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Saint George

Saint George (Greek: Γεώργιος (Geórgios), Latin: Georgius, Arabic: القديس جرجس; died 23 April 303), also George of Lydda, was a Christian who is venerated as a saint in Christianity. According to tradition he was a soldier in the Roman army. Saint George was a soldier of Cappadocian Greek origin and member of the Praetorian Guard for Roman emperor Diocletian, who was sentenced to death for refusing to recant his Christian faith. He became one of the most venerated saints and megalomartyrs in Christianity, and he has been especially venerated as a military saint since the Crusades. He is respected by Christians, Druze, as well as some Muslims as a martyr of monotheistic faith.


George
Portrait by Hans von Kulmbach (c. 1510)
Martyr, Patron of England
BornCappadocia
(modern-day Turkey)
Died23 April 303
Lydda, Syria Palaestina (modern-day Lod, Israel)[1][2]
Venerated in
Major shrine
Feast
AttributesClothed as a crusader in plate armour or mail, often bearing a lance tipped by a cross, riding a white horse, often slaying a dragon. In the Greek East and Latin West he is shown with St George's Cross emblazoned on his armour, or shield or banner.
PatronageMany Patronages of Saint George exist around the world

In hagiography, as one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers and one of the most prominent military saints, he is immortalized in the legend of Saint George and the Dragon. His memorial, Saint George's Day, is traditionally celebrated on 23 April. Historically, the countries of England, Ukraine, Ethiopia, and Georgia, as well as Catalonia and Aragon in Spain, and Moscow in Russia, have claimed George as their patron saint, as have several other regions, cities, universities, professions, and organizations. The Church-Mosque of Saint George in Lod (Lydda), Israel, contains a sarcophagus believed by many Christians to contain St. George's remains.[6]

Legend

Very little is known about George's life, but it is thought he was a Roman officer of Greek descent who was martyred in one of the pre-Constantinian persecutions.[7] Beyond this, early sources give conflicting information.

The saint's veneration dates to the 5th century with some certainty, and possibly even to the 4th. The addition of the dragon legend dates to the 11th century.

The earliest text which preserves fragments of George's narrative is in a Greek hagiography which is identified by Hippolyte Delehaye of the scholarly Bollandists to be a palimpsest of the 5th century.[8] An earlier work by Eusebius, Church history, written in the 4th century, contributed to the legend but did not name George or provide significant detail.[9] The work of the Bollandists Daniel Papebroch, Jean Bolland, and Godfrey Henschen in the 17th century was one of the first pieces of scholarly research to establish the saint's historicity, via their publications in Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca.[10] Pope Gelasius I stated in 494 that George was among those saints "whose names are justly reverenced among men, but whose actions are known only to God."[11]

The most complete version, based upon the fifth-century Greek text but in a later form, survives in a translation into Syriac from about 600. From text fragments preserved in the British Library a translation into English was published in 1925.[12][13][14]

In the Greek tradition, George was born to Greek Christian parents, in Cappadocia. After his father died, his mother, who was originally from Lydda, in Syria Palaestina, returned with George to her hometown.[15] He went on to become a soldier for the Roman army, but, because of his Christian faith, he was arrested and tortured, "at or near Lydda, also called Diospolis"; on the following day, he was paraded and then beheaded, and his body was buried in Lydda.[15] According to other sources, after his mother's death he travelled to the eastern imperial capital, Nicomedia,[16] where he was persecuted by one Dadianus. In later versions of the Greek legend, this name is rationalised to Diocletian, and George's martyrdom is placed in the Diocletian persecution of AD 303. The setting in Nicomedia is also secondary, and inconsistent with the earliest cults of the saint being located in Diospolis.[17]

George was executed by decapitation on 23 April 303. A witness of his suffering convinced Empress Alexandra of Rome to become a Christian as well, so she joined George in martyrdom. His body was buried in Lydda, where Christians soon came to honour him as a martyr.[18][19]

 
George in the Acta Sanctorum, as collected in late 1600s and early 1700s. The Latin title De S Georgio Megalo-Martyre; Lyddae seu Diospoli in Palaestina translates as St. George Great-Martyr; [from] Lydda or Diospolis, in Palestine.

The Latin Passio Sancti Georgii (6th century) follows the general course of the Greek legend, but Diocletian here becomes Dacian, Emperor of the Persians. His martyrdom was greatly extended to more than twenty separate tortures over the course of seven years. Over the course of his martyrdom, 40,900 pagans were converted to Christianity, including the empress Alexandra. When George finally died, the wicked Dacian was carried away in a whirlwind of fire. In later Latin versions, the persecutor is the Roman emperor Decius, or a Roman judge named Dacian serving under Diocletian.[20]

Historicity

 
George depicted in the Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493

There is little information on the early life of George. Herbert Thurston in The Catholic Encyclopedia states that based upon an ancient cultus, narratives of the early pilgrims, and the early dedications of churches to George, going back to the fourth century, "there seems, therefore, no ground for doubting the historical existence of St. George", although no faith can be placed in either the details of his history or his alleged exploits.[21]

 
Russian icon (mid 14th century), Novgorod

The Diocletianic Persecution of 303, associated with military saints because the persecution was aimed at Christians among the professional soldiers of the Roman army, is of undisputed historicity. According to Donald Attwater,

No historical particulars of his life have survived, ... The widespread veneration for St George as a soldier saint from early times had its centre in Palestine at Diospolis, now Lydda. St George was apparently martyred there, at the end of the third or the beginning of the fourth century; that is all that can be reasonably surmised about him.[22]

Edward Gibbon[23][24] argued that George, or at least the legend from which the above is distilled, is based on George of Cappadocia,[25][17] a notorious 4th-century Arian bishop who was Athanasius of Alexandria's most bitter rival, and that it was he who in time became George of England. This identification is seen as highly improbable. Bishop George was slain by Gentile Greeks for exacting onerous taxes, especially inheritance taxes. J. B. Bury, who edited the 1906 edition of Gibbon's The Decline and Fall, wrote "this theory of Gibbon's has nothing to be said for it". He adds that: "the connection of St. George with a dragon-slaying legend does not relegate him to the region of the myth".[21] Saint George in all likelihood was martyred before the year 290.[26]

St. George and the dragon

 
Miniature from a 13th-century Passio Sancti Georgii (Verona)

The legend of Saint George and the Dragon was first recorded in the 11th century, in a Georgian source.[27] It reached Catholic Europe in the 12th century. In the Golden Legend, by 13th-century Archbishop of Genoa Jacobus de Voragine, George's death was at the hands of Dacian, and about the year 287.[citation needed]

 
Saint George Killing the Dragon, 1434/35, by Bernat Martorell

The tradition tells that a fierce dragon was causing panic at the city of Silene, Libya, at the time George arrived there. In order to prevent the dragon from devastating people from the city, they gave two sheep each day to the dragon, but when the sheep were not enough they were forced to sacrifice humans instead of the two sheep. The human to be sacrificed was elected by the city's own people and one time the king's daughter was chosen to be sacrificed but no one was willing to take her place. George saved the girl by slaying the dragon with a lance. The king was so grateful that he offered him treasures as a reward for saving his daughter's life, but George refused it and instead he gave these to the poor. The people of the city were so amazed at what they had witnessed that they became Christians and were all baptized.[28]

The Golden Legend offered a narration of George's encounter with a dragon. This account was very influential and it remains the most familiar version in English owing to William Caxton's 15th-century translation.[29]

In the medieval romances, the lance with which George slew the dragon was called Ascalon, after the Levantine city of Ashkelon, today in Israel. The name Ascalon was used by Winston Churchill for his personal aircraft during World War II, according to records at Bletchley Park.[30] Iconography of the horseman with spear overcoming evil was widespread throughout the Christian period.[31]

Muslim legends

George (Arabic: جرجس, Jirjis or Girgus) is included in some Muslim texts as a prophetic figure. The Islamic sources state that he lived among a group of believers who were in direct contact with the last apostles of Jesus. He is described as a rich merchant who opposed erection of Apollo's statue by Mosul's king Dadan. After confronting the king, George was tortured many times to no effect, was imprisoned and was aided by the angels. Eventually, he exposed that the idols were possessed by Satan, but was martyred when the city was destroyed by God in a rain of fire.[32]

Muslim scholars had tried to find a historical connection of the saint due to his popularity.[33] According to Muslim legend, he was martyred under the rule of Diocletian and was killed three times but resurrected every time. The legend is more developed in the Persian version of al-Tabari wherein he resurrects the dead, makes trees sprout and pillars bear flowers. After one of his deaths, the world is covered by darkness which is lifted only when he is resurrected. He is able to convert the queen but she is put to death. He then prays to God to allow him to die, which is granted.[34]

Al-Thaʿlabi states that he was from Palestine and lived in the times of some disciples of Jesus. He was killed many times by the king of Mosul, and resurrected each time. When the king tried to starve him, he touched a piece of dry wood brought by a woman and turned it green, with varieties of fruits and vegetables growing from it. After his fourth death, the city was burnt along with him. Ibn al-Athir's account of one of his deaths is parallel to the crucifixion of Jesus, stating, "When he died, God sent stormy winds and thunder and lightning and dark clouds, so that darkness fell between heaven and earth, and people were in great wonderment." The account adds that the darkness was lifted after his resurrection.[33]

Veneration

History

 
Martyrdom of Saint George, by Paolo Veronese, 1564

A titular church built in Lydda during the reign of Constantine the Great (reigned 306–337) was consecrated to "a man of the highest distinction", according to the church history of Eusebius; the name of the titulus "patron" was not disclosed, but later he was asserted[by whom?] to have been George.

