Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

Monday 11 November 2019

Saint Martin. Bishop And Confessor. Feast Day 11 November. And Martinmas.


This Article, unless stated otherwise, is taken from MEDIEVAL HISTORIES


Illustration: MEDIEVAL HISTORIES

Martinmas – A European Feast.

Martinmas is celebrated the night before 11 November by merry-making and feasting. Since The Middle Ages, roast goose has been on the menu East of The Rhine.

Martin of Tours (circa 316 A.D. - 397 A.D.) was a soldier in The Roman Army, when he decided to convert to Christianity and afterwards was imprisoned for his refusal to fight. He later became a Monk, founded a Monastery in Gaul, at Marmoutier, and became Bishop of Tours, a career choice he, according to legend, vehemently tried to avoid by hiding in the goose-pen of the Monastery.

However, the geese honked loudly and he was discovered by the people, who carried him in triumph to The Throne in the Cathedral. It is believed that he built the Monastery, after his appointment as Bishop, in order to have a secluded place to withdraw to.


The Feast Day, 11 November, has its own roots in The Eastern Byzantine Church, where the Fast before Christmas, the Quadragesima Sancti Martini, still measures up to forty days. It begins the day after The Feast Day of Saint Martin. From this, stems its somewhat carnival-esque character, with different Traditions of merrymaking documented from all over Europe; Processions of children carrying lanterns, people eating goose, or other meaty delicacies, or just – as in Portugal – gathering at the fireplace, eating roasted chestnuts and drinking new wine.

Martin Walsh, who has surveyed a huge amount of very diverse source-material, was able to demonstrate that the Celebration of Martinmas in England can be documented back to the 14th-Century and was, at that time, accompanied “by conspicuous feasting, supplemented by musical entertainment”.


Illustration: MEDIEVAL HISTORIES

In England, and elsewhere, the Tradition was to have blood-puddings and freshly-roasted meat stemming from the slaughter of what cattle and other animals had to be culled in November. At the same time, it was “Settling Day”, when servants might leave in order to take up new employments. At the same time, peasants paid their dues to their lords and The Tithe to their Church; often partly paid in birds, like hens, ducks and geese, the Tradition grew to eat these birds roasted at the end of Autumn and beginning of Winter.

However, roast goose at Martinmas does not seem to have been quite so ubiquitous in an Early-English setting or French context.


European Traditions.

Quite the opposite is the case in Continental Europe, where the same elements of The Feast may be found – processions, merrymaking, reckoning, settling. Here, however, the goose was definitely on the table very early on, as is witnessed by some very charming “Martin-Ballads” composed by an otherwise unknown Monk, who lived at the Court of the Archbishop of Salzburg, 1365 -1396.


The Martin Ballads.

The Monk composed two secular ballads. The first one - Martein lieber Herre - is a vernacular translation of a Latin Hymn asking the Saint to present the company with roast goose and new wine. Another poem – Wolauf, lieben gessellen unuerczait – has more the character of being a subversive form of Eucharistic Liturgy, complete with a Chorus and a Tenor singing intermittently. The poem consists of seventy lines, divided into four verses, and the Text for the Tenor.

The song starts with an invitation to form a company, where social differences are laid aside, in order to create a sympathetic society. However, the joy is decidedly coupled with the introduction of (lots) of wine into the company. To this, is later added dishes of beans, apples and roast goose. The job of the Tenor is to invite the Saint –“Lord Martin” – to this joyful occasion as "King of the Merriments" – and to deliver all the goodies; wine and delicacies. It is obvious the Text was meant to be performed among a group of (celibate) men, being able to appreciate the definite Eucharistic connotations of the Text.


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.

Saint Martin's Day, also known as The Feast of Saint Martin, Martinstag or Martinmas, The Feast of Saint Martin of Tours, or Martin le Miséricordieux, is Celebrated on 11 November each year. This is the time when Autumn wheat seeding was completed, and the annual slaughter of fattened cattle produced "Martinmas Beef". Historically, Hiring Fairs were held, where farm laborers would seek new jobs.

