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Hermenegild

Saint Hermenegild or Ermengild (died 13 April 585; Spanish: San Hermenegildo; Latin: Hermenegildus, from Gothic 𐌹𐍂𐌼𐌿𐌽𐌰𐌲𐌹𐌻𐌳𐍃 *Airmana-gild, "immense tribute"), was the son of King Liuvigild of the Visigothic Kingdom in the Iberian Peninsula and southern France. He fell out with his father in 579, then revolted the following year. During his rebellion, he converted from Arianism to Chalcedonian Christianity. Hermenegild was defeated in 584 and exiled.[2] His death was later celebrated as a martyrdom due to the influence of Pope Gregory I's Dialogues, in which he portrayed Hermenegild as a "Catholic martyr rebelling against the tyranny of an Arian father."[3]

Saint Hermenegild
El Triunfo de San Hermenegildo by Francisco Herrera the Younger (1654)
Martyr
BornToletum, Visigothic Kingdom
Diedc. 13 April 585
Hispalis, Hispania
Venerated inCatholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
FeastApril 13
Attributesaxe, crown, sword, and cross [1]
PatronageSeville, Spain

Marriage to Ingund edit

Hermenegild was the eldest son of Liuvigild and his first wife.[4] He was a brother of Reccared I and brought up an Arian. Liuvigild made his sons co-regents.[5]

 
The Baptism of Saint Hermenegild, attributed to Guercino, 17th century

In 579, he married Ingund, the daughter of the Frankish King Sigebert I of Austrasia who was a Chalcedonian. Her mother was the Visigoth princess Brunhilda of Austrasia. The twelve-year-old Ingund was pressured by Hermenegild's stepmother Goiswintha to abjure her beliefs, but she stayed firm in her faith.[6]

Liuvigild sent Hermenegild to the south to govern on his behalf. There, he came under the influence of Leander of Seville, the older brother of Isidore of Seville. Hermenegild was converted to Chalcedonian Christianity. His family demanded for him to return to Arianism, but he refused.

Around then, he led a revolt against Liuvigild. Contemporary accounts attribute that to politics, rather than primarily religious differences.[7] He asked for the aid of the Byzantine Empire, but it was occupied with defending itself from territorial incursions by the Sasanian Empire.[8] For a time, Hermenegild had the support of the Suebi, who had been defeated by Liuvigild in 579, but he forced them to capitulate once again in 583.[5]

Hermenegild fled to Seville and when it fell to a siege in 584, he went to Córdoba. After Liuvigild paid 30,000 pieces of gold, the Byzantines withdrew and took Ingund and her son with them.[5]

Hermenegild sought sanctuary in a church. Liuvigild would not violate the sanctuary. He sent Reccared inside to speak with Hermenegild and to offer peace. That was accepted, and peace was made for some time.[4]

Imprisonment and death edit

Goiswintha, however, brought about another alienation within the family. Hermenegild was imprisoned in Tarragona or Toledo. During his captivity in the tower of Seville, an Arian bishop was sent to Hermenegild for Easter but he would not accept the Eucharist from him.[9] King Liuvigild ordered him beheaded; he was executed on 13 April 585.[4]

He had one son by his wife named Athanagild after his matrilineal great-grandfather king Athanagild. They both tried to seek refuge in Constantinople after his execution, but it was refused while they were already in Sicily. She then returned to the Frankish Kingdom, where her son remained under her and her mother's custody.

Reputation and legacy edit

Hermenegild's reputation as a Catholic martyr is not present in contemporary Spanish accounts, such as John of Biclaro's Chronicon continuans Victorem Tunnunensem and Isidore of Seville's Historia de regibus Gothorum, Vandalorum et Suevorum, which mention only his revolt and not his conversion.[10] The French chronicler Gregory of Tours, in his Decem Libri Historiarum, recounts Hermenegild's conversion and credits it as the cause of his rebellion; however, he judges Hermenegild harshly as a traitor.[11] Of Hermenegild, Gregory wrote: "Poor prince, he did not realize that the judgment of God hangs over anyone who makes such plans against his own father, even if that father be a heretic."[12] It is the Italian Pope Gregory I who first identifies Hermenegild as a martyr. Writing in his Dialogues, Pope Gregory states that Hermenegild was killed after refusing communion from an Arian bishop.[13] Pope Gregory credited Hermenegild's death as inspiring his brother Reccared's conversion, and thus the conversion of the Visigoth kingdom, saying that Reccared "could never have effected all this, if king Hermigildus had not died for the testimony of true religion; for, as it is written: Unless the grain of wheat falling into the earth doth die, itself remaineth alone; but if it die it bringeth forth much fruit."[13] It is chiefly on Pope Gregory's assessment that Hermenegild's subsequent legacy rests.