The veneration of George spread from Syria Palaestina through Lebanon to the rest of the Byzantine Empire – though the martyr is not mentioned in the Syriac Breviarium[19] – and the region east of the Black Sea. By the 5th century, the veneration of George had reached the Christian Western Roman Empire, as well: in 494, George was canonized as a saint by Pope Gelasius I, among those "whose names are justly reverenced among men, but whose acts are known only to [God]."[citation needed]

The early cult of the saint was localized in Diospolis (Lydda), in Palestine. The first description of Lydda as a pilgrimage site where George's relics were venerated is De Situ Terrae Sanctae by the archdeacon Theodosius, written between 518 and 530. By the end of the 6th century, the center of his veneration appears to have shifted to Cappadocia. The Life of Saint Theodore of Sykeon, written in the 7th century, mentions the veneration of the relics of the saint in Cappadocia.[35]

By the time of the early Muslim conquests of the mostly Christian and Zoroastrian Middle East, a basilica in Lydda dedicated to George existed.[36] A new church was erected in 1872 and is still standing, where the feast of the translation of the relics of Saint George to that location is celebrated on 3 November each year.[37] In England, he was mentioned among the martyrs by the 8th-century monk Bede. The Georgslied is an adaptation of his legend in Old High German, composed in the late 9th century. The earliest dedication to the saint in England is a church at Fordington, Dorset, that is mentioned in the will of Alfred the Great.[38] George did not rise to the position of "patron saint" of England, however, until the 14th century, and he was still obscured by Edward the Confessor, the traditional patron saint of England, until in 1552 during the reign of Edward VI all saints' banners other than George's were abolished in the English Reformation.[39][40]

 
The martyrdom of Saint George, by Cornelis Schut, 1643

Belief in an apparition of George heartened the Franks at the Battle of Antioch in 1098,[41] and a similar appearance occurred the following year at Jerusalem. The chivalric military Order of Sant Jordi d'Alfama was established by king Peter the Catholic from the Crown of Aragon in 1201, Republic of Genoa, Kingdom of Hungary (1326), and by Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor.[42] Edward III of England put his Order of the Garter under the banner of George, probably in 1348. The chronicler Jean Froissart observed the English invoking George as a battle cry on several occasions during the Hundred Years' War. In his rise as a national saint, George was aided by the very fact that the saint had no legendary connection with England, and no specifically localized shrine, as that of Thomas Becket at Canterbury: "Consequently, numerous shrines were established during the late fifteenth century," Muriel C. McClendon has written,[43] "and his did not become closely identified with a particular occupation or with the cure of a specific malady."

 
Relics of George at São Jorge parish church, São Jorge, Madeira Island, Portugal

In the wake of the Crusades, George became a model of chivalry in works of literature, including medieval romances. In the 13th century, Jacobus de Voragine, Archbishop of Genoa, compiled the Legenda Sanctorum, (Readings of the Saints) also known as Legenda Aurea (the Golden Legend). Its 177 chapters (182 in some editions) include the story of George, among many others. After the invention of the printing press, the book became a bestseller.

The establishment of George as a popular saint and protective giant[44] in the West, that had captured the medieval imagination, was codified by the official elevation of his feast to a festum duplex[45] at a church council in 1415, on the date that had become associated with his martyrdom, 23 April. There was wide latitude from community to community in celebration of the day across late medieval and early modern England,[46] and no uniform "national" celebration elsewhere, a token of the popular and vernacular nature of George's cultus and its local horizons, supported by a local guild or confraternity under George's protection, or the dedication of a local church. When the English Reformation severely curtailed the saints' days in the calendar, Saint George's Day was among the holidays that continued to be observed.

In April 2019, the parish church of São Jorge, in São Jorge, Madeira Island, Portugal, solemnly received the relics of George, patron saint of the parish. During the celebrations the 504th anniversary of its foundation. the relics were brought by the new Bishop of Funchal, D. Nuno Brás.[47]

Veneration in the Levant

George is renowned throughout the Middle East, as both saint and prophet. His veneration by Christians and Muslims lies in his composite personality combining several biblical, Quranic and other ancient mythical heroes.[48] Saint George is the patron saint of Lebanese Christians,[49] Palestinian Christians,[50] and Syrian Christians.[51]

 
Saint George dragged through the streets (detail), by Bernat Martorell, 15th century

William Dalrymple, who reviewed the literature in 1999, tells us that J. E. Hanauer in his 1907 book Folklore of the Holy Land: Muslim, Christian and Jewish "mentioned a shrine in the village of Beit Jala, beside Bethlehem, which at the time was frequented by Christians who regarded it as the birthplace of George and some Jews who regarded it as the burial place of the Prophet Elias. According to Hanauer, in his day the monastery was "a sort of madhouse. Deranged persons of all the three faiths are taken thither and chained in the court of the chapel, where they are kept for forty days on bread and water, the Eastern Orthodox priest at the head of the establishment now and then reading the Gospel over them, or administering a whipping as the case demands."[52] In the 1920s, according to Tawfiq Canaan's Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine, nothing seemed to have changed, and all three communities were still visiting the shrine and praying together."[53]

Dalrymple himself visited the place in 1995. "I asked around in the Christian Quarter in Jerusalem, and discovered that the place was very much alive. With all the greatest shrines in the Christian world to choose from, it seemed that when the local Arab Christians had a problem – an illness, or something more complicated – they preferred to seek the intercession of George in his grubby little shrine at Beit Jala rather than praying at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem or the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem."[53] He asked the priest at the shrine "Do you get many Muslims coming here?" The priest replied, "We get hundreds! Almost as many as the Christian pilgrims. Often, when I come in here, I find Muslims all over the floor, in the aisles, up and down."[53][54]

The Encyclopædia Britannica quotes G. A. Smith in his Historic Geography of the Holy Land, p. 164, saying: "The Mahommedans who usually identify St. George with the prophet Elijah, at Lydda confound his legend with one about Christ himself. Their name for Antichrist is Dajjal, and they have a tradition that Jesus will slay Antichrist by the gate of Lydda. The notion sprang from an ancient bas-relief of George and the Dragon on the Lydda church. But Dajjal may be derived, by a very common confusion between n and l, from Dagon, whose name two neighbouring villages bear to this day, while one of the gates of Lydda used to be called the Gate of Dagon."[55]

Veneration in the Muslim world

 
Inside the Druze maqam Al-Khidr in Kafr Yasif, Israel: There is an icon of Saint George and the Dragon; who has been syncretized with the figure of al-Khidr.[56]

George is described as a prophetic figure in Islamic sources.[32] George is venerated by some Christians and Muslims because of his composite personality combining several biblical, Quranic and other ancient mythical heroes.[citation needed] In some sources he is identified with Elijah or Mar Elis, George or Mar Jirjus and in others as al-Khidr. The last epithet meaning the "green prophet", is common to Christian, Muslim, and Druze folk piety. Samuel Curtiss who visited an artificial cave dedicated to him where he is identified with Elijah, reports that childless Muslim women used to visit the shrine to pray for children. Per tradition, he was brought to his place of martyrdom in chains, thus priests of Church of St. George chain the sick especially the mentally ill to a chain for overnight or longer for healing. This is sought after by both Muslims and Christians.[48]

According to Elizabeth Anne Finn's Home in the Holy land (1866):[57]

St George killed the dragon in this country; and the place is shown close to Beyroot. Many churches and convents are named after him. The church at Lydda is dedicated to George; so is a convent near Bethlehem, and another small one just opposite the Jaffa gate, and others beside. The Arabs believe that George can restore mad people to their senses, and to say a person has been sent to St. George's is equivalent to saying he has been sent to a madhouse. It is singular that the Moslem Arabs adopted this veneration for St George, and send their mad people to be cured by him, as well as the Christians, but they commonly call him El Khudder – The Green – according to their favourite manner of using epithets instead of names. Why he should be called green, however, I cannot tell – unless it is from the colour of his horse. Gray horses are called green in Arabic.

 
The earliest numismatic depiction of St. George. Coin of Kvirike III, Kingdom of Georgia, c. 1015

The mosque of Nabi Jurjis, which was restored by Timur in the 14th century, was located in Mosul and supposedly contained the tomb of George.[58] It was however destroyed in July 2014 by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, who also destroyed the Mosque of the Prophet Sheeth (Seth) and the Mosque of the Prophet Younis (Jonah). The militants claim such mosques have become places for apostasy instead of prayer.[59]

George or Hazrat Jurjays was the patron saint of Mosul. Along with Theodosius, he was revered by both Christian and Muslim communities of Jazira and Anatolia. The wall paintings of Kırk Dam Altı Kilise at Belisırma dedicated to him are dated between 1282 and 1304. These paintings depict him as a mounted knight appearing between donors including a Georgian lady called Thamar and her husband, the Emir and Consul Basil, while the Seljuk Sultan Mesud II and Byzantine Emperor Androncius II are also named in the inscriptions.[60]

A shrine attributed to prophet George can be found in Diyarbakir, Turkey. Evliya Çelebi states in his Seyahatname that he visited the tombs of prophet Jonah and prophet George in the city.[61][62]

Feast days

 
The Wedding of St George and Princess Sabra by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1857)

In the General Roman Calendar, the feast of George is on 23 April. In the Tridentine Calendar of 1568, it was given the rank of "Semidouble". In Pope Pius XII's 1955 calendar this rank was reduced to "Simple", and in Pope John XXIII's 1960 calendar to a "Commemoration". Since Pope Paul VI's 1969 revision, it appears as an "optional memorial". In some countries such as England, the rank is higher – it is a Solemnity (Roman Catholic) or Feast (Church of England): if it falls between Palm Sunday and the Second Sunday of Easter inclusive, it is transferred to the Monday after the Second Sunday of Easter.[63]

George is very much honoured by the Eastern Orthodox Church, wherein he is referred to as a "Great Martyr", and in Oriental Orthodoxy overall. His major feast day is on 23 April (Julian calendar 23 April currently corresponds to Gregorian calendar 6 May). If, however, the feast occurs before Easter, it is celebrated on Easter Monday, instead. The Russian Orthodox Church also celebrates two additional feasts in honour of George. One is on 3 November, commemorating the consecration of a cathedral dedicated to him in Lydda during the reign of Constantine the Great (305–37). When the church was consecrated, the relics of George were transferred there. The other feast is on 26 November for a church dedicated to him in Kiev, c. 1054.

In Bulgaria, George's day (Bulgarian: Гергьовден) is celebrated on 6 May, when it is customary to slaughter and roast a lamb. George's day is also a public holiday.

In Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Serbian Orthodox Church refers to George as Sveti Djordje (Свети Ђорђе) or Sveti Georgije (Свети Георгије). George's day (Đurđevdan) is celebrated on 6 May, and is a common slava (patron saint day) among ethnic Serbs.

In Egypt, the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria refers to George (Coptic: Ⲡⲓⲇⲅⲓⲟⲥ Ⲅⲉⲟⲣⲅⲓⲟⲥ or ⲅⲉⲱⲣⲅⲓⲟⲥ) as the "Prince of Martyrs" and celebrates his martyrdom on the 23rd of Paremhat of the Coptic calendar, equivalent to 1 May.[citation needed] The Copts also celebrate the consecration of the first church dedicated to him on the seventh of the month of Hatour of the Coptic calendar usually equivalent to 17 November.