Saint Martin of Tours started out as a Roman soldier, then was Baptised as an adult and became a Monk. It is understood that he was a kind man who led a quiet and simple life. The best-known legend of his "Life" is that he once cut his cloak in half to share with a beggar during a snowstorm, to save the beggar from dying from the cold. That night, he dreamed that Jesus was wearing the half-cloak. Martin heard Jesus say to the Angels: "Here is Martin, the Roman soldier who is not Baptised. He has clothed me."


English: Saint Martin's Day (Martinmas) Procession, Germany.
Deutsch: Sankt Martinszug. Erwachsene und Kinder mit Laternen
beim St.-Martins-Umzug. Sankt Martin auf dem Pferd.
Date: 1949.
Photographer: Lachmann, Hans.
Institution: German Federal Archives, Koblenz, Germany.
Sammlung Hans Lachmann (Bild 194).
Attribution: Bundesarchiv, Bild 194-0273-45 / Lachmann, Hans / CC-BY-SA 3.0.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Saint Martin.
   Bishop and Confessor.
   Feast Day 11 November.

Double.

White Vestments.


English: Children going door to door, with paper lanterns,
on Saint Martin's Day, in The Netherlands.
Nederland: Sunte-Marten/Sint-Maarten/St. Martins' Day (NL).
This File: 4 November 2006.
User: Servien
(Wikimedia Commons)

In the first three Centuries, the Saints were mostly Martyrs. Saint Martin is the first Bishop and Confessor honoured by The Church in The West. As Durand de Mende remarks, The Liturgy gives him a Rank equal to The Apostles, for he was the principal Apostle of Gaul.

His Feast Day was everywhere of obligation. Taking place often during "Saint Martin's Summer", that is at the end of Autumn, it rivalled in importance and popular rejoicings The Feast of Saint John. It had an Octave, like the Feast of Saint Laurence, for Saint Martin, "Priest of Priests" (The Response at Matins), occupied among Confessors the Rank of Saint Laurence among Martyrs.

Saint Martin, born at Savaria, in Pannonia, came to Gaul as a soldier. While still a Catechumen, he one day, near Amiens, gave part of his cloak to a poor man who asked him for alms in the name of Christ. During the following night, Jesus appeared to him clothed in this half of his cloak and said to him: "Martin, a simple Catechumen, covered Me with this garment."


Abbey of Marmoutiers, France.
Founded by Saint Martin of Tours.
Illustration: OLIVER'S TRAVELS

At the age of eighteen, he was Baptised, and, having become a Disciple of Saint Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers, he built, two leagues from the Episcopal City, in the desert of Ligugé, a Monastery, whither he retired with a few Disciples. He thus was the Founder of Monastic Life in Gaul.

But God would not allow this Light to remain hidden under the bushel (Gospel). Saint Martin had to leave his solitude and was made Bishop of Tours (Introit, Epistle, Gradual). He then Founded the famous Abbey of Marmoutiers, or Martin's Monastery, where he often retired. There, he had around him eighty Monks who imitated the Lives of The Hermits of Thebaid.

He lived more than eighty years, devoting himself to The Glory of God and The Salvation of Souls. He died at Candes, near Tours, France, in 397 A.D. His tomb became famous through many Miracles, and attracted crowds from all parts of the Country.

Saint Gregory, Bishop of Tours in the 6th-Century, does not hesitate to call The Holy Worker of Miracles the special Patron of the whole World. Few Saints have been so popular, In France, alone, there are about 4,000 Parish Churches Dedicated to Saint Martin and 485 Market-Towns or Villages that still bear his name.

Rome has a Church of Saint Sylvester and Saint Martin, where The Station is held on The Thursday of The Fourth Week in Lent. Saint Martin's Cope used to be borne at the head of the Army in Times of War and, on it, were sworn Solemn Oaths in Times of Peace.