As a Catholic martyr, Hermenegild rose to prominence in Spain during the period following the Reconquista, during which time there was renewed interest in the Visigothic "golden age".[14] In 1585, at the urging of Philip II of Spain, Pope Sixtus V authorized the cult of Hermenegild in Spain; recognition was later extended to the whole church by Pope Urban VIII.[15] Saint Hermenegild became celebrated through artistic representation such as poetry, painting, and plays.[14] One example of this is El mártir del sacramento, San Hermenegildo, a Eucharistic play written in the 1680s by the Mexican nun Juana Inés de la Cruz.[14] Another example is the Italian Cardinal Francesco Sforza Pallavicino's 1644 tragedy Ermenegildo martire, which is considered a masterpiece of seventeenth-century Jesuit hagiographical drama.[16] Francisco de Herrera the Younger's 1654 painting The Triumph of St. Hermenegild, originally for the Church of the Discalced Carmelites in Madrid, is now in the collection of the Museo del Prado.[17]

In art and Catholic Iconography, Saint Hermenegild is depicted with an ax as well as a crown, sword, and cross.[18] Hermenegild's entry in the Roman Martyrology, translated to English, reads: "In Seville, Spain, St. Hermenegild, Martyr. He was the son of Liuvigild, the Arian king of the Visigoths. He was imprisoned when he confessed the Catholic faith. When he refused to take communion from the Arian bishop during the Easter service, his perfidious father ordered that he be brought down with an axe. Thus he left this earthly realm and entered Heaven as a king and martyr."[18] Hermenegild's feast day is April 13. He is the patron of the "Real Hermandad de Veteranos de las Fuerzas Armadas y la Guardia Civil" ("Royal Brotherhood of Veterans of the Armed Forces and the Civil Guard") in Spain.[19] The Royal and Military Order of Saint Hermenegild, established by Ferdinand VII of Spain in 1814, is also named in his honor.

Parentage edit

According to the 9th-century Chronicle of Alfonso III, Erwig was the son of Ardabast, who had journeyed from the Byzantine Empire to Hispania during the time of Chindasuinth, and married Chindasuinth's niece Goda.[20] Ardabast (or Artavasdos), was probably an Armenian or Persian Christian exile in Constantinople or in Byzantine Africa. In Hispania he was made a count.[21]