In India, the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, one of the oriental catholic churches (Eastern Catholic Churches), and Malankara Orthodox Church venerate George. The main pilgrim centers of the saint in India are at Aruvithura and Puthuppally in Kottayam District, Edathua[64] in Alappuzha district, and Edappally[65] in Ernakulam district of the southern state of Kerala. The saint is commemorated each year from 27 April to 14 May at Edathua.[66] On 27 April after the flag hoisting ceremony by the parish priest, the statue of the saint is taken from one of the altars and placed at the extension of the church to be venerated by devotees till 14 May. The main feast day is 7 May, when the statue of the saint along with other saints is taken in procession around the church. Intercession to George of Edathua is believed to be efficacious in repelling snakes and in curing mental ailments. The sacred relics of George were brought to Antioch from Mardin in 900 and were taken to Kerala, India, from Antioch in 1912 by Mar Dionysius of Vattasseril and kept in the Orthodox seminary at Kundara, Kerala. H.H. Mathews II Catholicos had given the relics to St. George churches at Puthupally, Kottayam District, and Chandanappally, Pathanamthitta district.

George is remembered in the Church of England with a Festival on 23 April.[67]

Catholic Church feast days:

Eastern Orthodox Church feast days:[73]

Patronages

George is a highly celebrated saint in both the Western and Eastern Christian churches, and many Patronages of Saint George exist throughout the world.[79]

George is the patron saint of England. His cross forms the national flag of England, which also (through the structure of England and Wales) represents Wales within the Union Flag of the United Kingdom and other national flags containing the Union Flag, such as those of Australia and New Zealand. By the 14th century, the saint had been declared both the patron saint and the protector of the royal family.[80]

George has been the patron saint of Bosnia and Herzegovina from the medieval times until 26 August 1752, when he was replaced by Elijah at the request of a Bosnian Franciscan friar, Bishop Pavao Dragičević. The reasons for the replacement are unclear. It has been suggested that Elijah was chosen because of his importance to all three main religious groups in Bosnia and Herzegovina—Catholics, Muslims and Orthodox Christians. Pope Benedict XIV is said to have approved Bishop Dragičević's request with the remark that "a wild nation deserved a wild patron".[81][82]

George is the patron saint of Ethiopia.[83] He is also the patron saint of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church; George slaying the dragon is one of the most frequently used subjects of icons in the church.[84]

 
Monument dedicated to St George in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi

The country of Georgia, where devotions to the saint date back to the fourth century, is not technically named after the saint, but is a well-attested back-formation of the English name. However, many towns and cities around the world are. George is one of the patron saints of Georgia. Exactly 365 Orthodox churches in Georgia are named after George according to the number of days in a year. According to legend, George was cut into 365 pieces after he fell in battle and every single piece was spread throughout the entire country.[85][86][87]

George is also one of the patron saints of the Mediterranean islands of Malta and Gozo.[88] In a battle between the Maltese and the Moors, George was alleged to have been seen with Saint Paul and Saint Agata, protecting the Maltese. George is the protector of the island of Gozo and the patron of Gozo's largest city, Victoria. The St. George's Basilica in Victoria is dedicated to him.[89]

 
English recruitment poster from World War I, featuring George and the Dragon

Devotions to George in Portugal date back to the 12th century. Nuno Álvares Pereira attributed the victory of the Portuguese in the battle of Aljubarrota in 1385 to George. During the reign of John I of Portugal (1357–1433), George became the patron saint of Portugal and the King ordered that the saint's image on the horse be carried in the Corpus Christi procession. The flag of George (white with red cross) was also carried by the Portuguese troops and hoisted in the fortresses, during the 15th century. "Portugal and Saint George" became the battle cry of the Portuguese troops, being still today the battle cry of the Portuguese Army, with simply "Saint George" being the battle cry of the Portuguese Navy.[90]

Devotions to Saint George in Brazil was influenced by the Portuguese colonization. George is the unofficial patron saint of the city of Rio de Janeiro (title officially attributed to Saint Sebastian) and of the city of São Jorge dos Ilhéus (Saint George of Ilhéus). Additionally, George is the patron saint of Scouts and of the Cavalry of the Brazilian Army. In May 2019, he was made official as the patron saint of the State of Rio de Janeiro, next to Saint Sebastian.[91] George is also revered in several Afro-Brazilian religions, such as Umbanda, where it is syncretized in the form of Ogum. However, the connection of George with the Moon is purely Brazilian, with a strong influence of African culture, and in no way related to the European saint. Tradition says that the spots at the Moon's surface represent the miraculous saint, his horse and his sword slaying the dragon and ready to defend those who seek his help.[92]

George, is also the patron saint of the region of Aragon, in Spain, where his feast day is celebrated on 23 April and is known as "Aragon Day", or 'Día de Aragón' in Spanish. He became the patron saint of the former Kingdom of Aragon and Crown of Aragon when King Pedro I of Aragon won the Battle of Alcoraz in 1096. Legend has it that victory eventually fell to the Christian armies when George appeared to them on the battlefield, helping them secure the reconquest of the city of Huesca which had been under the Muslim control of the Taifa of Zaragoza. The battle, which had begun two years earlier in 1094, was long and arduous, and had also taken the life of King Pedro's own father, King Sancho Ramirez. With the Aragonese spirits flagging, it is said that George descending from heaven on his charger and bearing a dark red cross, appeared at the head of the Christian cavalry leading the knights into battle. Interpreting this as a sign of protection from God, the Christian militia returned emboldened to the battle field, more energized than ever, convinced theirs was the banner of the one true faith. Defeated, the moors rapidly abandoned the battlefield. After two years of being locked down under siege, Huesca was liberated and King Pedro made his triumphal entry into the city. To celebrate this victory, the cross of St. George was adopted as the personal coat of arms of Huesca and Aragon, in honour of their saviour. After the taking of Huesca, King Pedro aided the military leader and nobleman, Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, otherwise known as El Cid, with a coalition army from Aragon in the long reconquest of the Kingdom of Valencia.

Tales of King Pedro's success at Huesca and in leading his expedition of armies with El Cid against the Moors, under the auspices of George on his standard, spread quickly throughout the realm and beyond the Crown of Aragon, and Christian armies throughout Europe quickly began adopting George as their protector and patron, during all subsequent Crusades to the Holy Lands. By 1117, the military order of Templars adopted the Cross of St. George as a simple, unifying sign for international Christian militia embroidered on the left hand side of their tunics, placed above the heart.

The Cross of St. George, also known in Aragon as The Cross of Alcoraz, continues to emblazon the flags of all of Aragon's provinces.

The association of St. George with chivalry and noblemen in Aragon continued through the ages. Indeed, even the author Miguel de Cervantes, in his book on the adventures of Don Quixote, also mentions the jousting events that took place at the festival of St. George in Zaragoza in Aragon where one could gain international renown in winning a joust against any of the knights of Aragon.

In Valencia, Catalonia, the Balearics, Malta, Sicily and Sardinia, the origins of the veneration of St. George go back to their shared history as territories under the Crown of Aragon, thereby sharing the same legend.

One of the highest civil distinctions awarded in Catalonia is the St. George's Cross (Creu de Sant Jordi). The Sant Jordi Awards have been awarded in Barcelona since 1957.

Saint George (Sant Jordi in Catalan) is also the patron saint of Catalonia. His cross appears in many buildings and local flags, including the flag of Barcelona, the Catalan capital. A Catalan variation to the traditional legend places George's life story as having occurred in the town of Montblanc, near Tarragona.

In 1469, the Order of St. George (Habsburg-Lorraine) was founded in Rome by Emperor Friedrich III of Habsburg in the presence of Pope Paul II in honor of Saint George. The order was continued and promoted by his son, Emperor Maximilian of Habsburg. The later history of the order was eventful, in particular the order was dissolved by Nazi Germany. Only after the fall of the Iron Curtain and the collapse of communism in Central and Eastern Europe was the order reactivated as a European association in association with Saint George by the Habsburg family.[93][94][95]

Arms and flag

 
George's cross

It became fashionable in the 15th century, with the full development of classical heraldry, to provide attributed arms to saints and other historical characters from the pre-heraldic ages. The widespread attribution to George of the red cross on a white field in Western art – "Saint George's Cross" – probably first arose in Genoa, which had adopted this image for their flag and George as their patron saint in the 12th century. A vexillum beati Georgii is mentioned in the Genovese annals for the year 1198, referring to a red flag with a depiction of George and the dragon. An illumination of this flag is shown in the annals for the year 1227. The Genoese flag with the red cross was used alongside this "George's flag", from at least 1218, and was known as the insignia cruxata comunis Janue ("cross ensign of the commune of Genoa"). The flag showing the saint himself was the city's principal war flag, but the flag showing the plain cross was used alongside it in the 1240s.[96]

In 1348 Edward III of England chose George as the patron saint of his Order of the Garter, and also took to using a red-on-white cross in the hoist of his Royal Standard.

The term "Saint George's cross" was at first associated with any plain Greek cross touching the edges of the field (not necessarily red on white).[97] Thomas Fuller in 1647 spoke of "the plain or St George's cross" as "the mother of all the others" (that is, the other heraldic crosses).[98]

Iconography

 
Byzantine icon of George, Athens, Greece

George is most commonly depicted in early icons, mosaics, and frescos wearing armour contemporary with the depiction, executed in gilding and silver colour, intended to identify him as a Roman soldier. Particularly after the Fall of Constantinople and George's association with the crusades, he is often portrayed mounted upon a white horse. Thus, a 2003 Vatican stamp (issued on the anniversary of the Saint's death) depicts an armoured George atop a white horse, killing the dragon.[99]

Eastern Orthodox iconography also permits George to ride a black horse, as in a Russian icon in the British museum collection.[100] In the south Lebanese village of Mieh Mieh, the Saint George Church for Melkite Catholics commissioned for its 75th jubilee in 2012 (under the guidance of Mgr Sassine Gregoire) the only icons in the world portraying the whole life of George, as well as the scenes of his torture and martyrdom (drawn in eastern iconographic style).[101]

George may also be portrayed with Saint Demetrius, another early soldier saint. When the two saintly warriors are together and mounted upon horses, they may resemble earthly manifestations of the archangels Michael and Gabriel. Eastern traditions distinguish the two as George rides a white horse and Demetrius a red horse (the red pigment may appear black if it has bituminized). George can also be identified by his spearing a dragon, whereas Demetrius may be spearing a human figure, representing Maximian.

Gallery

Eastern
Western


See also

References

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  2. ^ "St. George". Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
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    Immediately on the publication of the decree against the churches in Nicomedia, a certain man, not obscure but very highly honored with distinguished temporal dignities, moved with zeal toward God, and incited with ardent faith, seized the edict as it was posted openly and publicly, and tore it to pieces as a profane and impious thing; and this was done while two of the sovereigns were in the same city,—the oldest of all, and the one who held the fourth place in the government after him. But this man, first in that place, after distinguishing himself in such a manner suffered those things which were likely to follow such daring, and kept his spirit cheerful and undisturbed till death.