Mass: Státuit ei Dóminus.
Commemoration: Saint Mennas.

Requiescant In Pace. Rest In Peace.



Auschwitz Concentration Camp, Poland.
Illustration: VICE.COM



"Schindler's List.".
Composer: John Williams.
Violin solos by Itzhak Perlman (see, below).
Available on YouTube at


Photograph from the Soviet Film of the liberation of Auschwitz, taken by the film unit of The First Ukrainian Front,. by Alexander Voronzow and others in his group. Child survivors of Auschwitz, wearing adult-size prisoner jackets, stand behind a barbed wire fence. Among those pictured are Tomasz Szwarz; Alicja Gruenbaum; Solomon Rozalin; Gita Sztrauss; Wiera Sadler; Marta Wiess; Boro Eksztein; Josef Rozenwaser; Rafael Szlezinger; Gabriel Nejman; Gugiel Appelbaum; Mark Berkowitz (a twin); Pesa Balter; Rut Muszkies (later Webber); Miriam Friedman; and twins
Miriam Mozes and Eva Mozes wearing knitted hats.
Date: 1945.
Source: USHMM/Belarusian State Archive of Documentary Film and Photography
Author: Alexander Voronzow and others in his group,
ordered by Mikhael Oschurkow, head of the photography unit.
(Wikimedia Commons)


"Arbeit Macht Frei".
"Work Makes You Free".
This was a sign commonly seen throughout Concentration Camps, such as Auschwitz, often seen on The Front Gate, upon entry. It was essentially psychological torment, as most prisoners were aware that the only way to earn "Freedom" was to die.
Illustration: FUNNYJUNK.COM


Ed Sullivan congratulates a young Itzhak Perlman
after a concert at ZOA House in Tel Aviv.
Photo: 28 August 1958.
Author: PINN HANS
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Itzhak Perlman was born in Tel Aviv in 1945, then the British Mandate of Palestine, now Israel. His parents, Chaim and Shoshana Perlman, were natives of Poland and had independently migrated to Palestine in the mid-1930s before they met and later married.

Perlman first became interested in the violin after hearing a classical music performance on the radio. At the age of three, he was denied admission to the Shulamit Conservatory for being too small to hold a violin. He, instead, taught himself how to play the instrument, using a toy fiddle, until he was old enough to study with Rivka Goldgart, at the Shulamit Conservatory, and at the Academy of Music in Tel Aviv, where he gave his first recital at age ten, before moving to The United States to study at The Juilliard School, with the violin pedagogue, Ivan Galamian, and his assistant, Dorothy DeLay.

Perlman contracted polio at age four. He made a good recovery, learning to walk with crutches. Today, he uses crutches, or an electric Amigo scooter, for mobility, and plays the violin while seated.


Violinist Itzhak Perlman plays during The White House State Dinner
in honour of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
Photo: 7 May 2007.
(United States Federal Government).
(Wikimedia Commons)

For The Fallen. Lest We Forget.




"Abide With Me".
Available on YouTube at

Lest We Forget. Requiescant In Pace.



"Last Post".
Available on YouTube at

"I Am The Resurrection And The Life", Saith The Lord.



"I Am The Resurrection And The Life", Saith The Lord.

Sunday 10 November 2019

Saint Tryphon, Saint Respicius, And Saint Nympha. Martyrs And Virgin. Feast Day, Today, 10 November.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Saint Tryphon, Saint Respicius,
And Saint Nympha.
   Martyrs And Virgin.
   Feast Day 10 November.

Simple.

Red Vestments.


This File: 22 March 2008.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

In the reign of Emperor Decius, Saint Tryphon suffered Martyrdom at Nicea in Bithynia. The Tribune, Respicius, touched by his fortitude, was converted and both were condemned to death by scourging (250 A.D.).

