medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Today (28. November) is the feast day of:
1) Irenarchus of Sebaste (d. early 4th cent. ?). I. is a very poorly attested saint of Sebaste in Armenia (today's Sivas in central Turkey). He has a legendary Martyrion (BHG Suppl., 2204) whose first manuscript witnesses are of the tenth century but which will have already been in existence in some form by the eighth century, when the Martyrion of St. Blaise, which draws upon it, begins to be attested. Later Martyria and synaxary notices of I. depend upon his legend as presented in this text, a tissue of commonplaces making him a pagan at Sebaste who during the persecution of an otherwise unknown governor Maximian (generally taken to be the emperor ineptly reduced in rank by I.'s hagiographer) is moved to convert by the constancy of seven Christian women prisoners and who is martyred after they are. The _dramatis personae_ also include two infants and the priest Acacius who baptizes I.
Unlike Blaise, whose cult (also linked hagiographically to Sebaste) was popular enough to have stimulated a sixth-century reference by a medical encyclopedist, I. has no testimonia apart from this Martyrion. Epigraphic evidence of his having had an early cult is lacking. I. entered the Latin-Rite martyrologies from Greek liturgical sources in the sixteenth century. Medieval Greek liturgical books typically do not include in I.'s commemoration the seven women, the two infants, and the priest Acacius. Since its revision of 2001, neither does the RM.
2) Papinian and Mansuetus (d. 430). We are told about these two African martyrs, victims of Vandal persecution under Geiseric, in Victor of Vita's propagandistic _Historia persecutionis Africanae provinciae_ (1. 8. 10). P. (more correctly Pampinian; also Papian) was bishop of Vita (today's Zaghouan in Tunisia); he is said to have been burned to death with red hot iron plates. M. was bishop of Uruc (or Urusi; today's Henchir Sougga near Kairouan); he is said to have been burned to death outside Vita's gate of Furnos or Furni. P. and M. entered the historical martyrologies with Florus of Lyon, who placed them under 1. December. Usuard moved them to today.
3) Stephen the Younger (d. 764). We know about this victim of iconoclast persecution from his Bios of ca. 809 by a deacon of Constantinople who also was named Stephen (BHG 1666). A native of that city, he had been a hermit before entering the monastery of St. Auxentius on the homonymous mountain in Bithynia (now Kaish Dagh near Kadiköy in the Asiatic portion of Istanbul). He was hegumen there when in 762 the emperor Constantine V requested that he observe the anti-iconophile canons of the council of Hieria of 753. S.'s refusal brought him exile on Proconnesus but in 763 he was brought back to Constantinople, imprisoned, and later executed. Today is his _dies natalis_.
4) James of the March (d. 1476). J. (Giacomo della Marca; Jacobus Picenus) was born at Monteprandone in today's Ascoli Piceno province of the Marche overlooking the valley of the Tronto, which at this part of its course served as the border in the later Middle Ages between the papal state to the north and the mostly mainland kingdom of Sicily to the south and which now similarly separates the Marche from Abruzzo. He was christened Domenico and studied first at Ascoli Piceno and then at Perugia, where he obtained doctorates in civil and in canon law. After a few years in minor posts at Florence and at Bibbiena he entered the Franciscan order in 1416 at the convent of Santa Maria degli Angeli at Assisi. There he took the Christian name by which he is known and studied under St. Bernardino of Siena.
Santa Maria degli Angeli is of course the home of St. Francis' celebrated chapel, the Porziuncola. Herewith a few views of this monument, starting with the exterior (frescoed in 1829/30) and ending with Ilario da Viterbo's recently restored altarpiece of 1393 on the rear wall:
http://tinyurl.com/yg2pk8
http://austinspace.smugmug.com/photos/10316407-L.jpg
http://tinyurl.com/59wcsh
http://tinyurl.com/yjrps4
http://tinyurl.com/ydhtby
J. was ordained priest in or shortly after 1420 and began to preach extensively in north central Italy, founding as he went numerous Monti di Pietŕ (low-interest pawn and credit funds which the Franciscans were promoting actively). He also traveled widely in northern and eastern Europe, both as a diplomat and as an inquisitor. From 1435 to 1438 J. was his order's vicar in Bosnia. In the 1450s J. preached crusade against the Turks; in 1456 he succeeded St. John of Capestrano in János Hunyadi's campaign in Bosnia and Serbia. Back in Italy he continued to preach and was also called upon to resolve numerous local disputes. In his last few years J. was based at Naples. He was buried at the Franciscan convent of Santa Maria la Nuova, where he still is (thus qualifying as a saint of the Regno). Some views of J.'s incorrupt remains are here:
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/corpo_incorrotto.htm
J. was canonized in 1726. He is one of Naples' patron saints. An early poem (_Elegiae_ 1. 7) by the late fifteenth-/early sixteenth-century Neapolitan humanist Jacobo Sannazaro honors him.
In 1449 J. founded the convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in his native Monteprandone. The convent's library, now housed in Monteprandone's Palazzo Comunale, has a nucleus of manuscript books that once belonged to J., including four so-called autographs that are really working texts dictated by him. Most of J.'s sermons have not been edited but the two published relatively recently in the the conference volume _San Giacomo della Marca nell'Europa del '400_ (Padova: Centro Studi Antoniani, 1997) show considerable skill. (J. was given to quoting pertinent bits of Italian poetry in these Latin texts: at least one has a few lines from Dante and many quote _Laude_ by or attributed to Jacopone of Todi). Herewith some views of the library and of selected contents:
http://giornale.regione.marche.it/archivio/num0102/foto17a.htm
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/o_sgiacomo/manoscritti.jpg
Expandable views of pages from individual codices are at lower right here:
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/biblioteca_san_giacomo.htm#target
Other views (also expandable):
http://web.tiscali.it/corradettiivan/text/allcodici.htm
At Monteprandone one may also see a house where J. is said to have been born:
http://web.tiscali.it/corradettiivan/images/fotogr3.gif
Also at Monteprandone, in the Museo del Santuario di San Giacomo della Marca, one may see various objects said to have been his. The last four images (all expandable) on this page are of a chalice, two crucifixes, a chest for relics, and an ivory triptych said to have belonged to J.:
http://web.tiscali.it/corradettiivan/text/allfoto.htm
More views (also expandable) are at lower right here:
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/MUSEO.htm
Some fifteenth-century portraits of J.:
Carlo Crivelli's painting (1477):
http://www.abcgallery.com/I/italy/crivelli5.html
A portrait by Carlo's brother, Vittore Crivelli (second image is expandable):
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/arte/2.htm
http://pintura.aut.org/SearchProducto?Produnum=133063
Another:
http://pintura.aut.org/SearchProducto?Produnum=133069
Pietro Alemanno's portrait:
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/arte/3.htm
Cola d'Amatrice's portrait:
http://www.sangiacomodellamarca.net/arte/4.htm
Best,
John Dillon
(James of the March lightly revised from last year's post)
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