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Further reading

  • Ælfric of Eynsham (1881). "Of Saint George" . Ælfric's Lives of Saints. London, Pub. for the Early English text society, by N. Trübner & co.
  • Brook, E.W., 1925. Acts of Saint George in series Analecta Gorgiana 8 (Gorgias Press).
  • Burgoyne, Michael H. 1976. A Chronological Index to the Muslim Monuments of Jerusalem. In The Architecture of Islamic Jerusalem. Jerusalem: The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem.
  • Gabidzashvili, Enriko. 1991. Saint George: In Ancient Georgian Literature. Armazi – 89: Tbilisi, Georgia.
  • Good, Jonathan, 2009. The Cult of Saint George in Medieval England (Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press).
  • Loomis, C. Grant, 1948. White Magic, An Introduction to the Folklore of Christian Legend (Cambridge: Medieval Society of America)
  • Natsheh, Yusuf. 2000. "Architectural survey", in Ottoman Jerusalem: The Living City 1517–1917. Edited by Sylvia Auld and Robert Hillenbrand (London: Altajir World of Islam Trust) pp. 893–899.
  • Whatley, E. Gordon, editor, with Anne B. Thompson and Robert K. Upchurch, 2004. St. George and the Dragon in the South English Legendary (East Midland Revision, c. 1400) Originally published in Saints' Lives in Middle English Collections (Kalamazoo, Michigan: Medieval Institute Publications) (on-line introduction)
  • George Menachery, Saint Thomas Christian Encyclopaedia of India. Vol.II Trichur – 73.

External links

  • English translation of the 5th century Latin legend at Archive.org.
  • and (more than 125), from
  • , including a woodcut of a Scout on horseback slaying a dragon
  • St. George and the Dragon: An Introduction
  • Greatmartyr, Victory-bearer and Wonderworker George Orthodox icon and synaxarion for 23 April
  • Dedication of the Church of the Greatmartyr George in Lydia Icon and synaxarion for 3 November
  • Dedication of the Church of the Greatmartyr George at Kiev Icon and synaxarion for 26 November
  • Saint George in the church in Plášťovce, (Palást) in Slovakia
  • Famous Georgian Pilgrim Center in India St. George Orthodox Church Puthuppally, Kerala, India
  • Hail George Radio webcast explains how Saint George came to be confused with some Afro-Brazilian deities
  • The feast of Saint George is 23 April – About that Dragon ...
  • St. George, Martyr at the Christian Iconography web site.
  • Of St. George, Martyr from Caxton's translation of the Golden Legend