Two Centuries later, Saint Nympha, a Sicilian Virgin from Palermo, Sicily, fled to Italy before the invading Goths, adn died in Tuscany. Her Feast Day is kept on this day, because her body, taken to Rome, was laid in the Church of Saints Tryphon and Respicius.

The Lenten Station on The Saturday after Ash Wednesday was formerly held in this Church.

Mass: Clamavérunt.


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise
.

Saint Tryphon (also spelled Trypho, Trifon, or Triphon, and known as Tryphon of Campsada) is a 3rd-Century A.D. Christian Saint. He is Venerated by The Roman Catholic Church and The Eastern Orthodox Church as a Great Martyr and Holy Unmercenary.

Saint Tryphon was formerly Celebrated jointly with Saints Respicius and Nympha on 10 November in The Liturgical Calendar of The Latin Church (Editor: Catholic Church) from the 11th-Century until the 20th-Century. Saint Tryphon continues to be Celebrated (separately) on 1 February 
[O.S. 14 February] on both The Orthodox Liturgical Calendar and The Roman Catholic Calendar of Saints.

“Bravo Zulu”.



“Bravo. Zulu”.
Illustration: MARINE CLUB STORE

“Bravo Zulu” is a Naval Signal, typically conveyed
by Flag Hoist, or Voice Radio, meaning “Well Done”;
in addition to U.S. Naval Forces, it has also been used
as part of vernacular slang within NATO
and other Allied Naval Forces.


So,
“Bravo Zulu”,
to each and every one of you who continue to
“Fight The Good Fight”.


“Rejoice And Celebrate,
Because Great Is Your Reward In Heaven;
For, In The Same Way, They Persecuted
The Prophets Before You”.


Saint Andrew Avellino. Confessor. Feast Day, Today, 10 November.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saint Andrew Avellino.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 10 November.

Double.

White Vestments.



English: Statue of Saint Andrew Avellino, by sculptor Pedro Alonso de los Ríos (1641–1702), at the façade of St. Emilian and St. Cajetan's Church, Madrid, Spain
Español: Estatua de San Andrés Avelino, obra del escultor Pedro Alonso de los Ríos (1641–1702), en la fachada de la Iglesia de San Millán y San Cayetano de Madrid (España).
Photo: 4 July 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Photograph: Luis García (Zaqarbal).
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Andrew Avellino was born at Castro-Nuovo, Sicily, at the time in the Kingdom of Naples, in 1521. He had to resist violent temptations: "He might have done wrong," says the Epistle, "and did not." He studied Law, but, afterwards, became a Priest, and, from that time, he pleaded only in The Ecclesiastical Court.

One day, a slight untruth escaped him at the Ecclesiastical Bar, and, a short time after, he read the following passage of Holy Scripture: "The mouth that utters untruth kills the Soul". He was so struck by it that he gave up his career at The Ecclesiastical Bar and joined The Theatines, or Clerks Regular of Saint Paul, at Naples. On account of his great love for The Cross, he was given the name of Andrew.

Having become Superior of The Institute (Communion), he devoted his time to Prayer and the care of Souls. He died at Naples in 1608, at a very advanced age, at the foot of the Altar where he was to Celebrate Mass.

Mass: Os justi.
Commemoration: SS. Tryphon, Respicius and Nympha.


English: The body of Saint Andrew Avellino
Português: San Paolo Maggiore, Nápoles.
Photo: 5 February 2015.
Source: Own work.
Author: José Luiz.
Attribution: © José Luiz Bernardes Ribeiro / CC-BY-SA-4.0
(Wikimedia Commons)


NET TV - City of Churches.
"Saint Andrew Avellino Church,
Flushing, Queens, New York.
Available on YouTube at

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Saint Andrew (Andrea) Avellino (1521 – November 10, 1608) was an Italian Saint. Born at Castronuovo, (today, Castronuovo di Sant'Andrea), a small town in Sicily, his Baptismal name was Lancelotto, which, out of love for The Cross, he changed into Andrew when he entered The Order of Theatines.

