medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Today (27. July) is the feast day of:
1) Seven Sleepers of Ephesus (d. 250 or 251, supposedly). The Sleepers of Ephesus, usually but not always seven in number, are said in a story that is at least as old as the early sixth century to have been Christian youths who were walled up in a cave outside of Ephesus (variant: Arabissos in Cappadocia) by the order of the emperor Decius. Instead of actually dying, they slumbered for some three hundred years and woke up in the reign of an emperor Theodosius (the numbers suggest Theodosius II, r. 401-450), whereupon they proclaimed the truth of the resurrection of the dead. Having done so, the Sleepers then returned to their cave, where they promptly died and were buried.
The Sleepers have a Passio with versions in Greek (BHG 1593-1599), in many Eastern languages (BHO 1012-1022), and in Latin (BHL 2313-2320; the first of these is by St. Gregory of Tours, who worked with a Syrian informant). There are numerous other medieval accounts based on the Passio as well as versions of the story that are by no means so specific. Two of the latter are a) in the _Qur'an_, at Surah 18 ("The Cave") and b) at Paul the Deacon, _Historia Langobardorum_, 1. 4 (with a location in far northern Germany at the edge of what must be the world-encircling Ocean).
A late antique burial cave near the ruins of ancient Ephesus in today's İzmir province in Turkey has since the sixth century been venerated as the Sleepers' resting place. Here's the Sacred Destinations page on it:
http://tinyurl.com/mhh4nz
Another view:
http://tinyurl.com/mdettq
In Eastern churches these saints have usually been celebrated on either 22., 23., or 24. October. In the Latin West the two most common dates have been today and 27. June.
2) Pantaleon of Nicomedia (d. early 4th cent., supposedly). We know nothing of the actual life of the megalomartyr P. (also Panteleimon), called "of Nicomedia" in modern scholarship to distinguish him from P. of Bisceglie, one of the companions of that Apulian city's legendary early martyr-bishop Maurus. His hagiographic legend in Greek (BHG 1412z-1418c) and in Latin (BHL 6429-6446) makes him a physician of Nicomedia who learned that the only important medicine was the cure of souls, who nonetheless was given the grace to operate many miraculous cures of the body, and who underwent a "classic" passio (including colloquies with the emperor followed by a series of ineffective tortures followed by decapitation) supervised by the emperor Maximian (i.e. Galerius).
In Eastern-rite churches P. has been celebrated on various days in late July, especially today (his feast day in the Byzantine Rite). The earlier ninth-century Marble Calendar of Naples, with its admixture of "Eastern" and "Western" feasts, also places his celebration on this day. But in the Latin West P.'s late antique and medieval feast day was often 28. July (so the [pseudo-]Hieronymian Martyrology; also Florus, St. Ado, and Usuard). From the sixteenth century onward the Roman Martyrology has commemorated P. under today's date.
Some visuals:
a) Ano Boulari (Mesa Mani), Lakonia, church of Agios Panteleimon (991/2). An illustrated, English-language account follows that of the same settlement's Agios Stratigos on this page:
http://www.zorbas.de/maniguide/deepc.html
Portrait of P. (at left; very late tenth-century) in the church's right apse:
http://www.zorbas.de/maniguide/scans/anbo.jpg
b) Vicinity of Distomo in Phokis, monastery of Hosios Loukas, katholikon, earlier eleventh-century mosaic portrait of P. (restored between 1953 and 1962):
http://tinyurl.com/2uc6482
c) Nea Moni, Chios, katholikon, mid-eleventh-century mosaic portrait of P.:
http://tinyurl.com/2bagwoy
d) Saint-Pantaléon, Gordes (Vaucluse), église Saint-Pantaléon (said to go back to the fifth century but in its present form largely an originally twelfth-century church). A page of expandable views:
http://tinyurl.com/mfq9xt
Other views:
http://tinyurl.com/mxhy8l
http://tinyurl.com/mvp2h4
http://tinyurl.com/mrhq9x
e) Köln, former abbey church of Sankt Pantaleon (consecrated, 980; expanded, mid-twelfth century; heavily damaged in World War II; restoration completed, 1962). An illustrated, German-language account of the building's history is here:
http://www.romanische-kirchen-koeln.de/125.html
Views (west front; early sixteenth-century Lettner):
http://www.kunsttrip.nl/steden/keulen/St%20Pantaleon.htm
http://www.deutsche-staedte.de/koeln/stpantaleon.html
Other views:
http://www.romanische-kirchen-koeln.de/810.html
http://www.romanische-kirchen-koeln.de/index.php?id=829
f) Venice, basilica di San Marco, cappella di San Pietro, earlier twelfth-century (?) mosaic on outer wall, P. at right:
http://tinyurl.com/nqygq9
g) Nerezi Lartëm (Skopje), Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, church of Sveti Panteleimon (twelfth-century). Illustrated, English-language accounts are here:
http://tinyurl.com/62c5ls
http://www.trekearth.com/gallery/photo917025.htm
Other views:
http://campus.belmont.edu/honors/Macedonia/Nerezi.html
h) Mödling (Niederösterreich), an illustrated, German-language page on the originally late twelfth-century (after 1182) Pantaleonskapelle:
http://www.othmar.at/kirchen/karner/karner.html
Another view:
http://tinyurl.com/lamdnc
i) Losa de Mena (Burgos), Castilla y León, ermita de San Pantaleón de Losa (late twelfth-/early thirteenth-century):
Illustrated, Spanish-language accounts:
http://www.arteguias.com/romanico_merindades.htm
http://tinyurl.com/6z487v
Other views:
http://tinyurl.com/6bu2wp
http://tinyurl.com/6xhdu8
j) Dolianova (CA), Sardinia, (ex-)cattedrale di San Pantaleo (1160-1289):
http://www.stilepisano.it/immagini4/index12.htm
http://tinyurl.com/67foz4
http://tinyurl.com/6qnc6y
k) Pieve a Elici di Massarosa (LU), Tuscany, chiesa di San Pantaleone (a thirteenth-century replacement for an early medieval predecessor on the same site). Illustrated, Italian-language account:
http://www.luccaterre.it/scheda.php?id=2807〈=it
More views (greatly expandable):
http://tinyurl.com/pgqs6w
l) Chartres, cathédrale de Notre-Dame, Saint Pantaleon window (1220-25):
http://tinyurl.com/gjx64
Detail (P. before the emperor Maximian):
http://tinyurl.com/jx83f
m) St. Catherine's Monastery, Sinai, icon of P., with scenes from his Bios (thirteenth-century):
http://www.nasledie-rus.ru/img/580000/580319.jpg
n) Maria Enzersdorf (Niederösterreich), Burg Liechtenstein, relief of P. (thirteenth-century; said to have come from Venice):
http://tinyurl.com/ny8fnv
o) Thessaloniki, church of Agios Panteleimon (thirteenth-century):
http://tinyurl.com/6dybud
p) Sopoćani (Raška dist.), Serbia, monastery church of the Holy Trinity, fresco portrait of P. (wearing light blue over purple) among the healers in the south choir (later thirteenth-century):
http://tinyurl.com/2cmfglq
http://tinyurl.com/29zxlo8
q) Mt. Athos, Protaton church, fresco portrait of P. attributed to Manuel Panselinos (ca. 1300):
http://tinyurl.com/2ay8r4c
r) Sopoćani (Raška dist.), Serbia, monastery church of the Holy Trinity, fresco portrait of P. in the chapel of St. Stephen, Protomartyr (fourteenth-century):
http://tinyurl.com/246kvh2
http://tinyurl.com/2g2z5v8
s) Peć in, depending on one's view of the matter, either the Republic of Kosovo or Serbia's province of Kosovo and Metohija, Patriarchate of Peć, church of St. Demetrius, fresco portrait of P. (ca. 1317-1324):
http://tinyurl.com/y93rcvq
http://tinyurl.com/y9u82wr
t) Courmayeur (AO), Valle d'Aosta, chiesa parrochiale di San Pantaleone twelfth-/fifteenth-century, later rebuilt):
http://tinyurl.com/22uek3b
http://tinyurl.com/2dg2ujw
http://tinyurl.com/k7lu7
(menu on the right in this last page takes one through stages of building on the site)
u) Unkel (Lkr. Neuwied), Rheinland-Pfalz, Pfarrkirche St. Pantaleon (thirteenth-/early sixteenth-century):
http://tinyurl.com/n7ke4y
http://tinyurl.com/l7hbsh
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/original/13126853.jpg
A view of this church's earlier fourteenth-century (second quarter) wooden reliquary shrine for a relic of P., painted in the later fifteenth-century, is at no. 3 here:
http://tinyurl.com/m3vtoo
3) Celestine I, pope (d. 432). C. is said to have been a native of the Roman Campagna. As a deacon of the Roman church, he is addressed with great respect in a letter from St. Augustine of 418. In 422 he succeeded pope St. Boniface I. At Rome C. suppressed the remaining Novatianists, taking away their churches and forcing them to meet in private homes. He restored the basilica that became Santa Maria in Trastevere (this had suffered damage in Alaric's sack in 410). During his pontificate the basilica that replaced the original _titulus Sabinae_ was built on the Aventine; we know it now as Santa Sabina. Here are some views:
http://tinyurl.com/23e6yq
http://tinyurl.com/2cusxc
http://tinyurl.com/38gm2y
http://tinyurl.com/3y6vay
http://tinyurl.com/3xtx7d
An illustrated, English-language page on this church's much restored, originally fifth-century wooden door:
http://www.rome101.com/Christian/Sabina/
The Sacred Destinations page on Santa Sabina and that page's accompanying photogallery:
http://www.sacred-destinations.com/italy/rome-santa-sabina
http://tinyurl.com/yefhgqu
Bill Thayer's page-in-progress on Santa Sabina:
http://tinyurl.com/92wyu
Elsewhere, C. was unsuccessful in getting the church of Africa to recognize his primacy. In 429 he sent St. Germanus of Auxerre to Britain in a campaign to suppress Pelagianism. G. was accompanied on this journey by the deacon Palladius, the first recorded Christian missionary to Ireland. C. used an appeal from St. Cyril of Alexandria to condemn Nestorius in 430 and, through emissaries, successfully pursued this course in the following year at the First Council of Ephesus. Today is C.'s _dies natalis_; he was buried in the cemetery of Priscilla.