17th-century Spanish genealogist Luis Bartolomé de Salazar y Castro gave Ardabast's father as Athanagild, the son of Saint Hermenegild and Ingund, and his mother as Flavia Juliana, a daughter of Peter Augustus and niece of the Emperor Maurice.[22] This imperial connection is disputed by Christian Settipani, who says that the only source for Athanagild's marriage to Flavia Julia is José Pellicer, who he claims to be a forger.[23]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Stracke, Richard (2015-10-20). "Saint Hermenegild: The Iconography". Christian Iconography.
  2. ^ Heather, Peter (1998). The Goths. Wiley. pp. 280–282. ISBN 978-0-631-20932-4.
  3. ^ Markus, Robert Austin (9 October 1997). Gregory the Great and His World. Cambridge University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-521-58608-5.
  4. ^ a b c Kirsch, Johann Peter. "Saint Hermengild." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 28 Jan. 2013
  5. ^ a b c Frassetto, Michael (2003). Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe: Society in Transformation. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-263-9.
  6. ^ Gregory of Tours translated by Lewis Thorpe, History of the Franks (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974,) page 302
  7. ^ "Hermenegild the Goth." Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
  8. ^ Butler Alban. The Lives or the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saint, Volume 4 by the Revereand Alban Butler, D & J Sadlier and Company, 1864
  9. ^ "Lives of the Saints: For Every Day of the Year" edited by Rev. Hugo Hoever, S.O.Cist, Ph.D., New York: Catholic Book Publishing Co., (1955)
  10. ^ Saxer, V., and S. Heid. "HERMENEGILD, martyr (d. 585)." Encyclopedia of Ancient Christianity, Angelo Di Berardino, InterVarsity Press, 1st edition, 2014.
  11. ^ Gregory of Tours. The History of the Franks. Trans. by Lewis Thorpe. London: Penguin Books, 1974.
  12. ^ Gregory of Tours. The History of the Franks. Trans. by Lewis Thorpe. London: Penguin Books, 1974. pg. 375
  13. ^ a b Pope Gregory I, Dialogues, Trans. Edmund Garratt Gardner. London: Warner, 1911. Book III, Chapter 31.
  14. ^ a b c Fuller, Amy. "Rebel with a cause? From traitor prince to exemplary martyr: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz's representation of San Hermenegildo", European Review of History: Revue européenne d'histoire Vol. 16, 2009 - Issue 6. pp. 893-910. https://doi.org/10.1080/13507480903368152
  15. ^ Goffart, W. "Saint Hermenegild." New Catholic Encyclopedia, Gale, 2003.
  16. ^ Sforza Pallavicino, Martyr Hermenegild. Ed. and trans. by Stefano Muneroni. Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, 2019.
  17. ^ "The Triumph of Saint Hermenegild". museodelprado.es. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  18. ^ a b Stracke, Richard. "Saint Hermenegild: The Iconography". christianiconography.info. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  19. ^ "San Hermenegildo". defensa.gob.es. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  20. ^ Collins, Visigothic Spain, 102.
  21. ^ Livermore, Twilight of the Goths, 76.
  22. ^ Luis de Salazar y Castro, Historia Genealógica de la Casa de Lara (Madrid, 1696) vol. I, p. 45.
  23. ^ Christian Settipani, Les ancêtres de Charlemagne, p. 431.

Sources edit

  • Walsh, Michael, ed. (1991). Butler's Lives of the Saints: Concise Edition, Revised and Updated. San Francisco: Harper. ISBN 0-06-069299-5.
  • Innes, Matthew (2007). Introduction to Early Medieval Europe, 300-900. The sword, the plough and the book. Routledge. p. 552. ISBN 978-0-203-64491-1.

External links edit

  • Lives of the Saints: April 13 St. Hermenegild, Martyr
  • Saint Hermenegild engraved by L. Beck, from De Verda collection
  • Saint Hermenegild, Martyr at the Christian Iconography web site