From his early youth, he was a great lover of Chastity. After receiving his elementary training in the school of Castronuovo, he was sent to Venice to pursue a course in the Humanities and in Philosophy. Being a handsome youth, his Chastity was often exposed to danger from female admirers, and, to escape their importunities, he took Ecclesiastical Tonsure.

Hereupon, he went to Naples to study Canon Law and Civil Law, obtained the Degree of Doctor of Laws and was Ordained Priest at the age of twenty-six. For some time, he held the Office of Lawyer at the Ecclesiastical Court of Naples. One day, while pleading the cause of a friend, a lie escaped his lips in the heat of argument. When, soon afterwards, his eyes fell upon the passage in The Bible, "The mouth that belieth, killeth the Soul."


English: Fresco of Saint Andrew Avellino, Church of Sant'Antonio Abate, Milan, Italy.
Italiano: Chiesa di Sant'Antonio Abate a Milano, seconda cappella a destra (di S. Andrea
Avellino). Ercole Procaccini il Vecchio (attribuito a), Apoteosi di Sant'Andrea Avellino
Photo: 20 May 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: G.dallorto
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Archbishop of Naples now commissioned him to reform a Convent at Naples, which, by the laxity of its discipline, had become a source of great scandal. By his own example and his untiring zeal, he restored the religious discipline of the Convent, but not without many and great difficulties.

Certain wicked men became exasperated at the Saint's interference and, one night, he was assaulted and severely wounded. He was brought to the Monastery of The Theatines to recuperate. Here, however, he resolved to devote himself entirely to God and he entered The Order of Theatines, which had but recently been founded by Saint Cajetan. On The Vigil of The Assumption, he was Invested, being then thirty-five years of age.

After completing his Novitiate, he obtained permission to visit the tombs of The Apostles and The Martyrs at Rome, and, upon his return, was made Master of Novices. After holding this Office for ten years, he was elected Superior. His holy zeal for strict religious discipline, and for the purity of The Clergy, as well as his deep humility and sincere piety, induced The General of his Order to entrust him with the Foundation of two new Theatine Houses, one at Milan, the other at Piacenza.


English: Side Altar of The Theatine Saint, Andrew Avellino,
Church of Saint Cajetan, Salzburg, Austria.
Deutsch: Kajetanerkirche am Kajetanerplatz, Salzburg, Linke Nebenkapelle,
Altar mit Bild des Theatinerheiligen Andreas Avellino (von Jacob Zanussy, 1712)
und Kopie des Gnadenbilds der Mutter vom Guten Rat zu Genazzano.
Photo: May 2008.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)

By his efforts, many more Theatine Houses rose up in various Diocese of Italy. As Superior of some of these new Foundations, he was so successful in converting sinners and heretics by his prudence in the direction of Souls, and by his eloquent Preaching, that numerous Disciples thronged around him, eager to be under his spiritual guidance.

One of the most noteworthy of his Disciples was Lorenzo Scupoli, the author of that still popular book "The Spiritual Combat". Saint Charles Borromeo was an intimate friend of Avellino and sought his advice in the most important affairs of The Church. He also requested Avellino to establish a new Theatine House in Milan.

On 10 November 1608, when beginning The Holy Sacrifice of The Mass, he was stricken with apoplexy, and, after devoutly receiving The Holy Viaticum, died the death of a Saint at the age of eighty-eight. In 1624, only sixteen years after his death, he was Beatified by Pope Urban VIII, and, in 1712, was Canonised by Pope Clement XI.

He is Venerated as Patron Saint of Naples and Sicily, and invoked especially against a sudden death. His remains lie buried in the Church of Saint Paul, at Naples.

Saturday 9 November 2019

Saint Theodore. Martyr. Whose Feast Day Is Today, 9 November.


Text is from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Saint Theodore.
   Martyr.
   Feast Day 9 November.

Simple.

Red Vestments.


