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Cyricus and Julitta

Cyricus (Greek: Κήρυκος, Amharic: ቂርቆስ, Imperial Aramaic: ܡܪܝ ܩܘܪܝܩܘܣ ܣܗܕܐ Mar Quriaqos Sahada; also Cyriacus, Quiriac, Quiricus, Cyr), and his mother, Julitta (Greek: Ἰουλίττα, Amharic: እየሉጣ, Imperial Aramaic: ܝܘܠܝܛܐ, Yulitha; also Julietta) are venerated as early Christian martyrs. According to tradition, they were put to death at Tarsus in AD 304.


Cyricus and Julitta
BornIconium, Asia Minor
(modern-day Konya, Turkey)
Died~304 AD
Tarsus, Asia Minor
(modern-day Tarsus, Mersin, Turkey)
Venerated inChurch of the East
Catholic Church
Oriental Orthodox Churches
Eastern Orthodox Church
Major shrineRelics at Nevers, and in the monastery of Saint-Amand, Tournai.
Feast
  • 16 June (Catholic Church)
  • 15 July (Eastern Orthodox Church, Oriental Orthodox Churches)
AttributesFrom the story involving Charlemagne, Cyricus is depicted as a naked child riding on a wild boar.
PatronagePrayed to for family happiness, and the restoring to health of sick children.
Cyricus and Julitta at Villamelendro (Palencia, Spain) Church of La Asunción.

Cyricus edit

Some evidence exists for an otherwise unknown child-martyr named Cyricus at Antioch.[1] It is believed that the legends about Cyricus and Julitta refer to him. There are places named after Cyricus in Europe and the Middle East, but without the name Julitta attached. Cyricus is the Saint-Cyr found in many French toponyms, as well as in several named San Quirico in Italy. The cult of these saints was strong in France after Amator, Bishop of Auxerre, brought relics back from Antioch in the 4th century. It is said that Constantine I discovered their relics originally and built a monastery near Constantinople, and a church not far off from Jerusalem. In the 6th century the Acts of Cyricus and Julitta were rejected in a list of apocryphal documents by the Decretum Gelasianum, called as such since the list was erroneously attributed to Pope Gelasius I.

History edit

 
Francesco Laurana, "St. Cyricus," Getty Center, Los Angeles

According to one version of their martyrdom, Julitta and her three-year-old son Cyricus had fled to Tarsus and were identified as Christians.[2] Julitta was tortured and Cyricus, being held by the governor of Tarsus, scratched the governor's face and was killed by being thrown down some stairs. Julitta did not weep but celebrated the fact that her son had earned the crown of martyrdom. In anger, the governor then decreed that Julitta's sides should be ripped apart with hooks, and then she was beheaded. Her body, along with that of Cyricus, was flung outside the city, on the heap of bodies belonging to criminals, but two maids rescued the corpses of the mother and child and buried them in a nearby field. This version is recorded in a letter from Theodore of Mopsuestia to Pope Zosimus[3] and in the Acta Graece Sincera.[4]

An alternative version of the story is found in Latin, Syriac, and Arabic.[5] In this version, Julitta is captured without Cyricus and brought before the governor. She refuses to sacrifice to idols and tells him to find a child, so that they can ask him if he thinks it is right to worship one god or many. Cyricus is found and he declares himself to be a Christian. The governor inflicts many tortures on them, all of which they miraculously survive. Satan enters Julitta's heart, causing her to be afraid of death, but Cyricus emboldens her with encouragement and prayers. The mother and child are finally decapitated.

Cyricus and Charlemagne edit

A story from Nevers states that one night Charlemagne dreamed he was saved from being killed by a wild boar during a hunt. He was saved by the appearance of a nude child, who had promised to save the Emperor from death if he would give him clothes to cover his nakedness.

The bishop of Nevers interpreted this dream to mean that he wanted the Emperor to repair the roof of the Cathédrale Saint-Cyr-et-Sainte-Julitte de Nevers.

Veneration edit

Croatia edit

In Croatia, in the Town of Visnjan, there is a 17th-century loggia and the church of Saint Cyricus (Kirik) and Julitta (Julita).