saint, george, other, uses, disambiguation, george, redirects, here, other, uses, george, disambiguation, greek, Γεώργιος, geórgios, latin, georgius, arabic, القديس, جرجس, died, april, also, george, lydda, christian, venerated, saint, christianity, according, . For other uses see Saint George disambiguation St George redirects here For other uses see St George disambiguation Saint George Greek Gewrgios Georgios Latin Georgius Arabic القديس جرجس died 23 April 303 also George of Lydda was a Christian who is venerated as a saint in Christianity According to tradition he was a soldier in the Roman army Saint George was a soldier of Cappadocian Greek origin and member of the Praetorian Guard for Roman emperor Diocletian who was sentenced to death for refusing to recant his Christian faith He became one of the most venerated saints and megalomartyrs in Christianity and he has been especially venerated as a military saint since the Crusades He is respected by Christians Druze as well as some Muslims as a martyr of monotheistic faith SaintGeorgePortrait by Hans von Kulmbach c 1510 Martyr Patron of EnglandBornCappadocia modern day Turkey Died23 April 303Lydda Syria Palaestina modern day Lod Israel 1 2 Venerated inRoman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church Oriental Orthodoxy Church of the East Anglican Communion Lutheranism Umbanda Druze faith 3 IslamMajor shrineChurch of Saint George Lod St George s Monastery Al Khader St George Syro Malabar Catholic Forane Church Edappally St George Orthodox Church Puthuppally Pally St George s Syro Malabar Catholic Forane Church Aruvithura St George Forane Church Edathua St George s Chapel Windsor CastleFeast23 April Saint George s Day 6 May Gregorian when Julian date is observed 23 Parmouti Coptic calendar 1 May 4 Saturday before third Sunday of Exaltation of the Cross Armenian Church calendar 5 AttributesClothed as a crusader in plate armour or mail often bearing a lance tipped by a cross riding a white horse often slaying a dragon In the Greek East and Latin West he is shown with St George s Cross emblazoned on his armour or shield or banner PatronageMany Patronages of Saint George exist around the worldIn hagiography as one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers and one of the most prominent military saints he is immortalized in the legend of Saint George and the Dragon His memorial Saint George s Day is traditionally celebrated on 23 April Historically the countries of England Ukraine Ethiopia and Georgia as well as Catalonia and Aragon in Spain and Moscow in Russia have claimed George as their patron saint as have several other regions cities universities professions and organizations The Church Mosque of Saint George in Lod Lydda Israel contains a sarcophagus believed by many Christians to contain St George s remains 6 Contents 1 Legend 1 1 Historicity 1 2 St George and the dragon 1 3 Muslim legends 2 Veneration 2 1 History 2 2 Veneration in the Levant 2 3 Veneration in the Muslim world 2 4 Feast days 3 Patronages 4 Arms and flag 5 Iconography 5 1 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLegend EditVery little is known about George s life but it is thought he was a Roman officer of Greek descent who was martyred in one of the pre Constantinian persecutions 7 Beyond this early sources give conflicting information The saint s veneration dates to the 5th century with some certainty and possibly even to the 4th The addition of the dragon legend dates to the 11th century The earliest text which preserves fragments of George s narrative is in a Greek hagiography which is identified by Hippolyte Delehaye of the scholarly Bollandists to be a palimpsest of the 5th century 8 An earlier work by Eusebius Church history written in the 4th century contributed to the legend but did not name George or provide significant detail 9 The work of the Bollandists Daniel Papebroch Jean Bolland and Godfrey Henschen in the 17th century was one of the first pieces of scholarly research to establish the saint s historicity via their publications in Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca 10 Pope Gelasius I stated in 494 that George was among those saints whose names are justly reverenced among men but whose actions are known only to God 11 The most complete version based upon the fifth century Greek text but in a later form survives in a translation into Syriac from about 600 From text fragments preserved in the British Library a translation into English was published in 1925 12 13 14 In the Greek tradition George was born to Greek Christian parents in Cappadocia After his father died his mother who was originally from Lydda in Syria Palaestina returned with George to her hometown 15 He went on to become a soldier for the Roman army but because of his Christian faith he was arrested and tortured at or near Lydda also called Diospolis on the following day he was paraded and then beheaded and his body was buried in Lydda 15 According to other sources after his mother s death he travelled to the eastern imperial capital Nicomedia 16 where he was persecuted by one Dadianus In later versions of the Greek legend this name is rationalised to Diocletian and George s martyrdom is placed in the Diocletian persecution of AD 303 The setting in Nicomedia is also secondary and inconsistent with the earliest cults of the saint being located in Diospolis 17 George was executed by decapitation on 23 April 303 A witness of his suffering convinced Empress Alexandra of Rome to become a Christian as well so she joined George in martyrdom His body was buried in Lydda where Christians soon came to honour him as a martyr 18 19 George in the Acta Sanctorum as collected in late 1600s and early 1700s The Latin title De S Georgio Megalo Martyre Lyddae seu Diospoli in Palaestina translates as St George Great Martyr from Lydda or Diospolis in Palestine The Latin Passio Sancti Georgii 6th century follows the general course of the Greek legend but Diocletian here becomes Dacian Emperor of the Persians His martyrdom was greatly extended to more than twenty separate tortures over the course of seven years Over the course of his martyrdom 40 900 pagans were converted to Christianity including the empress Alexandra When George finally died the wicked Dacian was carried away in a whirlwind of fire In later Latin versions the persecutor is the Roman emperor Decius or a Roman judge named Dacian serving under Diocletian 20 Historicity Edit George depicted in the Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493 There is little information on the early life of George Herbert Thurston in The Catholic Encyclopedia states that based upon an ancient cultus narratives of the early pilgrims and the early dedications of churches to George going back to the fourth century there seems therefore no ground for doubting the historical existence of St George although no faith can be placed in either the details of his history or his alleged exploits 21 Russian icon mid 14th century Novgorod The Diocletianic Persecution of 303 associated with military saints because the persecution was aimed at Christians among the professional soldiers of the Roman army is of undisputed historicity According to Donald Attwater No historical particulars of his life have survived The widespread veneration for St George as a soldier saint from early times had its centre in Palestine at Diospolis now Lydda St George was apparently martyred there at the end of the third or the beginning of the fourth century that is all that can be reasonably surmised about him 22 Edward Gibbon 23 24 argued that George or at least the legend from which the above is distilled is based on George of Cappadocia 25 17 a notorious 4th century Arian bishop who was Athanasius of Alexandria s most bitter rival and that it was he who in time became George of England This identification is seen as highly improbable Bishop George was slain by Gentile Greeks for exacting onerous taxes especially inheritance taxes J B Bury who edited the 1906 edition of Gibbon s The Decline and Fall wrote this theory of Gibbon s has nothing to be said for it He adds that the connection of St George with a dragon slaying legend does not relegate him to the region of the myth 21 Saint George in all likelihood was martyred before the year 290 26 St George and the dragon Edit Main article Saint George and the Dragon Miniature from a 13th century Passio Sancti Georgii Verona The legend of Saint George and the Dragon was first recorded in the 11th century in a Georgian source 27 It reached Catholic Europe in the 12th century In the Golden Legend by 13th century Archbishop of Genoa Jacobus de Voragine George s death was at the hands of Dacian and about the year 287 citation needed Saint George Killing the Dragon 1434 35 by Bernat Martorell The tradition tells that a fierce dragon was causing panic at the city of Silene Libya at the time George arrived there In order to prevent the dragon from devastating people from the city they gave two sheep each day to the dragon but when the sheep were not enough they were forced to sacrifice humans instead of the two sheep The human to be sacrificed was elected by the city s own people and one time the king s daughter was chosen to be sacrificed but no one was willing to take her place George saved the girl by slaying the dragon with a lance The king was so grateful that he offered him treasures as a reward for saving his daughter s life but George refused it and instead he gave these to the poor The people of the city were so amazed at what they had witnessed that they became Christians and were all baptized 28 The Golden Legend offered a narration of George s encounter with a dragon This account was very influential and it remains the most familiar version in English owing to William Caxton s 15th century translation 29 In the medieval romances the lance with which George slew the dragon was called Ascalon after the Levantine city of Ashkelon today in Israel The name Ascalon was used by Winston Churchill for his personal aircraft during World War II according to records at Bletchley Park 30 Iconography of the horseman with spear overcoming evil was widespread throughout the Christian period 31 Muslim legends Edit George Arabic جرجس Jirjis or Girgus is included in some Muslim texts as a prophetic figure The Islamic sources state that he lived among a group of believers who were in direct contact with the last apostles of Jesus He is described as a rich merchant who opposed erection of Apollo s statue by Mosul s king Dadan After confronting the king George was tortured many times to no effect was imprisoned and was aided by the angels Eventually he exposed that the idols were possessed by Satan but was martyred when the city was destroyed by God in a rain of fire 32 Muslim scholars had tried to find a historical connection of the saint due to his popularity 33 According to Muslim legend he was martyred under the rule of Diocletian and was killed three times but resurrected every time The legend is more developed in the Persian version of al Tabari wherein he resurrects the dead makes trees sprout and pillars bear flowers After one of his deaths the world is covered by darkness which is lifted only when he is resurrected He is able to convert the queen but she is put to death He then prays to God to allow him to die which is granted 34 Al Thaʿlabi states that he was from Palestine and lived in the times of some disciples of Jesus He was killed many times by the king of Mosul and resurrected each time When the king tried to starve him he touched a piece of dry wood brought by a woman and turned it green with varieties of fruits and vegetables growing from it After his fourth death the city was burnt along with him Ibn al Athir s account of one of his deaths is parallel to the crucifixion of Jesus stating When he died God sent stormy winds and thunder and lightning and dark clouds so that darkness fell between heaven and earth and people were in great wonderment The account adds that the darkness was lifted after his resurrection 33 Veneration EditSee also Saint George in devotions traditions and prayers History Edit Martyrdom of Saint George by Paolo Veronese 1564 A titular church built in Lydda during the reign of Constantine the Great reigned 306 337 was consecrated to a man of the highest distinction according to the church history of Eusebius the name of the titulus patron was not disclosed but later he was asserted by whom to have been George The veneration of George spread from Syria Palaestina through Lebanon to the rest of the Byzantine Empire though the martyr is not mentioned in the Syriac Breviarium 19 and the region east of the Black Sea By the 5th century the veneration of George had reached the Christian Western Roman Empire as well in 494 George was canonized as a saint by Pope Gelasius I among those whose names are justly reverenced among men but whose acts are known only to God citation needed The early cult of the saint was localized in Diospolis Lydda in Palestine The first description of Lydda as a pilgrimage site where George s relics were venerated is De Situ Terrae Sanctae by the archdeacon Theodosius written between 518 and 530 By the end of the 6th century the center of his veneration appears to have shifted to Cappadocia The Life of Saint Theodore of Sykeon written in the 7th century mentions the veneration of the relics of the saint in Cappadocia 35 By the time of the early Muslim conquests of the mostly Christian and Zoroastrian Middle East a basilica in Lydda dedicated to George existed 36 A new church was erected in 1872 and is still standing where the feast of the translation of the relics of Saint George to that location is celebrated on 3 November each year 37 In England he was mentioned among the martyrs by the 8th century monk Bede The Georgslied is an adaptation of his legend in Old High German composed in the late 9th century The earliest dedication to the saint in England is a church at Fordington Dorset that is mentioned in the will of Alfred the Great 38 George did not rise to the position of patron saint of England however until the 14th century and he was still obscured by Edward the Confessor the traditional patron saint of England until in 1552 during the reign of Edward VI all saints banners other than George s were abolished in the English Reformation 39 40 The martyrdom of Saint George by Cornelis Schut 1643 Belief in an apparition of George heartened the Franks at the Battle of Antioch in 1098 41 and a similar appearance occurred the following year at Jerusalem The chivalric military Order