medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
The day before yesterday (31. July) was the feast day of:
1) Calimerus of Milan (d. later 2d cent., supposedly). C. (also Calimerius) is an early saint of Milan. His modern church there goes back through several predecessors to a small structure already dedicated to him and described by the poet Ennodius as early and aged when it was expanded in the early sixth century. During a recognition of his remains in the eighth century the tomb containing his remains was found to be waterlogged. That is now explained by reference to seepage from one of Milan's numerous underground canals but it gave rise to a legend, enshrined in the C.'s medieval Passio (BHL 1522) in the Milanese church's eleventh-century _Datiana Historia_, that preserves his identity as a bishop but gives him a Greek origin and has him martyred in the second century with his body then being thrown down a well. It was presumably C.'s status as an early Milanese martyr that got him his place in the Ambrosian Canon of the Mass.
C.'s traditional second-century date accords with the purported apostolic foundation of the church of Milan by St. Barnabas. Whereas this early dating is now widely viewed as fiction, with Milan's first bishops being assigned to the third century, the archdiocese maintains it in its marble chronotaxis of Milan's bishops mounted in the cathedral of Milan (C. is no. 4; the incumbent, cardinal Tettamanzi, is no. 143):
http://tinyurl.com/6yu36c
The crypt of today's basilica di San Calimero is said to occupy the footprint of the sixth-century church. On display in the crypt is -- and who could doubt this? -- the very well that received C.'s corpse:
ttp://tinyurl.com/5porgp
Mounted on a wall down there is this roundel portraying a bishop (some think it a representation of C.):
http://tinyurl.com/55dgjw
Upstairs, remains said to be those of C. are housed behind the main altar of the church, some exposed to public view:
http://tinyurl.com/589zg2
http://tinyurl.com/5b62dl
and others in this box next to C.'s footwear:
http://tinyurl.com/5adhtg
2) Tertullinus (d. 257 or 258, supposedly). Our information about the historical T. (also Tertulinus) comes from the legendary Passio of pope St. Stephen I (BHL 7845-47; sixth-century?). There he is said to have been arrested in the Valerianic persecution two days after Stephen had ordained him priest, to have been subject to various tortures and then decapitated, and to have been laid to rest on this day at his place of execution in the pozzolana crypts at the second milestone of the Via Latina. Seventh-century pilgrim itineraries record a memorial basilica dedicated to T. on the same road (precise location not given). The cemetery in this vicinity now known as the Catacomba di Tertullino, though not fully explored, appears to be no earlier than the fourth century.
T. enters the martyrologies with Bede (a brief notice, based on the aforementioned Passio). Ado, who has a much fuller extract from the same Passio, lists T. under 4. August, which is where Usuard also put him, as did the RM until its revision of 2001. The calendar in a late thirteenth-century missal from Austria now at Yale (Marston Ms. 213) shows the continued influence of Stephen's Passio by listing T. on 31.July, a datum consistent with listings for T. under this date in calendars of Brixen, Freising, Regensburg, and Salzburg.
T.'s basilica on the Via Latina was rebuilt by pope St. Hadrian I (772-95). In the early Middle Ages the monastery of Schlehdorf (in today's Kreis Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen in Oberbayern) claimed to have T.'s relics, presented by Hadrian to its founding abbot Atto. Atto's election in 783 as bishop of Freising led to Schlehdorf's becoming a possession of the latter's bishops and, in time, to the spread of T.'s cult to the dioceses named at the end of the previous paragraph. In the tenth century T.'s putative relics were forcibly removed from Schlehdorf to Benediktbeuern by count Adalbero I of Ebersberg; some of these were soon given back after a protest from Schlehdorf but Benediktbeuern still had others early in the reign of its abbot Ratold (997?-1003), who promised their return to the bishop of Freising (the monastery at Schlehdorf is thought to have been destroyed by marauding Huns some years earlier).
Relics of T. are said to have been included among those translated by pope St. Paschal I (817-24) to Rome's church of Santa Prassede. In 1624 a printed edition of the propers of Le Puy-en-Velay in Auvergne asserted that T.'s relics were at the high altar of its cathedral of Notre-Dame; the early Bollandists were unable to locate anything to substantiate this claim. Relics said to be those of T. are housed at a side altar in Schlehdorf's early modern church dedicated to him; perhaps these came from Freising when the monastery was re-established in the twelfth century as an Augustinian canonry (it's now a Dominican convent):
http://www.pfarrei-schlehdorf.de/grafik/Marienaltar.jpg
3) Fabius (d. 303 or 304, supposedly). We know about F. from his undated Passio (BHL 2818), whose earliest witness is of the tenth century. According to this source, he was a military standardbearer who refused to participate in religious ceremonies connected with an assembly called by the Roman governor of Mauretania towards the outset of the Great Persecution. Thus revealed to be a Christian, F. declined to apostasize, was condemned to death, and was martyred by decapitation at Caesarea in Mauretania, the seaport where the assembly had taken place. His head and the remainder of his body were cast into the sea and later washed up, miraculously rejoined, at F.'s native Cartenna (whose successor is today's Mostaganem in Algeria), where he was given an honorable interment. Some think that only the latter part of this account is legendary.