hermenegild, given, name, given, name, spanish, military, decoration, royal, military, order, saint, saint, ermengild, died, april, spanish, latin, from, gothic, 𐌹𐍂𐌼𐌿𐌽𐌰𐌲𐌹𐌻𐌳𐍃, airmana, gild, immense, tribute, king, liuvigild, visigothic, kingdom, iberian, penin. For the given name see Hermenegild given name For the Spanish military decoration see Royal and Military Order of Saint Hermenegild Saint Hermenegild or Ermengild died 13 April 585 Spanish San Hermenegildo Latin Hermenegildus from Gothic 𐌹𐍂𐌼𐌿𐌽𐌰𐌲𐌹𐌻𐌳𐍃 Airmana gild immense tribute was the son of King Liuvigild of the Visigothic Kingdom in the Iberian Peninsula and southern France He fell out with his father in 579 then revolted the following year During his rebellion he converted from Arianism to Chalcedonian Christianity Hermenegild was defeated in 584 and exiled 2 His death was later celebrated as a martyrdom due to the influence of Pope Gregory I s Dialogues in which he portrayed Hermenegild as a Catholic martyr rebelling against the tyranny of an Arian father 3 Saint HermenegildEl Triunfo de San Hermenegildo by Francisco Herrera the Younger 1654 MartyrBornToletum Visigothic KingdomDiedc 13 April 585Hispalis HispaniaVenerated inCatholic ChurchEastern Orthodox ChurchFeastApril 13Attributesaxe crown sword and cross 1 PatronageSeville Spain Contents 1 Marriage to Ingund 2 Imprisonment and death 3 Reputation and legacy 4 Parentage 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 Sources 8 External linksMarriage to Ingund editHermenegild was the eldest son of Liuvigild and his first wife 4 He was a brother of Reccared I and brought up an Arian Liuvigild made his sons co regents 5 nbsp The Baptism of Saint Hermenegild attributed to Guercino 17th century In 579 he married Ingund the daughter of the Frankish King Sigebert I of Austrasia who was a Chalcedonian Her mother was the Visigoth princess Brunhilda of Austrasia The twelve year old Ingund was pressured by Hermenegild s stepmother Goiswintha to abjure her beliefs but she stayed firm in her faith 6 Liuvigild sent Hermenegild to the south to govern on his behalf There he came under the influence of Leander of Seville the older brother of Isidore of Seville Hermenegild was converted to Chalcedonian Christianity His family demanded for him to return to Arianism but he refused Around then he led a revolt against Liuvigild Contemporary accounts attribute that to politics rather than primarily religious differences 7 He asked for the aid of the Byzantine Empire but it was occupied with defending itself from territorial incursions by the Sasanian Empire 8 For a time Hermenegild had the support of the Suebi who had been defeated by Liuvigild in 579 but he forced them to capitulate once again in 583 5 Hermenegild fled to Seville and when it fell to a siege in 584 he went to Cordoba After Liuvigild paid 30 000 pieces of gold the Byzantines withdrew and took Ingund and her son with them 5 Hermenegild sought sanctuary in a church Liuvigild would not violate the sanctuary He sent Reccared inside to speak with Hermenegild and to offer peace That was accepted and peace was made for some time 4 Imprisonment and death editGoiswintha however brought about another alienation within the family Hermenegild was imprisoned in Tarragona or Toledo During his captivity in the tower of Seville an Arian bishop was sent to Hermenegild for Easter but he would not accept the Eucharist from him 9 King Liuvigild ordered him beheaded he was executed on 13 April 585 4 He had one son by his wife named Athanagild after his matrilineal great grandfather king Athanagild They both tried to seek refuge in Constantinople after his execution but it was refused while they were already in Sicily She then returned to the Frankish Kingdom where her son remained under her and her mother s custody Reputation and legacy editHermenegild s reputation as a Catholic martyr is not present in contemporary Spanish accounts such as John of Biclaro s Chronicon continuans Victorem Tunnunensem and Isidore of Seville s Historia de regibus Gothorum Vandalorum et Suevorum which mention only his revolt and not his conversion 10 The French chronicler Gregory of Tours in his Decem Libri Historiarum recounts Hermenegild s conversion and credits it as the cause of his rebellion however he judges Hermenegild harshly as a traitor 11 Of Hermenegild Gregory wrote Poor prince he did not realize that the judgment of God hangs over anyone who makes such plans against his own father even if that father be a heretic 12 It is the Italian Pope Gregory I who first identifies Hermenegild as a martyr Writing in his Dialogues Pope Gregory states that Hermenegild was killed after refusing communion from an Arian bishop 13 Pope Gregory credited Hermenegild s death as inspiring his brother Reccared s conversion and thus the conversion of the Visigoth kingdom saying that Reccared could never have effected all this if king Hermigildus had not died for the testimony of true religion for as it is written Unless the grain of wheat falling into the earth doth die itself remaineth alone but if it die it bringeth forth much fruit 13 It is chiefly on Pope Gregory s assessment that Hermenegild s subsequent legacy rests As a Catholic martyr Hermenegild rose to prominence in Spain during the period following the Reconquista during which time there was renewed interest in the Visigothic golden age 14 In 1585 at the urging of Philip II of Spain Pope Sixtus V authorized the cult of Hermenegild in Spain recognition was later extended to the whole