Georgia edit

Cyricus (Kvirike) and Julitta (Ivlita) are venerated as patron saints of the Kala community in the highland province of Svaneti. While the saints were relatively unknown in the rest of Georgia, the Svan mountaineers held them in high esteem. The 11th-century Lagurka church, located at 2200 metres above sea and known for its wall paintings, is the scene of an all-Svan festival and pilgrimage, kvirikoba ("the day of Cyricus"), held annually on July 28.[6] In the words of the historian Ekvtime Taqaishvili, for the Svans Lagurka is what for the ancient Greeks was Delphi—the symbol of their unity.[7]

Italy edit

 
The Collegiata dei Santi Quirico e Giulitta, San Quirico d’Orcia

In Italy, where they are known as Quirico (or Quilico, or Chirico) and Giulitta (or Giuletta or Giulietta ),[8] the place most commonly linked with the saints is the village of San Quirico d’Orcia in the Val d’Orcia of the Province of Siena, region of Tuscany. There a twelfth- or thirteenth-century church (pictured right), based on an eighth-century baptistery, is dedicated to them.[9] The cult, however, is common in many parts of country and more than 200 churches, monasteries, localities, etc. with signs of devotion to one or both of the saints have been identified.[10] Other communes named after them are Corvino San Quirico (Province of Pavia), San Chirico Nuovo (Province of Potenza), San Chirico Raparo (Province of Potenza), Serra San Quirico (Province of Ancona), and Santa Giuletta (Province of Pavia). Communes of whom they are patron saints include Borgo San Martino (Province of Alessandria), Cavaria in the municipality of Cavaria con Premezzo (Province of Varese), Cisternino (Province of Brindisi), Collesalvetti (Province of Livorno), and Trofarello (Province of Turin. San Quirico Province of Pistoia

In parts of Piedmont, including Centallo, Asti and Murisengo, an unconnected Saint Quirico is venerated, regarded as a member of the Theban Legion.[8]

British Isles edit

There are a few churches in England dedicated to Saints Cyricus and Julitta, including Newton St. Cyres in Devon, Tickenham[11] in Somerset, and Swaffham Prior in Cambridgeshire. In Cornwall, they can be found in the villages of Luxulyan and St Veep, and there was also once a chapel at Calstock dedicated to these two saints. In Wales there is a least one church dedicated to the saints, in Llanilid, but named as St. Ilid and St. Curig.

The cult of "St. Giric" was formerly much more widespread in Celtic Britain, however. His feast day was one of the principal Welsh holidays, as codified by the laws of Hywel Dda.[12]

 
Print of St Cyricus in Lacock, Wiltshire.

St Cyriac's Church, Lacock, Wiltshire, has a framed print of a similar story depicting St Cyricus boxing a governor's ears because the governor had blasphemed. The embittered governor stabs the child dead and the mother is crucified. This print appears to be based on panels from the predella of a 15th-century Italian altarpiece dedicated to Cyricus.[13]

Middle East edit

Cyricus in particular is mentioned numerous times in the daily office of the Church of the East as attested in the large collection of prayers and services known as the Hudra. The mention of a saint from Tarsus in such East Syriac traditions suggests that there was considerable early sharing of martyrological traditions despite doctrinal differences between churches.

Ethiopia and Eritrea edit

Cyricus or Qirqos (ቂርቆስ), also known as Qurqos or Č̣ǝrqos/Č̣ärqos, is a popular saint in Ethiopia and Eritrea, along with Julitta (ኢየሉጣ, ʾIyäluṭa). His feast is celebrated on the 15th of the month of Ṭərr (ጥር). Many churches in Ethiopia and Eritrea are named after Qirqos.[14]

India edit

Cyriacus is one of the saints venerated by the Saint Thomas Christians of India. Some of their important churches were dedicated to the saint. A document written in 1301 mentions the church at Kodungallur which was dedicated the saint.[15] The Pālūr Church, one of the seven churches associated with the mission of Thomas the Apostle, was originally dedicated to Cyriacus.[16] There is a small piece of St. Cyricus / Kuriakose's finger at St. Peter's and St. Paul's Orthodox Church in Puthencruz (Ernakulam) They celebrate his Perunnal (feast) on July 27, 28 and the anniversary of the relocation of his bone on Nov 13, 14 of every year. Also, a piece of his other finger can be found in St. George Dayro in Malecruze in Ernakulam.