Saint Theodore of Amasea (Pontus),
also known as St. Theodore Tyro (Orthodox icon).
This File: 22 March 2008.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Theodore, a Soldier in The Roman Legion at Amasea (Pontus), was arrested on account of his Christian Faith.

He was cast into prison, and torn with iron hooks until his ribs were laid bare.

The Martyr, filled with joy, never ceased singing the Verse of The Psalm: "I will Bless The Lord at all times."

He was burned alive and gave up his Soul to God in 306 A.D.

Mass: Lætábitur.


Saint Theodore.
Available on YouTube at

Remembrance Day: Silhouettes Stand Guard On The Village Green To Remember The Forty-One Villagers Who Fell In The Wars.



The figures will help raise money for The Royal British Legion.
Picture Credit: Kieron Palmer.
Illustration: BBC

Silhouettes representing Forty-One Villagers who lost their lives in World War One and World War Two have been erected on a Village Green.

Made from metal and painted black, the figures stand on the Village Green in Haughley, Suffolk.

They were designed by Kieron Palmer, owner of Palmer's Bakery, in Haughley Village, to remember the Soldiers and raise money for The Royal British Legion.

This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at, BBC

The Dedication Of The Basilica Of Saint Saviour, Rome. Celebrated On 9 November.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

The Dedication of The Basilica of Saint Saviour.
   9 November.

Double of The Second-Class.

White Vestments.



The Basilica of Saint Saviour, Rome.
(The Basilica of Saint John Lateran, Rome).
Illustrations: UNA VOCE OF ORANGE COUNTY
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.




"Terribilis est locus iste".
The Introit for The Mass of The Dedication of a Church.
Available on YouTube at

Among the rich and splendid Roman Basilicas where the Ceremonies of Christian Worship were Celebrated in great pomp, after the Era of Persecution, there is one of First Rank whose Dedication is Solemnised on this Anniversary.

The Palace of The Lateran, on The Coelian Hill, belonged to Fausta, the wife of Emperor Constantine. The Emperor, after his conversion, gave it to the Pope as his private residence, and founded there The Church of The Lateran, which became the Mother and Mistress of all The Churches of Rome and of the World.

On 9 November 324 A.D., Pope Saint Sylvester Consecrated it under the name of the Basilica of Saint Saviour. This was the first public Consecration of a Church. A long time after, under Pope Lucius II, in the 12th-Century, it was Dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, whose name had been given to the adjoining Baptistry, Wherefore, it has been given nowadays the Title of Saint John Lateran.


In this Basilica and the adjoining Palace were held, from the 4th-Century A.D. to the 16th-Century, more than twenty-five Councils, five of which were Ecumenical. On the most Solemn Days, The Station was held there. Holy Orders were Conferred there, Penitents were reconciled, Catechumens were Baptised on Easter Day, and, as Neophytes, they came there in Procession during the whole Easter Octave.

At Saint John Lateran is inaugurated, on The First Sunday in Lent, the great Liturgical Season Consecrated to Penance; there is held the Assembly on Palm Sunday, and that on Rogation Tuesday; there are carried out the Ceremonies of Maundy Thursday and Easter Eve; and Mass is Celebrated on Saturday in Albis and on the Eve of Pentecost.

The Church, which had been destroyed, was rebuilt and Consecrated anew by His Holiness Pope Benedict XIII, in 1726, and The Commemoration of this Consecration was fixed, as that of the first Church, on 9 November.

Mass: Terribilis.
In Low Masses: Commemoration of Saint Theodore.
First and Second Vespers: As in The Common.

Friday 8 November 2019

Experience The Beauty And Tranquillity, And The Profundity And Sanctity, Of The Missa Cantata. Every Second Sunday Of Every Month. At Saint Simon Stock Church, Ashford, Kent. No Guitars. No Waving At Everybody.