of Sant Jordi d Alfama was established by king Peter the Catholic from the Crown of Aragon in 1201 Republic of Genoa Kingdom of Hungary 1326 and by Frederick III Holy Roman Emperor 42 Edward III of England put his Order of the Garter under the banner of George probably in 1348 The chronicler Jean Froissart observed the English invoking George as a battle cry on several occasions during the Hundred Years War In his rise as a national saint George was aided by the very fact that the saint had no legendary connection with England and no specifically localized shrine as that of Thomas Becket at Canterbury Consequently numerous shrines were established during the late fifteenth century Muriel C McClendon has written 43 and his did not become closely identified with a particular occupation or with the cure of a specific malady Relics of George at Sao Jorge parish church Sao Jorge Madeira Island Portugal In the wake of the Crusades George became a model of chivalry in works of literature including medieval romances In the 13th century Jacobus de Voragine Archbishop of Genoa compiled the Legenda Sanctorum Readings of the Saints also known as Legenda Aurea the Golden Legend Its 177 chapters 182 in some editions include the story of George among many others After the invention of the printing press the book became a bestseller The establishment of George as a popular saint and protective giant 44 in the West that had captured the medieval imagination was codified by the official elevation of his feast to a festum duplex 45 at a church council in 1415 on the date that had become associated with his martyrdom 23 April There was wide latitude from community to community in celebration of the day across late medieval and early modern England 46 and no uniform national celebration elsewhere a token of the popular and vernacular nature of George s cultus and its local horizons supported by a local guild or confraternity under George s protection or the dedication of a local church When the English Reformation severely curtailed the saints days in the calendar Saint George s Day was among the holidays that continued to be observed In April 2019 the parish church of Sao Jorge in Sao Jorge Madeira Island Portugal solemnly received the relics of George patron saint of the parish During the celebrations the 504th anniversary of its foundation the relics were brought by the new Bishop of Funchal D Nuno Bras 47 Veneration in the Levant Edit George is renowned throughout the Middle East as both saint and prophet His veneration by Christians and Muslims lies in his composite personality combining several biblical Quranic and other ancient mythical heroes 48 Saint George is the patron saint of Lebanese Christians 49 Palestinian Christians 50 and Syrian Christians 51 Saint George dragged through the streets detail by Bernat Martorell 15th century William Dalrymple who reviewed the literature in 1999 tells us that J E Hanauer in his 1907 book Folklore of the Holy Land Muslim Christian and Jewish mentioned a shrine in the village of Beit Jala beside Bethlehem which at the time was frequented by Christians who regarded it as the birthplace of George and some Jews who regarded it as the burial place of the Prophet Elias According to Hanauer in his day the monastery was a sort of madhouse Deranged persons of all the three faiths are taken thither and chained in the court of the chapel where they are kept for forty days on bread and water the Eastern Orthodox priest at the head of the establishment now and then reading the Gospel over them or administering a whipping as the case demands 52 In the 1920s according to Tawfiq Canaan s Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine nothing seemed to have changed and all three communities were still visiting the shrine and praying together 53 Dalrymple himself visited the place in 1995 I asked around in the Christian Quarter in Jerusalem and discovered that the place was very much alive With all the greatest shrines in the Christian world to choose from it seemed that when the local Arab Christians had a problem an illness or something more complicated they preferred to seek the intercession of George in his grubby little shrine at Beit Jala rather than praying at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem or the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem 53 He asked the priest at the shrine Do you get many Muslims coming here The priest replied We get hundreds Almost as many as the Christian pilgrims Often when I come in here I find Muslims all over the floor in the aisles up and down 53 54 The Encyclopaedia Britannica quotes G A Smith in his Historic Geography of the Holy Land p 164 saying The Mahommedans who usually identify St George with the prophet Elijah at Lydda confound his legend with one about Christ himself Their name for Antichrist is Dajjal and they have a tradition that Jesus will slay Antichrist by the gate of Lydda The notion sprang from an ancient bas relief of George and the Dragon on the Lydda church But Dajjal may be derived by a very common confusion between n and l from Dagon whose name two neighbouring villages bear to this day while one of the gates of Lydda used to be called the Gate of Dagon 55 Veneration in the Muslim world Edit Inside the Druze maqam Al Khidr in Kafr Yasif Israel There is an icon of Saint George and the Dragon who has been syncretized with the figure of al Khidr 56 George is described as a prophetic figure in Islamic sources 32 George is venerated by some Christians and Muslims because of his composite personality combining several biblical Quranic and other ancient mythical heroes citation needed In some sources he is identified with Elijah or Mar Elis George or Mar Jirjus and in others as al Khidr The last epithet meaning the green prophet is common to Christian Muslim and Druze folk piety Samuel Curtiss who visited an artificial cave dedicated to him where he is identified with Elijah reports that childless Muslim women used to visit the shrine to pray for children Per tradition he was brought to his place of martyrdom in chains thus priests of Church of St George chain the sick especially the mentally ill to a chain for overnight or longer for healing This is sought after by both Muslims and Christians 48 According to Elizabeth Anne Finn s Home in the Holy land 1866 57 St George killed the dragon in this country and the place is shown close to Beyroot Many churches and convents are named after him The church at Lydda is dedicated to George so is a convent near Bethlehem and another small one just opposite the Jaffa gate and others beside The Arabs believe that George can restore mad people to their senses and to say a person has been sent to St George s is equivalent to saying he has been sent to a madhouse It is singular that the Moslem Arabs adopted this veneration for St George and send their mad people to be cured by him as well as the Christians but they commonly call him El Khudder The Green according to their favourite manner of using epithets instead of names Why he should be called green however I cannot tell unless it is from the colour of his horse Gray horses are called green in Arabic The earliest numismatic depiction of St George Coin of Kvirike III Kingdom of Georgia c 1015 The mosque of Nabi Jurjis which was restored by Timur in the 14th century was located in Mosul and supposedly contained the tomb of George 58 It was however destroyed in July 2014 by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant who also destroyed the Mosque of the Prophet Sheeth Seth and the Mosque of the Prophet Younis Jonah The militants claim such mosques have become places for apostasy instead of prayer 59 George or Hazrat Jurjays was the patron saint of Mosul Along with Theodosius he was revered by both Christian and Muslim communities of Jazira and Anatolia The wall paintings of Kirk Dam Alti Kilise at Belisirma dedicated to him are dated between 1282 and 1304 These paintings depict him as a mounted knight appearing between donors including a Georgian lady called Thamar and her husband the Emir and Consul Basil while the Seljuk Sultan Mesud II and Byzantine Emperor Androncius II are also named in the inscriptions 60 A shrine attributed to prophet George can be found in Diyarbakir Turkey Evliya Celebi states in his Seyahatname that he visited the tombs of prophet Jonah and prophet George in the city 61 62 Feast days Edit See also Saint George in devotions traditions and prayers The Wedding of St George and Princess Sabra by Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1857 In the General Roman Calendar the feast of George is on 23 April In the Tridentine Calendar of 1568 it was given the rank of Semidouble In Pope Pius XII s 1955 calendar this rank was reduced to Simple and in Pope John XXIII s 1960 calendar to a Commemoration Since Pope Paul VI s 1969 revision it appears as an optional memorial In some countries such as England the rank is higher it is a Solemnity Roman Catholic or Feast Church of England if it falls between Palm Sunday and the Second Sunday of Easter inclusive it is transferred to the Monday after the Second Sunday of Easter 63 George is very much honoured by the Eastern Orthodox Church wherein he is referred to as a Great Martyr and in Oriental Orthodoxy overall His major feast day is on 23 April Julian calendar 23 April currently corresponds to Gregorian calendar 6 May If however the feast occurs before Easter it is celebrated on Easter Monday instead The Russian Orthodox Church also celebrates two additional feasts in honour of George One is on 3 November commemorating the consecration of a cathedral dedicated to him in Lydda during the reign of Constantine the Great 305 37 When the church was consecrated the relics of George were transferred there The other feast is on 26 November for a church dedicated to him in Kiev c 1054 In Bulgaria George s day Bulgarian Gergovden is celebrated on 6 May when it is customary to slaughter and roast a lamb George s day is also a public holiday In Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina the Serbian Orthodox Church refers to George as Sveti Djordje Sveti Ђorђe or Sveti Georgije Sveti Georgiјe George s day Đurđevdan is celebrated on 6 May and is a common slava patron saint day among ethnic Serbs In Egypt the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria refers to George Coptic Ⲡⲓⲇⲅⲓⲟⲥ Ⲅⲉⲟⲣⲅⲓⲟⲥ or ⲅⲉⲱⲣⲅⲓⲟⲥ as the Prince of Martyrs and celebrates his martyrdom on the 23rd of Paremhat of the Coptic calendar equivalent to 1 May citation needed The Copts also celebrate the consecration of the first church dedicated to him on the seventh of the month of Hatour of the Coptic calendar usually equivalent to 17 November In India the Syro Malabar Catholic Church one of the oriental catholic churches Eastern Catholic Churches and Malankara Orthodox Church venerate George The main pilgrim centers of the saint in India are at Aruvithura and Puthuppally in Kottayam District Edathua 64 in Alappuzha district and Edappally 65 in Ernakulam district of the southern state of Kerala The saint is commemorated each year from 27 April to 14 May at Edathua 66 On 27 April after the flag hoisting ceremony by the parish priest the statue of the saint is taken from one of the altars and placed at the extension of the church to be venerated by devotees till 14 May The main feast day is 7 May when the statue of the saint along with other saints is taken in procession around the church Intercession to George of Edathua is believed to be efficacious in repelling snakes and in curing mental ailments The sacred relics of George were brought to Antioch from Mardin in 900 and were taken to Kerala India from Antioch in 1912 by Mar Dionysius of Vattasseril and kept in the Orthodox seminary at Kundara Kerala H H Mathews II Catholicos had given the relics to St George churches at Puthupally Kottayam District and Chandanappally Pathanamthitta district George is remembered in the Church of England with a Festival on 23 April 67 Catholic Church feast days 23 April main commemoration 68 24 April commemoration in Poland 69 23 April commemoration of Saint Wojciech 70 7 May martyrdom in Lydda 71 20 June commemoration of translation of relics to Anchin Abbey 72 15 October commemoration of translation of relics to Toulouse 72 Eastern Orthodox Church feast days 73 27 January Commemoration of the Miracle deliverance of the island of Zakynthos from the plague of the Great Martyr George in Zakynthos in 1689 1688 Greek Orthodox Church 74 12 April Gerontius from Cappadocia martyr father of George husband of Polychronia c 290 75 23 April Holy Glorious Great martyr Victory bearer and Wonderworker George 303 Death anniversary 23 April Polychronia from Cappadocia martyr mother of George wife of Gerontius 303 304 76 6 May George s Day in Spring BOC 3 November Dedication of the Church of the Great martyr George in Lydda 4th century 10 November Commemoration of the torture of Great martyr George in 303 GOC 77 78 23 November Dedication of the Church of St George at Kiev 1051 Patronages EditMain article Patronages of Saint George George is a highly celebrated saint in both the Western and Eastern Christian churches and many Patronages of Saint George exist throughout the world 79 George is the patron saint of England His cross forms the national flag of England which also through the structure of England and Wales represents Wales within the Union Flag of the United Kingdom and other national flags containing the Union Flag such as those of Australia and New Zealand By the 14th century the saint had been declared both the patron saint and the protector of the royal family 80 George has been the patron saint of Bosnia and Herzegovina from the medieval times until 26 August 1752 when he was replaced by Elijah at the request of a Bosnian Franciscan friar Bishop Pavao Dragicevic The reasons for the replacement are unclear It has been suggested that Elijah was chosen because of his importance to all three main religious groups in Bosnia and Herzegovina Catholics Muslims and Orthodox Christians Pope Benedict XIV is said to have approved Bishop Dragicevic s request with the remark that a wild nation deserved a wild patron 81 82 George is the patron saint of Ethiopia 83 He is also the patron saint of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church George slaying the dragon is one of the most frequently used subjects of icons in the church 84 Monument dedicated to St George in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi The country of Georgia where devotions to the saint date back to the fourth