Ethiopic texts edit

Ethiopic texts on Saint Qirqos include:[17]

  • Gädlä Qirqos "(Spiritual) Combat of Qirqos" (Passio)
  • Täʾamrä Qirqos "Miracles of Qirqos"
  • Mälkʾa Qirqos "Image of Qirqos"
  • Sälam lä-Qirqos "Salutation to Qirqos"

Ethiopian manuscripts containing the Passio of St. Qirqos that were digitized by the Ethio-SPaRe project include:[17]

  • ʿAddi Qolqwal Giyorgis: 1 MS (Gädlä Sämaʿtat, 16th century)
  • Koholo Yoḥannǝs: 1 MS (Gädlä Sämaʿtat, 15th century)
  • Mǝdrä Ruba: 1 MS (19th century)
  • Qǝddus Qirqos: 2 MSS (19th century)
  • Qändaʻro Qirqos: 1 MS (20th century)
  • ʿUra Qirqos: 4 MSS (14th/15th, 19th, 18th, 20th century; 1 MS Gädlä Sämaʿtat)
  • Wälwalo Qirqos: 1 MS (19th century)

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Saint Martyrs Julitta (Giulietta, Julietta) and Cyricus (Kirik, Cyr, Cyriacus, Quiriac, Quiricus) mother and son of Tarsus". www.icon.lt. Retrieved 4 September 2017.
  2. ^ Farmer, David Hugh (2011). "Cyricus (Cyriacus, Quiriac, Quiricus, Cyr) and Julitta". The Oxford dictionary of saints (5th ed. rev. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acref/9780199596607.001.0001. ISBN 9780199596607.
  3. ^ Papebroch, Daniel (1867). Acta Sanctorum, Junii, vol. 3. Paris & Rome. pp. 19–23.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ van Hoof, Gulielmus (1882). Analecta Bollandiana 1. Bruxelles. pp. 192–208.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Terpelyuk, Alisa (2009). Martyrdom of Mār Qūryāqūs and Yōlīṭī (Cyriacus & Julitta). Critical text, Russian translation from Syriac, and research by Аlisa А. Тerpelyuk. Moscow: Institute for Oriental and Classical Studies, Russian State University for the Humanities. p. 5.
  6. ^ Voell, Stéphane (2013). "Oath of Memory: The Taking of Oaths on Icons in Svan Villages of Southern Georgia". Iran & the Caucasus. 17 (2): 158, 163. doi:10.1163/1573384X-20130203. JSTOR 23597593.
  7. ^ Taqaishvili, Ekvtime (1937). არქეოლოგიური ექსპედიცია ლეჩხუმ-სვანეთში [Archaeological expedition to Lechkhumi and Svaneti] (PDF) (in Georgian). Paris. pp. 179–184.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ a b Santi Quirico e Giullita : I lori nomi 2007-10-21 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian)
  9. ^ For a description and history of the church see Collegiata dei Santi Quirico e Giulitta (in English)
  10. ^ See the list at Santi Quirico e Giullita: Il culto in Italia 2007-10-21 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ . tickenhamchurch.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2016-04-27. Retrieved 2006-06-21.
  12. ^ Wade-Evans, Arthur. Welsh Medieval Laws, p. 343. Oxford Univ., 1909. Accessed 31 Jan. 2013.
  13. ^ "Story of Saints Julitta and Quiricus (Three predella panels)".
  14. ^ Pisani, Vitagrazia (2013). Il culto di San Qirqos nell’Etiopia storica: analisi storico-filologica, con edizione critica della "Passio" (Gädlä Qirqos) (Ph.D. dissertation). Naples: Università degli Studi di Napoli "L’Orientale".
  15. ^ Brock, Sebastian P. (2011a). "Thomas Christians". In Sebastian P. Brock; Aaron M. Butts; George A. Kiraz; Lucas Van Rompay (eds.). Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage: Electronic Edition. Gorgias Press. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  16. ^ Whitehouse, Thomas (1873). Lingerings of light in a dark land: researches into the Syrian church of Malabar (1873 ed.). William Brown & CO. p. 31.
  17. ^ a b Pisani, Vitagrazia (28 April 2012). The Martyrdom of Saint Cyricus (Qirqos) in North Ethiopia: Elements of the devotion and of the manuscripts tradition. University of Hamburg.

