medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Today (19. November) is the feast day of:
1) Severinus, Exuperius, and Felician (d. 3d cent., supposedly). S., E., and F. are martyrs of Vienne whose cult is first documented from the early ninth century, when different versions of their miraculous Inventio were current, and who are entered under 19. November in the ninth-century martyrologies of Florus of Lyon, St. Ado of Vienne, and Usuard. They have two relatively late and quite legendary Passiones (BHL 7665, 7666) that make them martyrs of what would seem to be the latter half of the third century. Their cult at Vienne was active well into the sixteenth century.
In 838 archbishop St. Barnardus of Vienne founded at today's Romans-sur-Isère (Drôme) a monastery dedicated to St. Peter and the other apostles and to S., E., and F. After his death in 842 Barnardus, who was buried nearby, came to be thought of as the monastery's protector. In the 930s this house was converted to a canonry. In 1050, when the canonry was reformed, its collegiate church was called that of St. Barnardus. In 1052 the archbishop of Vienne and the canons of St. Barnardus brought putative relics of S., E. and F. to today's Saint-Félicien (Ardèche), where these were installed in the recently built church of a dependency of St. Barnardus. Though S. and E. along with F. were surely always its titulars, this since rebuilt church came to be known -- as it still is -- by F.'s name alone. Herewith an illustrated, French-language page on this église Saint-Félicien:
http://tinyurl.com/238b8wt
Three further views of the exterior:
http://tinyurl.com/28sdkou
http://tinyurl.com/27p5lwy
http://tinyurl.com/25jpheb
While we're here, an illustrated, French-language page on the originally eleventh- to fifteenth-century église collégiale Saint-Barnard in Romans-sur-Isère:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coll%C3%A9giale_Saint-Barnard
2) Maximus of Caesarea in Cappadocia (?). M. is entered, under 18. November and with two others, in the later fourth-century Syriac Martyrology as a chorepiscopus martyred at an unspecified Caesarea and, under today and with several others at least one of whom also occurs in the aforementioned entry in the Syriac Martyrology, in the (pseudo-)Hieronymian Martyrology with Caesarea identified as the one in Cappadocia. Beyond these data, nothing is known about him. It may be inferred from the Syriac Martyrology's failure to describe M. as an ancient martyr that he was a victim of the Great Persecution.
3) Barlaam of Antioch (d. 304?). We know about B. principally from Eusebius (_Historia ecclesiastica_, 8. 12), from sermons by St. Basil the Great (BHG 223), St. John Chrysostom (BHG 222), and Severus of Antioch, and from an at least partly legendary Greek Passio (BHG 221) representing a tradition already fairly widespread in the sixth century. He is presented as an unlettered rustic caught up in a persecution at Antioch whose stubborn refusal to sacrifice to the gods of the Roman state led to his being made to hold in his hand incense and burning coals over an altar in the expectation that his pain-induced letting go of the coals would cause the incense to drop, giving the appearance of a sacrificial act. But B., it is said, unflinchingly allowed the coals to burn his hand.
B. is entered in the (pseudo-)Hieronymian Martyrology under 18. November. His commemoration on 19. November in the the RM follows the practice of the Synaxary of Constantinople.
4) Forty Women Martyrs of Heraclea (d. early 4th cent.?). This group of martyrs is entered under today in the partially preserved fourth-century Gothic Calendar and under 1. September in Byzantine menologia as having suffered at Beroea in Thrace (today's Stara Zagora in Bulgaria). They are entered under 1. September in the (pseudo-)Hieronymian Martyrology and in Byzantine synaxaries as martyrs of Heraclea in Thrace (today's Marmara Ereğli in Turkey). They have a legendary Greek-language Passio (BHG 2280, 2281) that makes them widows and virgins arrested in the Licinian persecution along with their deacon Ammon (also Ammos) at Beroea and executed at Heraclea. The perhaps eleventh- to thirteenth-century anonymous Bios of the fifth-century St. Elizabeth the Wonderworker (BHG 2121) retrojects to E.'s own time a veneration at Heraclea of the entire group, including Ammon.
Prior to its revision of 2001 the RM included Ammon in this commemoration and entered it under 1. September.
The Forty Women Martyrs of Heraclea as depicted (lower register) in a September calendar composition in the earlier fourteenth-century frescoes (betw. ca. 1312 and 1321/1322) in the nave of the monastery church of the Theotokos at Gračanica in, depending on one's view of the matter, Serbia's province of Kosovo and Metohija or the Republic of Kosovo:
http://tinyurl.com/2fwe4qw
The Forty Women Martyrs of Heraclea as depicted (at right) in a September calendar composition in the earlier fourteenth-century frescoes (betw. 1335 and 1350) of the narthex of the church of the Holy Ascension at the Visoki Dečani monastery near Peć in, depending on one's view of the matter, either the Republic of Kosovo or Serbia's province of Kosovo and Metohija:
http://tinyurl.com/2cvmmhj
5) Eudo of Calmeliacum (d. early 7th cent., supposedly). E. (also Odo; in French, Eudes) is the fairly legendary first abbot and co-founder of the abbey at Calmeliacum that became Saint-Chaffre at today's Le Monastier-sur-Gazeille (Haute-Loire) in Auvergne. According to the monastery's cartulary chronicle and to its Vitae of yesterday's St. Theofredus (a.k.a. St. Chaffre), said to have been E.'s nephew (BHL 8102-8105; not earlier than the tenth century), the foundation took place around the year 600 (modern scholars prefer the eighth century) and the original dedication was to St. Peter. E.'s cult is first attested from 840 and is still active in the diocese of Le Puy-en-Velay (where he is celebrated on 20. November).