The Victoria Consort.
“In Dedicatione Templi”.
Composed by: Orlande de Lassus.
Available on YouTube at





English: “Ite Missa Est”.
High Tridentine Mass.
Italiano: “Ite Missa Est”.
Messa tridentina solenne.
Photo: June 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lumen roma
(Wikimedia Commons)

Monthly Missa Cantata.
1230 hrs.
The Second Sunday Of Every Month.
Saint Simon Stock Church,
Brookfield Road,
Ashford, Kent TN23 4EU.



The Victoria Consort.
“Locus Iste”.
Composed by: Anton Bruckner.
Available on YouTube at


Come and experience the beauty of
The Traditional Latin Mass.
Music by: The Victoria Consort.
Director: Ben Bevan.




ASHFORD, KENT.


Church of Saint Simon Stock,
Ashford, Kent.
Photo: WIKIMAPI

Traditional Latin Masses are Celebrated at
The Church of Saint Simon Stock,
Brookfield Road,
Ashford,
Kent TN23 4EU,
at 1230 hrs,

on the SECOND SUNDAY OF EVERY MONTH.




If you would like to contribute
towards the cost of the music,
please give your donation to Mrs. Marygold Turner.


A Solemn High Requiem Mass At Saints Cyril And Methodius Oratory, 79, Bridgeport, Connecticut CT 06608. Celebrant: Reverend Canon Andrew Todd. Saturday, 16 November 2019 At 1015 a.m.

The Holy Four Crowned Martyrs. Feast Day, Today, 8 November.


Text and Illustrations from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

The Holy Four Crowned Martyrs.
   Feast Day 8 November.

Simple.

Red Vestments.



English: The Four Crowned Saints. Statue commissioned by the
Arte dei Maestri di Pietra e Legname (Guild of Wood and Stone Cutters),
Orsanmichele, Florence, Italy. Sculptor: Nanni di Banco.
Français: Les Quatre saints couronnés. Statue commandée par l'arte dei Maestri
di Pietra e Legname (guilde des tailleurs de bois et de pierre). Orsanmichele, Florence.
Italiano: Tabernacolo dell'arte dei Maestri di Pietra e Legname,
con Quattro Santi Coronati di Nanni di Banco. Orsanmichele, Firenze.
Date: 1408.
Source: it:Utente:MM, own picture (April 2005).
Author: Nanni di Banco (Italian, 1375–1421).
(Wikimedia Commons)

These Saints were four brothers, whose names remained long unknown. They were called "The Four Crowned" because they received The Palm of Martyrdom and were Crowned in Heaven, 304 A.D.

Mass: Intret.


The Basilica of The Holy Four Crowned Martyrs, Rome.
Available on YouTube at

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

The designation "Four Crowned Martyrs" or "Four Holy Crowned Ones" (in Latin, Sancti Quatuor Coronati), actually refers to nine separate Martyrs, divided into two groups:

First Group: Severus (or Secundius); Severian(us); Carpophorus (Carpoforus); Victorinus (Victorius, Vittorinus).

Second Group: Claudius; Castorius; Symphorian (Simpronian); Nicostratus; and Simplicius.

According to the Golden Legend, the names of the members of the First Group were not known at the time of their death “but were learned through the Lord’s revelation after many years had passed." They were called the "Four Crowned Martyrs", because their names were unknown ("Crown" referring to The Crown of Martyrdom).


The Martyrdom of The Four Crowned Martyrs.
Painting by Mario Minniti, in San Pietro dal Carmine, Siracusa, Sicily, Italy.
Date: Circa 1620.
Author: Minitti, Mario.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Severus (or Secundius), Severian(us), Carpophorus, Victorinus were Martyred at Rome, or Castra Albana, according to Christian Tradition.

According to the Passion of Saint Sebastian, the four Saints were soldiers (specifically "Cornicularii", or Clerks, in charge of all the Regiment's records and paperwork), who refused to sacrifice to Aesculapius, and therefore were killed by order of Emperor Diocletian (284 A.D. - 305 A.D.), two years after the death of the five sculptors. The bodies of the Martyrs were buried in the Cemetery of Santi Marcellino e Pietro, on the fourth mile of via Labicana, by Pope Miltiades and Saint Sebastian (whose skull is preserved in the Church).