century is not technically named after the saint but is a well attested back formation of the English name However many towns and cities around the world are George is one of the patron saints of Georgia Exactly 365 Orthodox churches in Georgia are named after George according to the number of days in a year According to legend George was cut into 365 pieces after he fell in battle and every single piece was spread throughout the entire country 85 86 87 George is also one of the patron saints of the Mediterranean islands of Malta and Gozo 88 In a battle between the Maltese and the Moors George was alleged to have been seen with Saint Paul and Saint Agata protecting the Maltese George is the protector of the island of Gozo and the patron of Gozo s largest city Victoria The St George s Basilica in Victoria is dedicated to him 89 English recruitment poster from World War I featuring George and the Dragon Devotions to George in Portugal date back to the 12th century Nuno Alvares Pereira attributed the victory of the Portuguese in the battle of Aljubarrota in 1385 to George During the reign of John I of Portugal 1357 1433 George became the patron saint of Portugal and the King ordered that the saint s image on the horse be carried in the Corpus Christi procession The flag of George white with red cross was also carried by the Portuguese troops and hoisted in the fortresses during the 15th century Portugal and Saint George became the battle cry of the Portuguese troops being still today the battle cry of the Portuguese Army with simply Saint George being the battle cry of the Portuguese Navy 90 Devotions to Saint George in Brazil was influenced by the Portuguese colonization George is the unofficial patron saint of the city of Rio de Janeiro title officially attributed to Saint Sebastian and of the city of Sao Jorge dos Ilheus Saint George of Ilheus Additionally George is the patron saint of Scouts and of the Cavalry of the Brazilian Army In May 2019 he was made official as the patron saint of the State of Rio de Janeiro next to Saint Sebastian 91 George is also revered in several Afro Brazilian religions such as Umbanda where it is syncretized in the form of Ogum However the connection of George with the Moon is purely Brazilian with a strong influence of African culture and in no way related to the European saint Tradition says that the spots at the Moon s surface represent the miraculous saint his horse and his sword slaying the dragon and ready to defend those who seek his help 92 George is also the patron saint of the region of Aragon in Spain where his feast day is celebrated on 23 April and is known as Aragon Day or Dia de Aragon in Spanish He became the patron saint of the former Kingdom of Aragon and Crown of Aragon when King Pedro I of Aragon won the Battle of Alcoraz in 1096 Legend has it that victory eventually fell to the Christian armies when George appeared to them on the battlefield helping them secure the reconquest of the city of Huesca which had been under the Muslim control of the Taifa of Zaragoza The battle which had begun two years earlier in 1094 was long and arduous and had also taken the life of King Pedro s own father King Sancho Ramirez With the Aragonese spirits flagging it is said that George descending from heaven on his charger and bearing a dark red cross appeared at the head of the Christian cavalry leading the knights into battle Interpreting this as a sign of protection from God the Christian militia returned emboldened to the battle field more energized than ever convinced theirs was the banner of the one true faith Defeated the moors rapidly abandoned the battlefield After two years of being locked down under siege Huesca was liberated and King Pedro made his triumphal entry into the city To celebrate this victory the cross of St George was adopted as the personal coat of arms of Huesca and Aragon in honour of their saviour After the taking of Huesca King Pedro aided the military leader and nobleman Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar otherwise known as El Cid with a coalition army from Aragon in the long reconquest of the Kingdom of Valencia Tales of King Pedro s success at Huesca and in leading his expedition of armies with El Cid against the Moors under the auspices of George on his standard spread quickly throughout the realm and beyond the Crown of Aragon and Christian armies throughout Europe quickly began adopting George as their protector and patron during all subsequent Crusades to the Holy Lands By 1117 the military order of Templars adopted the Cross of St George as a simple unifying sign for international Christian militia embroidered on the left hand side of their tunics placed above the heart The Cross of St George also known in Aragon as The Cross of Alcoraz continues to emblazon the flags of all of Aragon s provinces The association of St George with chivalry and noblemen in Aragon continued through the ages Indeed even the author Miguel de Cervantes in his book on the adventures of Don Quixote also mentions the jousting events that took place at the festival of St George in Zaragoza in Aragon where one could gain international renown in winning a joust against any of the knights of Aragon In Valencia Catalonia the Balearics Malta Sicily and Sardinia the origins of the veneration of St George go back to their shared history as territories under the Crown of Aragon thereby sharing the same legend One of the highest civil distinctions awarded in Catalonia is the St George s Cross Creu de Sant Jordi The Sant Jordi Awards have been awarded in Barcelona since 1957 Saint George Sant Jordi in Catalan is also the patron saint of Catalonia His cross appears in many buildings and local flags including the flag of Barcelona the Catalan capital A Catalan variation to the traditional legend places George s life story as having occurred in the town of Montblanc near Tarragona In 1469 the Order of St George Habsburg Lorraine was founded in Rome by Emperor Friedrich III of Habsburg in the presence of Pope Paul II in honor of Saint George The order was continued and promoted by his son Emperor Maximilian of Habsburg The later history of the order was eventful in particular the order was dissolved by Nazi Germany Only after the fall of the Iron Curtain and the collapse of communism in Central and Eastern Europe was the order reactivated as a European association in association with Saint George by the Habsburg family 93 94 95 Arms and flag EditMain article Saint George s Cross George s cross It became fashionable in the 15th century with the full development of classical heraldry to provide attributed arms to saints and other historical characters from the pre heraldic ages The widespread attribution to George of the red cross on a white field in Western art Saint George s Cross probably first arose in Genoa which had adopted this image for their flag and George as their patron saint in the 12th century A vexillum beati Georgii is mentioned in the Genovese annals for the year 1198 referring to a red flag with a depiction of George and the dragon An illumination of this flag is shown in the annals for the year 1227 The Genoese flag with the red cross was used alongside this George s flag from at least 1218 and was known as the insignia cruxata comunis Janue cross ensign of the commune of Genoa The flag showing the saint himself was the city s principal war flag but the flag showing the plain cross was used alongside it in the 1240s 96 In 1348 Edward III of England chose George as the patron saint of his Order of the Garter and also took to using a red on white cross in the hoist of his Royal Standard The term Saint George s cross was at first associated with any plain Greek cross touching the edges of the field not necessarily red on white 97 Thomas Fuller in 1647 spoke of the plain or St George s cross as the mother of all the others that is the other heraldic crosses 98 Iconography Edit Byzantine icon of George Athens Greece George is most commonly depicted in early icons mosaics and frescos wearing armour contemporary with the depiction executed in gilding and silver colour intended to identify him as a Roman soldier Particularly after the Fall of Constantinople and George s association with the crusades he is often portrayed mounted upon a white horse Thus a 2003 Vatican stamp issued on the anniversary of the Saint s death depicts an armoured George atop a white horse killing the dragon 99 Eastern Orthodox iconography also permits George to ride a black horse as in a Russian icon in the British museum collection 100 In the south Lebanese village of Mieh Mieh the Saint George Church for Melkite Catholics commissioned for its 75th jubilee in 2012 under the guidance of Mgr Sassine Gregoire the only icons in the world portraying the whole life of George as well as the scenes of his torture and martyrdom drawn in eastern iconographic style 101 George may also be portrayed with Saint Demetrius another early soldier saint When the two saintly warriors are together and mounted upon horses they may resemble earthly manifestations of the archangels Michael and Gabriel Eastern traditions distinguish the two as George rides a white horse and Demetrius a red horse the red pigment may appear black if it has bituminized George can also be identified by his spearing a dragon whereas Demetrius may be spearing a human figure representing Maximian Gallery Edit For equestrian depictions see Saint George and the Dragon Iconography Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint George structured art gallery Eastern Tetarteron of Manuel I Komnenos 12th century showing a bust of George Main icon of Yuriev Monastery in Novgorod c 1130 A 12th century depiction of Saint George in a church at the Staraya Ladoga Fortress of Staraya Ladoga Scenes from the life of George Kremikovtsi Monastery Bulgaria 15th century A plaque on which is represented George rescuing the emperor s daughter 15th century Ethiopian Empire forces assisted by St George top win the Battle of Adwa against Italy Painted 1965 75 Western George as a crusader knight miniature from a ms of Vies de Saints c 1340 BNF Richelieu Manuscrits Francais 185 Miniature of George and the Dragon ms of the Legenda Aurea dated 1348 BNF Francais 241 fol 101v Miniature of George and the Dragon ms of theLegenda Aurea Paris 1382 BL Royal 19 B XVII f 109 George on a small pavise Nuremberg c 1480 George as a martyr St George s Collegiate Church in Tubingen 15th century George by Carlo Crivelli St George by the Master of Sierentz 1440 1450 Stained glass by J Mehoffer Fribourg cathedral Stained glass by J Mehoffer Fribourg cathedralSee also Edit Statue of Saint George Prague Castle St George Statue in Tbilisi Saint George s Day Saint Andrew St George and the Dragon a 17th century ballad comparing the myth of George to that of other heroes Dragon Hill Uffington English hill named due to a legend that George slew the dragon there Fort St George an English built fort in Chennai India Georgslied 9th century Old High German poem about the life of George Georgslegende 13th century Middle High German poem about the martyrdom of George Ederlezi song and Romani name for the Bulgarian Macedonian and Serbian Feast of Saint George Knights of St George Uastyrdzhi Ossetian name for George Tetri Giorgi Georgian name for George Moors and Christians of Alcoy an international historical festival dedicated to George in Alcoy Alicante Spain The Magic Sword a 1962 film loosely based on the legend of St George and the Dragon Patrick Woodroffe author of several poems about St George collated in a book called Hallelujah Anyway St George s Church churches dedicated to St George St George s School schools dedicated to St George St George s College colleges dedicated to St George St George s Castle castles dedicated to St George St George s Hospital hospitals dedicated to St George Ribbon of St George ribbon dedicated to St George George given name Joris en de Draak a roller coaster in the theme park Efteling based on the legend of St George and the dragon Order of St George Habsburg Lorraine References Edit Saint George Encyclopaedia Britannica Online ed Retrieved 21 July 2022 St George Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 21 July 2022 Murphy O Connor Jerome 2008 The Holy Land An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700 OUP Oxford p 205 ISBN 9780191647666 Otto Friedrich August Meinardus Two Thousand Years of Coptic Christianity 1999 p 315 Archived 13 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine Domar the calendrical and liturgical cycle of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church Armenian Orthodox Theological Research Institute 2002 p 504 5 G Massiot Church of Saint George Lod Interior view of the nave from the southeast end CurateND University of Notre Dame Retrieved 11 May 2022 Who was Saint George and why is he England s patron saint The Independent 23 April 2020 Retrieved 21 August 2020 Acta Sanctorum Volume 12 as republished in 1866 Church History Eusebius book 8 chapter 5 Greek text here Archived 14 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine and English text here Archived 14 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Eusebius s full text as follows Immediately on the publication of the decree against the churches in Nicomedia a certain man not obscure but very highly honored with distinguished temporal dignities moved with zeal toward God and incited with ardent faith seized the edict as it was posted openly and publicly and tore it to pieces as a profane and impious thing and this was done while two of the sovereigns were in the same city the oldest of all and the one who held the fourth place in the government after him But this man first in that place after distinguishing himself in such a manner suffered those things which were likely to follow such daring and kept his spirit cheerful and undisturbed till death Walter Christopher 2003 The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition Ashgate Publishing p 110 ISBN 1 84014 694 X Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca 271 272 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 George Saint Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 737 In the canon of Pope Gelasius 494 George is mentioned in a list of those whose names are justly reverenced among men but whose acts are known only to God Cross Frank Livingstone Elizabeth eds 1957 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 2005 ed pp 667 668 Brooks Ernest W 1925 Acts of S George Le Museon 38 67 115 ISSN 0771 6494 online here Collins