4) Clement of Ohrid (d. 916); also Gorazd, Naum, Sava, and Angelarius (d. early 10th cent.; G. perh. d. 885/886). These Slavonic-speaking disciples of Sts. Constantine/Cyril and Methodius are generally considered the founders of the organized church in Bulgaria. Their grouping comes from C.'s late eleventh-century Bios by St. Theophylact of Ohrid (BHG 355). The two best known are C. and N., who were among Methodius' earliest missionary companions in Great Moravia and whose later work was based on Pliska and on Ohrid in today's Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. C., a prolific commentator and translator, has also been viewed traditionally as the deviser of the Cyrillic alphabet (probably a product of the Pliska Literary School directed by N. after C.'s move to Kutmichevitza in 886). C. and N. founded monasteries at/near Ohrid that have survived and preserved their memory; both have Lives in Old Church Slavonic.
English-language summaries of these saints' achievements are here:
http://www.mymacedonia.net/language/clement.htm
http://www.mymacedonia.net/language/naum.htm
Remains of C.'s late tenth-century monastery church of St. Panteleimon at Ohrid have been found beneath its much rebuilt successor dedicated both to C. and to P.:
http://www.ohrid.org.mk/eng/crkvi/pantelej.htm
C.'s present tomb in the latter church:
http://tinyurl.com/5tssfy
Remains of N.'s monastery church at today's Sveti Naum, some thirty kilometers south of Ohrid, have been found beneath that institution's much photographed early modern buildings:
http://www.ohrid.org.mk/eng/crkvi/sv_naum.htm
An illustrated, English-language page on Ohrid's originally late thirteenth-century church of Sv. Bogorodica Perivlepta (Sv. Kliment):
http://www.ohrid.org.mk/eng/crkvi/sv_bogorod.htm
Other views:
http://tinyurl.com/2d4h76y
http://tinyurl.com/2f2rumg
http://www.ikontour.org/sv%20kliment%20Pande%20Trajkoski.jpg
Four detail views of older parts of the exterior start here:
http://tinyurl.com/22sdfnv
C. as depicted in a late thirteenth-century fresco in this church:
http://tinyurl.com/365xarv
C. as depicted in a thirteenth-century relief icon in the Gallery of Ohrid Icons in Sv. Bogorodica Perivlepta at Ohrid:
http://www.ohrid.org.mk/eng/ikoni/32.htm
C. as depicted in a fourteenth-century icon in the same collection:
http://www.ohrid.org.mk/eng/ikoni/22.htm
C. as depicted in the earlier fourteenth-century frescoes (ca. 1313-ca. 1320) of the altar area in the King's Church (dedicated to Sts. Joachim and Anne) in the Studenica monastery near Kraljevo (Raška dist.) in southern Serbia:
http://tinyurl.com/ycrsggl
N. as depicted in two fourteenth-century icons in the Gallery of Ohrid Icons in Sv. Bogorodica Perivlepta at Ohrid:
http://www.soros.org.mk/archive/G02/sm0808.htm
http://www.ohrid.org.mk/eng/ikoni/23.htm
4) Berthold of Rachez (d. 1142). According to his two closely posthumous Vitae (BHL 1274-1282; 1283), the Austrian noble and monastic reformer B. (also B. of Garsten; in Latin, Bertoldus and Perhtoldus) entered the great abbey of St. Blaise in the Black Forest at a very young age and rose there to occupy positions of responsibility before becoming, in about 1105, prior of the abbey of Göttweig in today's Niederösterreich. In 1111 B. became the first abbot of Göttweig's former priory at Garsten in today's Oberösterreich. There he introduced the Cluniac-inspired reforms promoted by the abbey of Hirsau in today's Baden-Württemberg, opened both a hospice and a guest house, and made Garsten a center of spiritual retreat that attracted numerous wealthy visitors including the emperor Conrad III. His cult was immediate; the Vitae that followed ascribe to him powers of prophecy and thaumaturgy.
B.'s cult was officially permitted by the bishop of Passau in 1236. Austrian Benedictines kept it alive. B.'s Office was approved for the diocese of Linz in 1883 and for the diocese of Passau in 1892. His cult was confirmed papally 1951.
Best,
John Dillon
(last year's post revised and with the addition of Berthold of Rachez)
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