medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Herewith a link to an earlier 'Saints of the day' for 22. March (including St. Epaphroditus of Philippi; Sts. Callinicus and Basilissa; St. Paul of Narbonne; St. Basil of Ankara; St. Lea; St. Deogratias of Carthage; St. Benvenuto Scotivoli):
http://tinyurl.com/6oubyu4
Further to Epaphroditus of Philippi:
In that earlier post's notice of this saint, in the first sentence for 'there also' please read 'there is also'.
Paul (at left, in prison) and Epaphroditus as depicted in the initial 'P' of the Epistle to the Philippians in a thirteenth-century Bible (Toulouse, Bibliothèque municipale, ms. 11, fol. 462r):
http://tinyurl.com/86z8rhm
Further to Paul of Narbonne:
In that earlier post's notice of this saint, some of the links to views of Narbonne's basilique Saint-Paul-Serge no longer function. Herewith a new set (not including the views of ancient sarcophagi in the crypt, as those links are all o.k.):
http://tinyurl.com/36nqax
http://www.vos-photos.eu/photo_12225_7.jpg
http://www.amisdesmusees-narbonne.org/images/stpaul/saintpaul.jpg
http://lieuxsacres.canalblog.com/archives/2007/11/03/6773284.html [views expandable]
http://tinyurl.com/8xf9gfb
Narbonne is not all that far away from Nîmes. It's somehow fitting that Nîmes is noted for denim and Narbonne is noted for Serge.
Further to Lea:
In that earlier post's notice of this saint, the link to a view of the funerary monument of Praetextatus and Paulina no longer functions. Use this for a smallish view in color:
http://tinyurl.com/84alqmf
and this for a black-and-white view of its inscription listing their religious and civic honors:
http://elearning.unifr.ch/antiquitas/images/Praetetxtatus.jpg
(That inscription is translated in the first paragraph here: <http://www.stoa.org/diotima/anthology/wlgr/wlgr-religion439.shtml>).
Further to Benvenuto Scotivoli:
In that earlier post's notice of this saint, for 'In this polyptych from 1518' please read 'In this polyptych from 1418 by Pietro di Domenico da Montepulciano'. The link to this object does not work. Use this instead (Benvenuto is the bishop at upper right):
http://www.duomodiosimo.it/museo_diocesano/images/DSC_0060%20%28Medium%29.JPG
In the same notice, the links to the first and second views of Benvenuto's late sixteenth-century tomb (the second showing the lower portion only) no longer function. Use these instead:
http://static.panoramio.com/photos/original/33972909.jpg
http://tinyurl.com/7fgo3zn
In the same notice, the first of the two links to illustrated, Italian-language pages on Osimo's concattedrale di San Leopardo is absent. Now use these (the third is this church's page at Italia nell'Arte Medievale):
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concattedrale_di_Osimo
http://www.luoghimisteriosi.it/marche_osimoduomo.html
http://www.medioevo.org/artemedievale/Pages/Marche/Osimo.html
In the same notice, perhaps add (but many will know this already) that 'Osimo' is pronounced as a proparoxytone.
Best,
John Dillon
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