Michael 2012 3 The Greek and Latin traditions St George and the dragons the making of English identity Fonthill ISBN 978 1 78155 649 8 a b Guiley Rosemary 2001 The Encyclopedia of Saints p 129 ISBN 978 1 4381 3026 2 George was an historical figure According to an account by Metaphrastes he was born in Cappadocia in modern Turkey to a noble Christian family his mother was Palestinian Heylin A 1862 The Journal of Sacred Literature and Biblical Record vol 1 p 244 Darch John H 2006 Saints on Earth Church House Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 7151 4036 9 Walter Christopher 2003 The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition Ashgate Publishing p 112 ISBN 1 84014 694 X a b Saint George Catholic Encyclopedia it is not improbable that the apocryphal Acts have borrowed some incidents from the story of the Arian bishop Hackwood Fred 2003 Christ Lore the Legends Traditions Myths Kessinger Publishing p 255 ISBN 0 7661 3656 6 a b Butler Alban 2008 Lives of the Saints ISBN 978 1 4375 1281 6 166 Michael Collins St George and the Dragons The Making of English Identity 2018 p 129 Archived 13 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b Thurston Herbert 1913 St George In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company There seems therefore no ground for doubting the historical existence of St George even though he is not commemorated in the Syrian or in the primitive Hieronymian Martyrologium but no faith can be placed in the attempts that have been made to fill up any of the details of his history For example it is now generally admitted that St George cannot safely be identified by the nameless martyr spoken of by Eusebius Church History VIII 5 who tore down Diocletian s edict of persecution at Nicomedia The version of the legend in which Diocletian appears as persecutor is not primitive Diocletian is only a rationalized form of the name Dadianus Moreover the connection of the saint s name with Nicomedia is inconsistent with the early cultus at Diospolis Still less is St George to be considered as suggested by Gibbon Vetter and others a legendary double of the disreputable bishop George of Cappadocia the Arian opponent of St Athanasius Attwater Donald 1995 1965 Dictionary of Saints Third ed London Penguin Reference p 152 Edward Gibbon The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 2 23 5 Richardson Robert D Moser Barry eds 1996 Emerson p 520 George of Cappadocia held the contract to supply the army with bacon embraced Arianism and was promoted to the episcopal throne of Alexandria When Julian came George was dragged to prison the prison was burst open by a mob and George was lynched he became in good time Saint George of England Edward Gibbon The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 2 23 5 Hogg John 1863 Supplemental Notes on St George the Martyr and on George the Arian Bishop Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom Royal Society of Literature 106 136 St George and the Dragon Introduction Robbins Library Digital Projects Retrieved 14 July 2020 Pirlo Paolo O 1997 St George My first book of saints Sons of Holy Mary Immaculate Quality Catholic Publications pp 83 85 ISBN 971 91595 4 5 De Voragine Jacobus 1995 The Golden Legend Princeton University Press p 238 ISBN 978 0 691 00153 1 Getting There Churchill s Wartime Journeys The International Churchill Society 1 May 2013 Retrieved 9 November 2019 Charles Clermont Ganneau Horus et Saint Georges d apres un bas relief inedit du Louvre Revue archeologique 1876 a b Scott B Noegel Brannon M Wheeler April 2010 The A to Z of Prophets in Islam and Judaism Rowman amp Littlefield p 313 ISBN 978 1 4617 1895 6 a b H S Haddad 1968 Georgic Cults and Saints of the Levant Numen Brill 37 Bernard Carra de Vaux P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol I Part 2 Second ed Brill p 1047 Christopher Walter The Origins of the Cult of Saint George Revue des etudes byzantines 53 1995 295 326 p 296 persee fr Archived 28 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine Pringle Denys 1998 The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem Cambridge University Press p 25 ISBN 0 521 39037 0 Eastern Christian Publications Theosis Calendar of Saints 2020 pp 75 76 Samantha Riches St George Hero Martyr and Myth Sutton 2000 ISBN 0750924527 p 19 McClendon 1999 p 6 Perrin British Flags 1922 p 38 Runciman Steven 1951 1952 A History of the Crusades I The First Crusade Penguin Classics pp 204 205 ISBN 978 0 14 198550 3 Catholic Encyclopedia 1913 s v Orders of St George Archived 22 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine omits Genoa and Hungary see David Scott Fox Saint George The Saint with Three Faces 1983 59 63 98 123 noted by McClellan 999 6 note 13 Additional Orders of St George were founded in the eighteenth century Catholic Encyclopedia McClendon 1999 10 Desiderius Erasmus in The Praise of Folly 1509 printed 1511 remarked The Christians have now their gigantic St George as well as the pagans had their Hercules Only the most essential work might be done on a festum duplex Muriel C McClendon A Moveable Feast Saint George s Day Celebrations and Religious Change in Early Modern England The Journal of British Studies 38 1 January 1999 1 27 Goncalves Luisa 29 April 2019 D Nuno Bras presidiu a Festa em honra de Sao Jorge Jornal da Madeira in European Portuguese Retrieved 3 September 2019 a b Religion and Culture in Medieval Islam by Richard G Hovannisian Georges Sabagh 2000 ISBN 0 521 62350 2 Cambridge University Press pp 109 110 History Project Christian 2003 By this Sign A D 250 to 350 from the Decian Persecution to the Constantine Era Christian History Project p 44 ISBN 9780968987322 St George is also the patron saint of Lebanese and Palestinian Christians Melton J Gordon 2021 Religious Celebrations An Encyclopedia of Holidays Festivals Solemn Observances and Spiritual Commemorations ABC CLIO p 334 ISBN 9781598842050 He is also the patron saint of the Palestinian Christian community S Hassan Wail 2014 Immigrant Narratives Orientalism and Cultural Translation in Arab American and Arab British Literature Oxford University Press p 83 ISBN 9780199354979 There are several examples of this Besides being the patron saint of England and of the Christians of Syria Hanauer JE 1907 Folk lore of the Holy Land Moslem Christian and Jewish Retrieved 18 January 2007 a b c William Dalrymple 1999 From the Holy Mountain a journey among the Christians of the Middle East Owl Books ISBN missing H S Haddad 1969 Georgic Cults and Saints of the Levant Numen 16 1 21 39 doi 10 1163 156852769X00029 JSTOR 3269569 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 George Saint Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 737 Ferg Erica 2020 Geography Religion Gods and Saints in the Eastern Mediterranean Routledge p 197 200 ISBN 9780429594496 Elizabeth Anne Finn 1866 Home in the Holyland London James Nisbet and Co pp 46 47 Middle East and Africa International Dictionary of Historic Places I B Tauris 5 March 2014 p 525 ISBN 978 1 134 25986 1 Islamic militants destroy historic 14th century mosque in Mosul The Telegraph 28 July 2014 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Teresa Fitzherbert 5 October 2006 Religious Diversity Under Ilkhanid Rule In Linda Komaroff ed Beyond the Legacy of Genghis Khan Brill p 402 ISBN 9789047418573 EVLIYA CELEBI NIN SEYAHATNAME SINDE DIYARBAKIR DIYARBAKIR IN EVLIYA CELEBI S SEYAHATNAME PDF Ucretsiz indirin docplayer biz tr Retrieved 21 August 2020 EVLIYA CELEBI DIYARBAKIR DA Turkish Archived 13 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine TigrisHaber Posted 22 July 2014 The Divine Office Table of Liturgical Days Section I RC and Calendar Lectionary and Collects Church House Publishing 1997 p 12 C of E B Sathish 20 March 2008 St George forane church Edathua 689573 Edathuapalli Sathish B Retrieved 5 February 2017 St George forane church Edappally Edappally St George Church 22 April 2014 Retrieved 5 February 2017 Arrangements for Edathua church fete The Hindu Alappuzha 3 April 2016 Retrieved 5 February 2017 The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 popadmin 25 March 2021 23 April Feast of Saint George Prince of Peace Catholic Church amp School Retrieved 19 August 2022 24 kwietnia sw Jerzego meczennika ordo pallotyni pl Retrieved 19 August 2022 23 kwietnia sw Wojciecha biskupa i meczennika glownego patrona Polski ordo pallotyni pl Retrieved 19 August 2022 Georg der Martyrer Okumenisches Heiligenlexikon www heiligenlexikon de in German Retrieved 19 August 2022 a b Georg der Martyrer Okumenisches Heiligenlexikon www heiligenlexikon de in German Retrieved 19 August 2022 GEORGIJ POBEDONOSEC Drevo drevo info ru in Russian Retrieved 17 July 2022 O Tropaioforos kai h panoykla Efhmerida Hmera Zakyn8os in Greek 31 January 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2022 GERONTIJ KAPPADOKIJSKIJ Drevo drevo info ru in Russian Retrieved 17 July 2022 POLIHRONIYa KAPPADOKIJSKAYa Drevo drevo info ru in Russian Retrieved 17 July 2022 KOLESOVANIE VELIKOMUChENIKA GEORGIYa Drevo drevo info ru in Russian Retrieved 17 July 2022 Vospominanie kolesovaniya velikomuchenika Georgiya Pobedonosca Gruz Hram velikomuchenicy Iriny in Russian Retrieved 17 July 2022 Seal Graham 2001 Encyclopedia of folk heroes p 85 ISBN 1 57607 216 9 Hinds Kathryn 2001 Medieval England Marshall Cavendish p 44 ISBN 0 7614 0308 6 Skoko Iko 21 August 2012 Sveti Ilija zastitnik Bosne i Hercegovine in Serbo Croatian Vecernji list Martic Zvonko 2014 Sveti Jure i sveti Ilija u puckoj poboznosti katolika u Bosni i Hercegovini in Serbo Croatian Svjetlo rijeci Archived from the original on 22 August 2016 Retrieved 6 August 2016 Saint George Patron Saint of Ethiopia Horniman Museum and Gardens Retrieved 4 June 2022 Fargher Brian L 1996 The Origins of the New Churches Movement in Southern Ethiopia 1927 1944 Brill ISBN 978 9004106611 Gabidzashvili Enriko 1991 Saint George In Ancient Georgian Literature Tbilisi Georgia Armazi 89 Foakes Jackson FJ 2005 A History of the Christian Church Cosimo p 556 ISBN 1 59605 452 2 Eastmond Antony 1998 Royal Imagery in Medieval Georgia Penn State Press p 119 ISBN 0 271 01628 0 Vella George Francis St George the patron saint of Gozo Times of Malta Times of Malta Retrieved 26 January 2017 The patron saint and protector of Gozo Times of Malta Times of Malta Retrieved 26 January 2017 de Bles Arthur 2004 How to Distinguish the Saints in Art p 86 ISBN 1 4179 0870 X de Oliveira Marques AH Andre Vitor Wyatt SS 1971 Daily Life in Portugal in the Late Middle Ages University of Wisconsin Press p 216 ISBN 0 299 05584 1 Governador sanciona lei que torna Sao Jorge e Sao Sebastiao padroeiros do estado Santos Georgina Silva dos Oficio e sangue a Irmandade de Sao Jorge e a Inquisicao na Lisboa moderna Lisboa Colibri Portimao Instituto de Cultura Ibero Atlantica 2005 Manfred Hollegger Maximilian I 2005 p 150 History of the St Georgs Orden Roman Prochazka Osterreichisches Ordenshandbuch 1979 p 274 Aldo Ziggioto Genova in Vexilla Italica 1 XX 1993 Aldo Ziggioto Le Bandiere degli Stati Italiani in Armi Antiche 1994 cited after Pier Paolo Lugli 18 July 2000 Archived 29 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine on Flags of the World William Woo Seymour The Cross in Tradition History and Art 1898 p 363 Fuller A Supplement tu the Historie of the Holy Warre Book V 1647 chapter 4 Vatican stamps Vaticanstate va Archived from the original on 1 October 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2011 Bobrov Yury A catalogue of the Russian icons in the British Museum The British Museum احتفالات بمناسبة اليوبيل الماسي لبناء كنيسة مار جاورجيوس المية ومية Noursat Retrieved 11 August 2019 Further reading EditAElfric of Eynsham 1881 Of Saint George AElfric s Lives of Saints London Pub for the Early English text society by N Trubner amp co Brook E W 1925 Acts of Saint George in series Analecta Gorgiana 8 Gorgias Press Burgoyne Michael H 1976 A Chronological Index to the Muslim Monuments of Jerusalem In The Architecture of Islamic Jerusalem Jerusalem The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem Gabidzashvili Enriko 1991 Saint George In Ancient Georgian Literature Armazi 89 Tbilisi Georgia Good Jonathan 2009 The Cult of Saint George in Medieval England Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press Loomis C Grant 1948 White Magic An Introduction to the Folklore of Christian Legend Cambridge Medieval Society of America Natsheh Yusuf 2000 Architectural survey in Ottoman Jerusalem The Living City 1517 1917 Edited by Sylvia Auld and Robert Hillenbrand London Altajir World of Islam Trust pp 893 899 Whatley E Gordon editor with Anne B Thompson and Robert K Upchurch 2004 St George and the Dragon in the South English Legendary East Midland Revision c 1400 Originally published in Saints Lives in Middle English Collections Kalamazoo Michigan Medieval Institute Publications on line introduction George Menachery Saint Thomas Christian Encyclopaedia of India Vol II Trichur 73 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint George Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article about Saint George English translation of the 5th century Latin legend at Archive org St George and the Dragon free illustrated book based on The Seven Champions by Richard Johnson 1596 Archnet Saint George and the Dragon links and pictures more than 125 from Dragons in Art and on the Web Story of Saint George from The Golden Legends Saint George and the Boy Scouts including a woodcut of a Scout on horseback slaying a dragon A prayer for St George s Day St George St George and the Dragon An Introduction Greatmartyr Victory bearer and Wonderworker George Orthodox icon and synaxarion for 23 April Dedication of the Church of the Greatmartyr George in Lydia Icon and synaxarion for 3 November Dedication of the Church of the Greatmartyr George at Kiev Icon and synaxarion for 26 November Saint George in the church in Plastovce Palast in Slovakia Famous Georgian Pilgrim Center in India St George Orthodox Church Puthuppally Kerala India Hail George Radio webcast explains how Saint George came to be confused with some Afro Brazilian deities Blog Article on the Feast of Saint George The feast of Saint George is 23 April About that Dragon St George Martyr at the Christian Iconography web site Of St George Martyr from Caxton s translation of the Golden Legend Portals Saints Biography Christianity Greece Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint George amp oldid 1131434925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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