External links edit

  • "St. Julitta, Martyr", Butler's Lives of the Saints
  • Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Saint Julitta
  • Church of St Quiricus and St Julietta 2016-04-27 at the Wayback Machine, Tickenham, England
  • Orthodox Church of America
  • Online Chapel - Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
  • St. Cyricus page at the Christian Iconography web site
  • "Saint Quiricus and His Mother Saint Julitta" from the Golden Legend
  • Full text

cyricus, julitta, saint, quiricus, redirects, here, other, uses, quiricus, cyricus, greek, Κήρυκος, amharic, ቂርቆስ, imperial, aramaic, ܡܪܝ, ܩܘܪܝܩܘܣ, ܣܗܕܐ, quriaqos, sahada, also, cyriacus, quiriac, quiricus, mother, julitta, greek, Ἰουλίττα, amharic, እየሉጣ, impe. Saint Quiricus redirects here For other uses see Quiricus Cyricus Greek Khrykos Amharic ቂርቆስ Imperial Aramaic ܡܪܝ ܩܘܪܝܩܘܣ ܣܗܕܐ Mar Quriaqos Sahada also Cyriacus Quiriac Quiricus Cyr and his mother Julitta Greek Ἰoylitta Amharic እየሉጣ Imperial Aramaic ܝܘܠܝܛܐ Yulitha also Julietta are venerated as early Christian martyrs According to tradition they were put to death at Tarsus in AD 304 SaintsCyricus and JulittaBornIconium Asia Minor modern day Konya Turkey Died 304 ADTarsus Asia Minor modern day Tarsus Mersin Turkey Venerated inChurch of the EastCatholic ChurchOriental Orthodox ChurchesEastern Orthodox ChurchMajor shrineRelics at Nevers and in the monastery of Saint Amand Tournai Feast16 June Catholic Church 15 July Eastern Orthodox Church Oriental Orthodox Churches AttributesFrom the story involving Charlemagne Cyricus is depicted as a naked child riding on a wild boar PatronagePrayed to for family happiness and the restoring to health of sick children Cyricus and Julitta at Villamelendro Palencia Spain Church of La Asuncion Contents 1 Cyricus 2 History 3 Cyricus and Charlemagne 4 Veneration 4 1 Croatia 4 2 Georgia 4 3 Italy 4 4 British Isles 4 5 Middle East 4 6 Ethiopia and Eritrea 4 7 India 5 Ethiopic texts 6 Footnotes 7 External linksCyricus editSome evidence exists for an otherwise unknown child martyr named Cyricus at Antioch 1 It is believed that the legends about Cyricus and Julitta refer to him There are places named after Cyricus in Europe and the Middle East but without the name Julitta attached Cyricus is the Saint Cyr found in many French toponyms as well as in several named San Quirico in Italy The cult of these saints was strong in France after Amator Bishop of Auxerre brought relics back from Antioch in the 4th century It is said that Constantine I discovered their relics originally and built a monastery near Constantinople and a church not far off from Jerusalem In the 6th century the Acts of Cyricus and Julitta were rejected in a list of apocryphal documents by the Decretum Gelasianum called as such since the list was erroneously attributed to Pope Gelasius I History edit nbsp Francesco Laurana St Cyricus Getty Center Los AngelesAccording to one version of their martyrdom Julitta and her three year old son Cyricus had fled to Tarsus and were identified as Christians 2 Julitta was tortured and Cyricus being held by the governor of Tarsus scratched the governor s face and was killed by being thrown down some stairs Julitta did not weep but celebrated the fact that her son had earned the crown of martyrdom In anger the governor then decreed that Julitta s sides should be ripped apart with hooks and then she was beheaded Her body along with that of Cyricus was flung outside the city on the heap of bodies belonging to criminals but two maids rescued the corpses of the mother and child and buried them in a nearby field This version is recorded in a letter from Theodore of Mopsuestia to Pope Zosimus 3 and in the Acta Graece Sincera 4 An alternative version of the story is found in Latin Syriac and Arabic 5 In this version Julitta is captured without Cyricus and brought before the governor She refuses to sacrifice to idols and tells him to find a child so that they can ask him if he thinks it is right to worship one god or many Cyricus is found and he declares himself to be a Christian The governor inflicts many tortures on them all of which they miraculously survive Satan enters Julitta s heart causing her to be afraid of death but Cyricus emboldens her with encouragement and prayers The mother and child are finally decapitated Cyricus and Charlemagne editA story from Nevers states that one night