4) Germanus of Auxerre (d. 448). According to his late fifth-century Vita by his disciple Constantius of Lyon (BHL 3453; interpolated versions: BHL 3454, 3454b), G. was a Gallo-Roman from Auxerre who had studied law in Rom before being appointed governor of a Gallic province (probably Armorica). In 418 he was chosen to succeed St. Amator (1. May) as bishop of Auxerre, where he sought to improve the educational level of his priests and in whose immediate vicinity he founded a monastery dedicated to Sts. Cosmas and Damian. G. twice went to southern Britain to combat Pelagianism there; in one of the interpolations in his Vita he is also reported to have visited the shrine of St. Alban. G. died at the imperial capital of Ravenna; Galla Placidia and Valentinian III saw to it that his body was returned to Auxerre for burial.
Constantius doesn't tell us where the citizens of Auxerre laid their holy bishop to rest. His body later reposed in his monastery at Auxerre, which had come to be named for him. Herewith one view and a few illustrated accounts of Auxerre's abbaye de St.-Germain (NB: the last of these does not interface well with Firefox):
http://tinyurl.com/5chyad
http://www.wfu.edu/~titus/stgermain.htm
http://en.structurae.de/structures/data/index.cfm?ID=s0015179
http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/arcnat/auxerre/en/index.htm
G.'s former sarcophagus in the crypt:
http://tinyurl.com/66h4fa
Various views (Wikipedia):
http://tinyurl.com/59znu5
The saint after whom St Germans in Cornwall was named in pre-Conquest times may not have been G. But his originally twelfth- and thirteenth-century priory church there is certainly dedicated to him. Herewith a few accounts of it and of its history:
http://www.cornwall-calling.co.uk/churches/st-germans-church.htm
http://www.stgermansparishes.com/index-page2.html
http://www.cornwalls.co.uk/St-Germans/
Exterior views:
http://tinyurl.com/5gf2lv
http://tinyurl.com/6d7zkq
http://www.cornwalls.co.uk/photos/img2312.htm
http://tinyurl.com/6pau3g
http://tinyurl.com/6gamnd
http://tinyurl.com/56pu7h
http://tinyurl.com/5nj9v3
http://tinyurl.com/5jjwwf
Interior views:
http://tinyurl.com/5je3b6
http://tinyurl.com/62efz3
http://tinyurl.com/5nrwob
Here's an interior view of the much rebuilt church of St Germain at Scothern (Lincs), showing the original twelfth-century columns on either side of the chancel arch:
http://tinyurl.com/6g5qu7
Some views of the chiefly fifteenth-century church of Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois in Paris:
http://tinyurl.com/6mggp5
http://en.structurae.de/structures/data/index.cfm?ID=s0010769
http://architecture.relig.free.fr/auxerrois.htm
5) Helen of Skövde (d. c. 1160) According to her late thirteenth-century Passio (BHL 3793), H. (in Swedish, Elin), was a noblewoman of Västergötland who married, had children, was widowed, resided on a farm at Götene, used much of her property to fund construction of the church at Skövde, and went on pilgrimage to the Holy Land. While she was away her son-in-law was murdered by his servants. His relatives blamed H. and, after she had returned, had her murdered while she was on her way to the consecration of the church at Götene.
H. was buried at Skövde's church, where her cult was immediate and drew pilgrims until the Reformation. Alexander III is said to have authorized her canonization in 1164. Skövde was destroyed almost completely in a fire in 1759; H.'s reputed burial chamber lies beneath her church's mostly eighteenth-century replacement:
http://tinyurl.com/6ehc72
That church also preserves a capital from its medieval predecessor:
http://tinyurl.com/6ou7ym
H. is connected legendarily to nearby Våmb. Here's a view of the latter's originally early twelfth-century church:
http://tinyurl.com/58uzgd
Best,
John Dillon
(Tertullinus revised from an older post)
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