A multi-page, illustrated, French-language site on the abbey of Saint-Chaffre in Le Monastier-sur-Gazeille (Haute-Loire):
http://www.abbatialedumonastier.fr/
Another illustrated, French-language page:
http://3ascm.vogaweb.com/histoire.html
Some views of the mostly originally eleventh- and twelfth-century abbey church:
http://www.alain-collet.com/MassifCentral/Stevenson/12.html
http://tinyurl.com/6a4pty
http://www.chamina.com/art-roman/pages/sites/site_226.asp
A view of the interior:
http://storage.canalblog.com/34/55/261616/21790117.jpg
Many other black-and-white views of the church are here:
http://tinyurl.com/2fntbxd
6) Simon of Calabria (d. 10th or early 11th cent. ?). As far as one can tell, S.'s memory survived the Middle Ages solely in a longish synaxary notice (BHG 2400) published from a thirteenth-century manuscript (Paris, BnF, ms. Grec 1621) by Delehaye in his edition of the Synaxary of Constantinople. According to this clearly legendary account, he was a monk of Greek-speaking Calabria sent to Africa by his hegumen in order to effect the ransom of fellow monks who had been enslaved during a raid. While he was negotiating it became apparent that the Muslims wished him to abjure Christ. S. protested that he would rather die. One of his interlocutors then raised an arm to strike him only to find that member immediately paralyzed. After the same fate had befallen another, S. was arrested and charged with sorcery.
The magistrate before whom this putative saint of the Regno appeared promised to free both S. and the other Christians if he through his prayers would restore the health of the two paralyzed Muslims. S.'s prayers were heard, the Muslims were cured, and S. and the earlier captives were freed and returned to Calabria. At his monastery S. resumed a severely ascetic lifestyle and distinguished himself through further miracles. Thus far his synaxary notice. S. is one of the somewhat numerous Italo-Greek saints to have entered the RM in the 2004 revisions to its revised edition of 2001.
7) Atto of Tordino (d. 11th cent.). According to his now lost Vita (said to have been medieval in origin), this less well known saint of the Regno was a monk of Montecassino sent from there to Abruzzo in or shortly after 1004 to establish as its first abbot a monastery at the newly endowed church of San Nicolò in the Tordino valley near Teramo. The monastery, which prospered rapidly, was formally that of San Nicolò di Tordino but came in time to be known also as that of A. (in Italian, Atto as well as Attone).
A. was remembered for his efforts in improving the spiritual and material well-being of the local populace and whose tomb became a pilgrimage destination. By the end of the twelfth century the monastery, now enormously wealthy, was a major landholder in the region. A modern scholarly survey refers to its "vasto patrocinio". The parish church of Sant'Attone in the _frazione_ of Sant'Atto in what is now a very industrial part of Teramo occupies part of the original site.
When in 1477 the monastery was closed the cathedral chapter of Teramo adopted A. as its own patron, a distinction that he retains today (the diocesan patron is of course St. Berardus of Teramo). An Italian-language account of Teramo's originally twelfth-century cattedrale di San Berardo is here:
http://www.diocesiteramoatri.it/arte/cattedrale.asp
A view of the cathedral's main portal (originally of 1332) in the form it assumed in the fifteenth century:
http://tinyurl.com/ca4t6
None of the figures in the niches is of A. A. has yet to grace the pages of the RM.
8) Mecht(h)ild of Hackeborn (d. 1298 or 1299). The mystic M., who seems not to have been papally canonized but who appears in the RM with the designation Saint, was a younger sister of St. Gertude of Helfta. As a child she was allowed to enter the latter's community at Rodersdorf in today's Wegeleben (Lkr. Harz) in Sachsen-Anhalt. Both there and later after the community's move to today's Helfta, now a locality in the city of Eisleben, she was director of the monastery's school. M.'s mystical experiences began to be collected late in her life and are recorded in the posthumously assembled _Liber specialis gratiae_. A German-language version of that book, printed in Leipzig in 1503, is available here in digitization from the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich:
http://daten.digitale-sammlungen.de/~db/bsb00003896/images/
Best,
John Dillon
(last year's post revised and with the addition of Maximus of Caesarea in Cappadocia)
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