Charlemagne dreamed he was saved from being killed by a wild boar during a hunt He was saved by the appearance of a nude child who had promised to save the Emperor from death if he would give him clothes to cover his nakedness The bishop of Nevers interpreted this dream to mean that he wanted the Emperor to repair the roof of the Cathedrale Saint Cyr et Sainte Julitte de Nevers Veneration editCroatia edit In Croatia in the Town of Visnjan there is a 17th century loggia and the church of Saint Cyricus Kirik and Julitta Julita Georgia edit Cyricus Kvirike and Julitta Ivlita are venerated as patron saints of the Kala community in the highland province of Svaneti While the saints were relatively unknown in the rest of Georgia the Svan mountaineers held them in high esteem The 11th century Lagurka church located at 2200 metres above sea and known for its wall paintings is the scene of an all Svan festival and pilgrimage kvirikoba the day of Cyricus held annually on July 28 6 In the words of the historian Ekvtime Taqaishvili for the Svans Lagurka is what for the ancient Greeks was Delphi the symbol of their unity 7 Italy edit nbsp The Collegiata dei Santi Quirico e Giulitta San Quirico d OrciaIn Italy where they are known as Quirico or Quilico or Chirico and Giulitta or Giuletta or Giulietta 8 the place most commonly linked with the saints is the village of San Quirico d Orcia in the Val d Orcia of the Province of Siena region of Tuscany There a twelfth or thirteenth century church pictured right based on an eighth century baptistery is dedicated to them 9 The cult however is common in many parts of country and more than 200 churches monasteries localities etc with signs of devotion to one or both of the saints have been identified 10 Other communes named after them are Corvino San Quirico Province of Pavia San Chirico Nuovo Province of Potenza San Chirico Raparo Province of Potenza Serra San Quirico Province of Ancona and Santa Giuletta Province of Pavia Communes of whom they are patron saints include Borgo San Martino Province of Alessandria Cavaria in the municipality of Cavaria con Premezzo Province of Varese Cisternino Province of Brindisi Collesalvetti Province of Livorno and Trofarello Province of Turin San Quirico Province of PistoiaIn parts of Piedmont including Centallo Asti and Murisengo an unconnected Saint Quirico is venerated regarded as a member of the Theban Legion 8 British Isles edit There are a few churches in England dedicated to Saints Cyricus and Julitta including Newton St Cyres in Devon Tickenham 11 in Somerset and Swaffham Prior in Cambridgeshire In Cornwall they can be found in the villages of Luxulyan and St Veep and there was also once a chapel at Calstock dedicated to these two saints In Wales there is a least one church dedicated to the saints in Llanilid but named as St Ilid and St Curig The cult of St Giric was formerly much more widespread in Celtic Britain however His feast day was one of the principal Welsh holidays as codified by the laws of Hywel Dda 12 nbsp Print of St Cyricus in Lacock Wiltshire St Cyriac s Church Lacock Wiltshire has a framed print of a similar story depicting St Cyricus boxing a governor s ears because the governor had blasphemed The embittered governor stabs the child dead and the mother is crucified This print appears to be based on panels from the predella of a 15th century Italian altarpiece dedicated to Cyricus 13 Middle East edit Cyricus in particular is mentioned numerous times in the daily office of the Church of the East as attested in the large collection of prayers and services known as the Hudra The mention of a saint from Tarsus in such East Syriac traditions suggests that there was considerable early sharing of martyrological traditions despite doctrinal differences between churches Ethiopia and Eritrea edit Cyricus or Qirqos ቂርቆስ also known as Qurqos or C ǝrqos C arqos is a popular saint in Ethiopia and Eritrea along with Julitta ኢየሉጣ ʾIyaluṭa His feast is celebrated on the 15th of the month of Ṭerr ጥር Many churches in Ethiopia and Eritrea are named after Qirqos 14 India edit Cyriacus is one of the saints venerated by the Saint Thomas Christians of India Some of their important churches were dedicated to the saint A document written in 1301 mentions the church at Kodungallur which was dedicated the saint 15 The Palur Church one of the seven churches associated with the mission of Thomas the