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Saint Agatha.
Attended in Prison by Saint Peter and an Angel.
Artist: Alessandro Turchi (1578–1649).
Medium: Oil on Slate.
According to an early Christian legend, when a 3rd-Century Roman official of Sicily desired the Christian woman, Agatha, and she refused to yield to his advances, he had her tortured, and even ordered her breasts cut off. At night in prison, she was visited by a vision of Saint Peter and an Angel, and her breasts were miraculously restored. The gray stone of the prison wall was created by letting the slate show through, and it forms a background for the night scene, illuminated by a torch. As opposed to canvas and wood, slate gave a painting almost unlimited durability
and the same kind of permanence as sculpture.
Date: Between, circa, 1640 and 1645 (Baroque).
Current location: Walters Art Museum, Baltimore,
Maryland, United States of America.
Credit line: Acquired by Henry Walters, before 1909.
Source/Photographer: Walters Art Museum.
(Wikimedia Commons)
English: The Parish Church of Saint Agatha of Sicily,
Bischofstetten, Austria.
Deutsch: Pfarrkirche Bischofstetten, Österreich.
Photo: 8 February 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: BSonne.
(Wikimedia Commons)
She is the Patron Saint of: Catania, Sicily; Molise, Italy; Malta; San Marino; and Zamarramala, a municipality of the Province of Segovia, Spain. She is also the Patron Saint of breast cancer patients, Martyrs, wet nurses, bell-founders, bakers, fire, earthquakes, and eruptions of Mount Etna.
Agatha is buried at the Abbey Church of Saint Agatha (Badia di Sant'Agata), Catania. She is listed in the Late-6th-Century Martyrologium Hieronymianum, associated with Jerome, and the Synaxarion, the Calendar of the Church of Carthage, circa 530 A.D.
English: The Martyrdom of Saint Agatha.
Italiano: Martirio di Sant'Agata.
Artist: Giovanni Battista Tiepolo.
This File: 17 April 2006.
User: Crux. This image was
copied from wikipedia:de.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Agatha also appears in one of the carmina of Venantius Fortunatus. Two early Churches were dedicated to her in Rome, notably the Church of Sant'Agata dei Goti, in via Mazzarino, a Titular Church with Apse mosaics of circa 460 A.D., and traces of a fresco cycle, over-painted by Gismondo Cerrini, in 1630. In the 6th-Century, the Church was adapted to Arian Christianity, hence its name, "Saint Agatha of Goths" (Sant'Agata dei Goti), and later reconsecrated by Pope Gregory the Great, who confirmed her traditional Sainthood.
Agatha is also depicted in the mosaics of Sant' Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna, where she appears, richly dressed, in the procession of female Martyrs along the North Wall. Her image forms an initial "I" in the Sacramentary of Gellone, from the end of the 8th-Century.
Italiano: Giovanni Battista Vaccarini (1702-1768),
la Chiesa della Badia di Sant'Agata a Catania (1767).
English: Giovanni Battista Vaccarini (1702-1768),
was the Architect of the Abbey Church of Saint Agatha,
Catania, Sicily, Italy.
was the Architect of the Abbey Church of Saint Agatha,
Catania, Sicily, Italy.
Photo: 4 July 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Giovanni Dall'Orto.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Her written legend comprises "straightforward accounts of interrogation, torture, resistance, and triumph, which constitute some of the earliest hagiographic literature", and are reflected in later recensions, the earliest surviving one being an illustrated Late-10th-Century passio, bound into a composite volume, in the Bibliothèque nationale de France, originating, probably, in Autun, Burgundy; in its margin illustrations, Magdalena Carrasco detected Carolingian or Late Antique iconographic traditions.
According to Jacobus de Voragine, Legenda Aurea, of circa 1288, having dedicated her virginity to God, fifteen-year-old Agatha, from a rich and noble family, rejected the amorous advances of the low-born Roman Prefect, Quintianus, who then persecuted her for her Christian Faith. He sent Agatha to Aphrodisia, the keeper of a brothel.
English: Church of Saint Agatha, Rabat, Malta.
Italiano: Chiesa di Sant'Agata, Rabat, Malta.
Photo: 31 August 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Cruccone.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Osbern Bokenham, A Legend of Holy Women, written in the 1440s, offers some further detail.
English: Internal view of Saint Agatha's Chapel, Mdina, Malta.
Italiano: Interno della cappella di Sant'Agata, Mdina, Malta.
Photo: 31 August 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Cruccone.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Saint Agatha's Church,
Yorkshire, England.
The Church is next to Easby Abbey.
Photo: 15 June 2008.
Source: Own work by uploader.
Author: Greenjettaguy.
(Wikimedia Commons)
The following Text is from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.
Saint Agatha.
Virgin and Martyr.
Feast Day 5 February.
Double.
Red Vestments.
English: Cathedral of Saint Agatha, Catania, Sicily, Italy.
Deutsch: Italien, Sizilien, Catania, Dom Sant' Agata.
Photo: 6 October 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Berthold Werner.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Endowed with remarkable beauty, she had to resist the solicitations of the Roman Governor, Quintianus, who, unable to attain his end by persuasion, had recourse to violence. Her breast was torn by his order, but was healed on the following night, by the Apostle, Saint Peter, who appeared to her in prison (Communion).
Then the body of the Saint was rolled on pieces of broken pottery and on burning coals, and when she was brought back to her cell, she expired while Praying.
This happened at Catana (Catania), Sicily, in 251 A.D., during the Persecution of the Emperor, Decius. God Almighty, by granting the victory of Martyrdom to a feeble woman (Collect), wished to show that He alone is our Redeemer, for it is with this "end in view that He chooses what is weak, in the world, to confound with their nothingness those who trust in their own strength" (Epistle).
English: Interior of the Church of Saint Agatha, Hausleiten, Austria.
Deutsch: Innenansicht der katholischen Pfarrkirche hl. Agatha
in der niederösterreichischen Gemeinde Hausleiten.
Photo: 29 September 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Bwag.
(Wikimedia Commons)
On several occasions, the virginal veil, which covered the tomb of Saint Agatha, held up the torrents of burning lava rushing down from Mount Etna and threatening to ruin the town. God thus honoured the resistance that her very pure Soul had shown to all the assaults of passion.
Her name is mentioned in the Canon of the Mass (Second List). Her Feast was already celebrated at Rome in the 6th-Century. The Church of Saint Agatha, in Rome, was made a Stational Church by Pope Pius XI, in 1934 (Third Tuesday in Lent).
Let us invoke Saint Agatha to preserve our homes from fire and to extinguish, through the spirit of penitence, the impure flames that consume our bodies and our Souls.
Mass: Gaudeámus omnes in Domino.
Mass: Gaudeámus omnes in Domino.
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