In Norway, after the Reformation & well into the twentieth century, ‘Pederstol’, Peter’s chair, remained an important reference point in the calendars. It was said that on this date the ice began to thaw. On runic calendars, the feast was marked by Peter's keys. (6/6)
- SH
In a C15 calendar from Åbo, the rank is simplex, a low rank. In Breviarium Nidrosiense (1519), the rank is semiduplex, which is higher. In a C15 calendar from Linköping (Sveriges Riksarkiv Fr 27557, the rank is listed as totum duplex, the highest possible rank. (5/n)
In the early Christian Norse sphere, St. Peter’s Chair does not appear to have been an important feast. Later medieval sources indicate that the feast gained greater importance, perhaps as a consequence of the Church’s stronger institutional power. The liturgical rank varied, however. (4/n)
Peter was an important saint in the Norse sphere. In church art, he is often depicted with the keys to Heaven and earth, which in turn symbolise the supremacy of the Church. One example is the door of a C13 altarpiece from Fåberg Church in Norway, where his attribute is prominently displayed.(3/n)
Legenda Aurea outlines the reasons why the feast was instituted, & explains its connection to the other feasts of St. Peter in the calendar (June 29 with Paul; & August 1). The feast thereby serves to bolster the cult of Peter, and, by extension, the status of the clerical class. (2/n)
Today is the feast of Cathedra Petri, St. Peter’s Chair. The feast commemorates Peter as the head - & the rock - of the Christian church, an idea based on Matthew 16:18. By the High Middle Ages, this date commemorated the appointment of Peter as bishop of Antioch. (1/n)
Registration is now open for Sacred Networks: New Perspectives on Hagiography and Saints’ Cults in the Celtic and Norse Worlds, 1-2 May at University College Dublin, organised with @networknorse.bsky.social
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sacred-net...
We are pleased and excited to be sponsoring the following sessions (and a round table) at @imc-leeds.bsky.social this summer, some co-sponsored/organised with @networknorse.bsky.social!
The manuscript also features a full-page illustration of Agnes, but the illuminator has confused the saints & their attributes. While Agnes is shown with a spear (f.60v), it is St Agatha who is depicted with Agnes' characteristic lamb (f.69r). (6/6)
- SH
The best testament to Agnes’ cult in the Nordic sphere is the Icelandic manuscript Kirkjubæjarbók (AM 429), which is a collection of material on women saints. The book contains a translation of her passio, attributed to Ambrose (ff.61r-69r).
(5/n)
The lamb became Agnes' attribute partly because her name sounds like ‘agnus’, 'lamb'. One example is the early C16 wooden sculpture from St Bartholomew’s Church in Salo, Finland, which also shows traces of paint.
(Courtesy of Helsinki National Museum item H52105.2; finna.fi)
(4/n)
Agnes' cult is well attested. Both her feast & its octave is included in Nordic calendars, something which is unusual even for most universal saints. She appears in several late-medieval works of art from the Nordic sphere, often accompanied by the lamb which became her attribute. (3/n)
Agnes' rejected suitors denounced her, & she was placed in a brothel. One suitor sought to assault her & was struck blind. She was later sentenced to death for her faith.
Agnes was part of the catalogue of saints that English and German missionaries brought to the Nordic sphere.
(2/n)
Today, is the feast of St Agnes of Rome. She lived during Diocletian's reign, & was one of the first virgin martyrs to be widely venerated as a saint, largely due to the promotion of her cult by Ambrose of Milan. According to her legend, she refused to marry. (1/n)
It has been suggested that the saga accounts of Thomas Becket were a source of inspiration for those Icelandic bishops who were engaged in the fight for libertas ecclesiae.
- DSa
Four extant hagiographies of the saint were composed in Old Norse-Icelandic over the course of the thirteenth and fourteenth century. Notably, it is recorded that the church at Ás in Kelduhverf not only owned a saga (c. 1318) but also commissioned a new version by the end of the century. (4/n)
The liturgical sources from Nidaros, Lund & Uppsala archbishoprics contain offices for his feast-day that were imported from Canterbury with interesting local variations. In Iceland, Thomas of Canterbury is one of the most venerated non-native saints, at both clerical and popular level. (3/n)
This is attested by a variety of representations of his martyrdom, such as the late C12 wall-painting in the Danish church of Sønder Nærå (Fyn), the early C13 carving on the baptismal font in Lyngsjö church (Skåne), & the Heddal reliquary & an ampulla of water in Bergen, both from c. 1220. (2/n)
Today is the feast of St Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, who suffered martyrdom at the hands of a group of knights in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170. News of Thomas’ death spread quickly through Latin Christendom, & the cult of the saint arrived in the Norse world already in the 1170s. (1/n)
One translation is included in the manuscript AM 645 4to (ff. 41r-43r), together with sagas of several other apostles. In this account, Andrew evangelised in Greece, ‘g[ri]cl[an]d’, an area well known to Norse audiences as a location of adventurous tales of knights and varangians. (5/5)
- SH
Of known church dedications, there are 12 from Norway, 5 from Sweden, & one from Denmark (Vordingborg; now lost, but dedication known from the C15). Andrew might have been more popular in Iceland, where translations of the Latin legend, Andreas saga postola, exists in four different versions. (4/n)
The overall popularity of Andrew is difficult to assess. In medieval art, he often appears together with other disciples, such as in the altarpiece in Bälinge Church, Sweden (Medeltidens Bildvärld; Lennart Karlsson). Andrew is recognisable, but not prominently placed within the artwork. (3/n)
In the law of the Gulathing law province (Western Norway), which was written down in the middle of the 12th century, the feast of St Andrew was to be celebrated as a Sunday. This shows that the feast was important, but also not among the most important feasts. (2/n)
Today is the feast of St Andrew, one of the 12 disciples of Christ. According to his apocryphal legend, he was crucified on an X-shaped cross. As one of the disciples, Andrew was part of the catalogue of saints that missionaries brought to the Norse sphere from the 9th century onwards. (1/n)
I think that would depend on where the encounter took place. In a lot of French depictions, for example, it is very difficult to distinguish between the two based on the amount of skull being transported.
The legend conflates the C1 Dionysius the Aeorpagite (cf. Acts 17:34) & Denis of Paris. References to the saint & his martyrdom are abundant in Old-Norse Icelandic literature, especially in texts influenced by French romance epics (e.g., Karlamagnúss saga ok kappa hans, Mírmanns saga). (6/6)
-DSa
St Dionysius was also co-patron of the churches at Reykholt and at the nearby Engey. A Norse version of the saint’s life, Dionysius saga, is extant in two large C15 legendaries (AM 235 fol. & - pictured here - Stock. Perg. fol. no. 2). (5/n)
In Norway, melodies of the office of St Dionysius were recycled for the C12 office for St Olaf. Moreover, the saint was the dedicatee of a now-lost church in Roskilde before 1266.
In Iceland, Dionysius figures as the co-patron of an altar at Viðey monastery (founded in 1225). (4/n)
The cult of St Dionysius most likely arrived in the Norse world during the Christianisation period, & as a result of Scandinavian intellectuals studying in Paris. It does not appear, however, that St Dionysius was widely important before the C14, when he was counted among the 14 holy helpers. (3/n)
Denis was beheaded. His legend states that he picked up his head & walked to the place where he subsequently died. In medieval art, he is often depicted as carrying his head or the crown of his head. Thus he is represented in a modern copy of a medieval statue from Trondheim cathedral. (2/n)