Apostle was originally dedicated to Cyriacus 16 There is a small piece of St Cyricus Kuriakose s finger at St Peter s and St Paul s Orthodox Church in Puthencruz Ernakulam They celebrate his Perunnal feast on July 27 28 and the anniversary of the relocation of his bone on Nov 13 14 of every year Also a piece of his other finger can be found in St George Dayro in Malecruze in Ernakulam Ethiopic texts editEthiopic texts on Saint Qirqos include 17 Gadla Qirqos Spiritual Combat of Qirqos Passio Taʾamra Qirqos Miracles of Qirqos Malkʾa Qirqos Image of Qirqos Salam la Qirqos Salutation to Qirqos Ethiopian manuscripts containing the Passio of St Qirqos that were digitized by the Ethio SPaRe project include 17 ʿAddi Qolqwal Giyorgis 1 MS Gadla Samaʿtat 16th century Koholo Yoḥannǝs 1 MS Gadla Samaʿtat 15th century Mǝdra Ruba 1 MS 19th century Qǝddus Qirqos 2 MSS 19th century Qandaʻro Qirqos 1 MS 20th century ʿUra Qirqos 4 MSS 14th 15th 19th 18th 20th century 1 MS Gadla Samaʿtat Walwalo Qirqos 1 MS 19th century Footnotes edit Saint Martyrs Julitta Giulietta Julietta and Cyricus Kirik Cyr Cyriacus Quiriac Quiricus mother and son of Tarsus www icon lt Retrieved 4 September 2017 Farmer David Hugh 2011 Cyricus Cyriacus Quiriac Quiricus Cyr and Julitta The Oxford dictionary of saints 5th ed rev ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780199596607 001 0001 ISBN 9780199596607 Papebroch Daniel 1867 Acta Sanctorum Junii vol 3 Paris amp Rome pp 19 23 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link van Hoof Gulielmus 1882 Analecta Bollandiana 1 Bruxelles pp 192 208 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Terpelyuk Alisa 2009 Martyrdom of Mar Quryaqus and Yōliṭi Cyriacus amp Julitta Critical text Russian translation from Syriac and research by Alisa A Terpelyuk Moscow Institute for Oriental and Classical Studies Russian State University for the Humanities p 5 Voell Stephane 2013 Oath of Memory The Taking of Oaths on Icons in Svan Villages of Southern Georgia Iran amp the Caucasus 17 2 158 163 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20130203 JSTOR 23597593 Taqaishvili Ekvtime 1937 არქეოლოგიური ექსპედიცია ლეჩხუმ სვანეთში Archaeological expedition to Lechkhumi and Svaneti PDF in Georgian Paris pp 179 184 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Santi Quirico e Giullita I lori nomi Archived 2007 10 21 at the Wayback Machine in Italian For a description and history of the church see Collegiata dei Santi Quirico e Giulitta in English See the list at Santi Quirico e Giullita Il culto in Italia Archived 2007 10 21 at the Wayback Machine Home tickenhamchurch org uk Archived from the original on 2016 04 27 Retrieved 2006 06 21 Wade Evans Arthur Welsh Medieval Laws p 343 Oxford Univ 1909 Accessed 31 Jan 2013 Story of Saints Julitta and Quiricus Three predella panels Pisani Vitagrazia 2013 Il culto di San Qirqos nell Etiopia storica analisi storico filologica con edizione critica della Passio Gadla Qirqos Ph D dissertation Naples Universita degli Studi di Napoli L Orientale Brock Sebastian P 2011a Thomas Christians In Sebastian P Brock Aaron M Butts George A Kiraz Lucas Van Rompay eds Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage Electronic Edition Gorgias Press Retrieved 22 September 2016 Whitehouse Thomas 1873 Lingerings of light in a dark land researches into the Syrian church of Malabar 1873 ed William Brown amp CO p 31 a b Pisani Vitagrazia 28 April 2012 The Martyrdom of Saint Cyricus Qirqos in North Ethiopia Elements of the devotion and of the manuscripts tradition University of Hamburg External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cyricus and Julitta nbsp Saints portal St Julitta Martyr Butler s Lives of the Saints Catholic Encyclopedia Saint Julitta Church of St Quiricus and St Julietta Archived 2016 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Tickenham England Cyriac Family History Project Saints Cyr amp Julitta page Orthodox Church of America Online Chapel Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America St Cyricus page at the Christian Iconography web site Saint Quiricus and His Mother Saint Julitta from the Golden Legend Syriac Martyrdom of Mar Quryaqus and Yoliti Full text Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cyricus and Julitta amp oldid 1203789236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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