church by Pope Urban VIII 15 Saint Hermenegild became celebrated through artistic representation such as poetry painting and plays 14 One example of this is El martir del sacramento San Hermenegildo a Eucharistic play written in the 1680s by the Mexican nun Juana Ines de la Cruz 14 Another example is the Italian Cardinal Francesco Sforza Pallavicino s 1644 tragedy Ermenegildo martire which is considered a masterpiece of seventeenth century Jesuit hagiographical drama 16 Francisco de Herrera the Younger s 1654 painting The Triumph of St Hermenegild originally for the Church of the Discalced Carmelites in Madrid is now in the collection of the Museo del Prado 17 In art and Catholic Iconography Saint Hermenegild is depicted with an ax as well as a crown sword and cross 18 Hermenegild s entry in the Roman Martyrology translated to English reads In Seville Spain St Hermenegild Martyr He was the son of Liuvigild the Arian king of the Visigoths He was imprisoned when he confessed the Catholic faith When he refused to take communion from the Arian bishop during the Easter service his perfidious father ordered that he be brought down with an axe Thus he left this earthly realm and entered Heaven as a king and martyr 18 Hermenegild s feast day is April 13 He is the patron of the Real Hermandad de Veteranos de las Fuerzas Armadas y la Guardia Civil Royal Brotherhood of Veterans of the Armed Forces and the Civil Guard in Spain 19 The Royal and Military Order of Saint Hermenegild established by Ferdinand VII of Spain in 1814 is also named in his honor Parentage editAccording to the 9th century Chronicle of Alfonso III Erwig was the son of Ardabast who had journeyed from the Byzantine Empire to Hispania during the time of Chindasuinth and married Chindasuinth s niece Goda 20 Ardabast or Artavasdos was probably an Armenian or Persian Christian exile in Constantinople or in Byzantine Africa In Hispania he was made a count 21 17th century Spanish genealogist Luis Bartolome de Salazar y Castro gave Ardabast s father as Athanagild the son of Saint Hermenegild and Ingund and his mother as Flavia Juliana a daughter of Peter Augustus and niece of the Emperor Maurice 22 This imperial connection is disputed by Christian Settipani who says that the only source for Athanagild s marriage to Flavia Julia is Jose Pellicer who he claims to be a forger 23 See also editSaint Hermenegild patron saint archiveFootnotes edit Stracke Richard 2015 10 20 Saint Hermenegild The Iconography Christian Iconography Heather Peter 1998 The Goths Wiley pp 280 282 ISBN 978 0 631 20932 4 Markus Robert Austin 9 October 1997 Gregory the Great and His World Cambridge University Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 521 58608 5 a b c Kirsch Johann Peter Saint Hermengild The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 7 New York Robert Appleton Company 1910 28 Jan 2013 a b c Frassetto Michael 2003 Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe Society in Transformation ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 263 9 Gregory of Tours translated by Lewis Thorpe History of the Franks Harmondsworth Penguin 1974 page 302 Hermenegild the Goth Okumenisches Heiligenlexikon Butler Alban The Lives or the Fathers Martyrs and Other Principal Saint Volume 4 by the Revereand Alban Butler D amp J Sadlier and Company 1864 Lives of the Saints For Every Day of the Year edited by Rev Hugo Hoever S O Cist Ph D New York Catholic Book Publishing Co 1955 Saxer V and S Heid HERMENEGILD martyr d 585 Encyclopedia of Ancient Christianity Angelo Di Berardino InterVarsity Press 1st edition 2014 Gregory of Tours The History of the Franks Trans by Lewis Thorpe London Penguin Books 1974 Gregory of Tours The History of the Franks Trans by Lewis Thorpe London Penguin Books 1974 pg 375 a b Pope Gregory I Dialogues Trans Edmund Garratt Gardner London Warner 1911 Book III Chapter 31 a b c Fuller Amy Rebel with a cause From traitor prince to exemplary martyr Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz s representation of San Hermenegildo European Review of History Revue europeenne d histoire Vol 16 2009 Issue 6 pp 893 910 https doi org 10 1080 13507480903368152 Goffart W Saint Hermenegild New Catholic Encyclopedia Gale 2003 Sforza Pallavicino Martyr Hermenegild Ed and trans by Stefano Muneroni Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies 2019 The Triumph of Saint Hermenegild museodelprado es Retrieved 7 May 2023 a b Stracke Richard Saint Hermenegild The Iconography christianiconography info Retrieved 7 May 2023 San Hermenegildo defensa gob es Retrieved 7 May 2023 Collins Visigothic Spain 102 Livermore Twilight of the Goths 76 Luis de Salazar y Castro Historia Genealogica de la Casa de Lara Madrid 1696 vol I p 45 Christian Settipani Les ancetres de Charlemagne p 431 Sources editWalsh Michael ed 1991 Butler s Lives of the Saints Concise Edition Revised and Updated San Francisco Harper ISBN 0 06 069299 5 Innes Matthew 2007 Introduction to Early Medieval Europe 300 900 The sword the plough and the book Routledge p 552 ISBN 978 0 203 64491 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hermenegild Lives of the Saints April 13 St Hermenegild Martyr Saint Hermenegild engraved by L Beck from De Verda collection Saint Hermenegild Martyr at the Christian Iconography web site Portals nbsp Saints nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hermenegild amp oldid 1220629965, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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