The Second Group, according to Christian Tradition, were sculptors from Sirmium, who were killed in Pannonia. They refused to fashion a pagan statue for the Emperor Diocletian or to offer sacrifice to the Roman gods. The Emperor ordered them to be placed alive in lead coffins and thrown into the sea, about 287 A.D. Simplicius was killed with them.

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, "the Acts of these Martyrs, written by a Revenue Officer, named "Porphyrius", probably in the 4th-Century, relates to the five sculptors that, although they raised no objections to executing such profane images as Victoria, Cupid, and the Chariot of the Sun, they refused to make a statue of Æsculapius for a heathen temple. For this they were condemned to death as Christians. They were put into leaden caskets and drowned in the River Save. This happened towards the end of 305 A.D."


English: Stained-Glass Window of the "Four Crowned Martyrs"
in the Assumption Church of Samoëns (Haute-Savoie, France).
Français: Vitrail (1982) dit des "Quatre Couronnés"
dans l'église de l'Assomption à Samoëns (Haute-Savoie).
Les fr:Quatre Saints couronnés sont les patrons
de la confrérie des maçons de Samoëns.
Photo: 29 August 2013.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tangopaso
(Wikimedia Commons)

When the names of the First Group were learned, it was decreed that they should be Commemorated with the Second Group. The bodies of the First Group were interred by Saint Sebastian and Pope Melchiades (Miltiades) at the third milestone on the Via Labicana, in a sandpit where rested the remains of other executed Christians. According to tradition, since the names of the Four Martyred Soldiers could not be authentically established, Pope Melchiades commanded that, since the date of their deaths (8 November) was the same as that of the Second Group, their anniversary should be celebrated on that day.

It is unclear where the names of the Second Group actually come from. The tradition states that Pope Melchiades asked that the Saints be Commemorated as Claudius, Nicostratus, Simpronian, and Castorius. These same names actually are identical to names shared by converts of Polycarp the Priest, in the legend of Saint Sebastian.


Entrance of San Silvestro Chapel, at the Basilica dei SS. Quattro Coronati,
Rome, Italy, with painting of The Four Crowned Martyrs.
Date: Circa 1570.
Source: www.universitadeimarmorari.it/ universita.html.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, "this report has no historic foundation. It is merely a tentative explanation of the name Quatuor Coronati, a name given to a group of really authenticated Martyrs, who were buried and venerated in the Catacomb of Saints Peter and Marcellinus, the real origin of which, however, is not known. They were classed with the Five Martyrs of Pannonia in a purely external relationship."

The bodies of the Martyrs are kept in four ancient sarcophagi, in the Crypt of Santi Marcellino e Pietro. According to a lapid, dated 1123, the head of one of the four Martyrs is buried in Santa-Maria-in-Cosmedin.


Basilica of Santi Quattro Coronati, Rome, Italy.
Photo: 10 November 2005.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa.
(Wikimedia Commons)

In the 4th- and 5th-Centuries A.D., a Basilica (the Basilica of Santi Quattro Coronati) was erected and dedicated in honour of these Martyrs on the Caelian Hill, probably in the general area where Tradition located their execution. This became one of the Titular Churches of Rome and was restored several times.

The Four Crowned Martyrs were Venerated early on in England, with Saint Bede noting that there was a Church Dedicated to them in Canterbury. This Veneration can perhaps be accounted for by the fact that Augustine of Canterbury came from a Monastery near the Basilica of Santi Quattro Coronati, in Rome, or because their Relics were sent from Rome to England in 601 A.D.

Their connection with stone-masonry, in turn, connected them to the Freemasons. One of the scholarly journals of the English Freemasons was called Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, and the Stonemasons of Germany adopted them as Patron Saints of "Operative Masonry."
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