased
>the papacy's temporal power and moved temporarily the Vatican Site to the
>charming town of Salerno) .The event remains in the chronicles.
>
>Erminia
>
>
>
>
>
>Lycos Homepage > Lycos_Italy > Arte & Spettacolo > Letteratura
>...acquistare online. Passannanti Erminia NUOVO! - Le......forme di
>scrittura visiva.
>http://www.lycos.it/dir/Arte_e_Spettacolo/Letteratura/Autori/Novecento/
>
>
>
>
>
>
>________________________________________________________________________
>Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
>
>
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|