Christianity: Details about 'Catherine Of Alexandria'

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Saint Catherine of Alexandria
Martyr
Bornafter AD 282 (?)
Diedafter AD 300 (?)
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church; Roman Catholic Church; Oriental Orthodoxy
FeastNovember 25 (November 24 in Orthodox churches of Russian background)
AttributesWheel
Patron saint ofapologists; craftsmen who work with a wheel (potters, spinners, etc.); archivists; attornies; barristers; dying people; educators; girls; jurists; knife grinders; knife sharpeners; lawyers; librarians; libraries; maidens; mechanics; millers; nurses; old maids; philosophers; potters; preachers; scholars; schoolchildren; scribes; secretaries; spinners; spinsters; stenographers; students; tanners; teachers; theologians; turners; University of Paris; unmarried girls; wheelwrights; Żejtun; Żurrieq

Saint Catherine of Alexandria, known as Saint Catherine of the Wheel and The Great Martyr Saint Catherine (Greek ἡ Ἃγια Ἃικατειρίνα ἡ Μεγαλομάρτυς) is a figure claimed to have been a noted scholar in the early 4th Century who, at the age of only 18, is said to have visited the Emperor Maximinus II and to have attempted to convince him of the error of his ways in persecuting Christians (and having succeeded in converting Maximinus's wife). According to legend, she also converted many pagans, who were subsequently murdered. The legend of Catherine continues that she was condemned to death on the breaking wheel (an instrument of torture), but that it broke when she touched it, so she was beheaded. Her symbol is the spiked wheel,



which became known as the Catherine wheel, and her feast day is celebrated the 25 November in most Orthodox churches. (Her feast is celebrated on 24 November in the Russian Orthodox Church, because Empress Catherine the Great did not wish to share her patronal feast with the Leavetaking of the Presentation of the Theotokos.)

In an elaboration of the legend, angels carried her body to Mt. Sinai, where in the 6th century AD, the Eastern Emperor Justinian established Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai, the church being built between 548-565. Saint Catherine's Monastery survives, a famous repository of early Christian art, architecture and illuminated manuscripts.

In another development of the legend, having rejected many offers of marriage, she was transported to heaven in vision and betrothed to Christ by the Virgin Mary, the ancient theme of the mystical marriage to the deity that is familiar in the ecstatic mythology of the eastern Mediterranean and Anatolia.

Historians believe that Catherine (literally 'the pure one') may not have existed. She was more an ideal exemplary figure than a historical one. In 1969, the Catholic Church removed her feast day from its general calendar, citing a lack of historical evidence for her existence. She did certainly form an exemplary counterpart to the pagan philosopher Hypatia of Alexandria in the medieval mindset; and it has been suggested that she was invented specifically for that purpose. Like Hypatia, she is said to have been highly learned (in philosophy and theology), very beautiful, sexually pure, and to have been brutally murdered for publicly stating her beliefs; 105 years before Hypatia's death



(although first records mentioning her, or one of her variants, date much later). In 2002, Catherine was reincluded in the Roman Catholic calendar of saints published by the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments . Moreover, for years the feast of this saint has been celebrated in the island of Malta by two villages Zurrieq and Zejtun. Between 1961-2002 (the period when St. Catherine was not included from the official catholic church calendar) concession was given by the Vatican to celebrate the feast just the same.

The 1908 Catholic Encyclopedia describes the historical importance of the belief in her as follows:

Ranked with St. Margaret and St. Barbara as one of the fourteen most helpful saints in heaven, she was unceasingly praised by preachers and sung by poets. It is a well known fact that Jacques-Benigne Bossuet dedicated to her one of his most beautiful panegyrics and that Adam of Saint-Victor wrote a magnificent poem in her honour: "Vox Sonora nostri chori", etc. In many places her feast was celebrated with the utmost solemnity, servile work being suppressed and the devotions being attended by great numbers of people. In several dioceses of France it was observed as a Holy Day of obligation up to the beginning of the seventeenth century, the splendour of its ceremonial eclipsing that of the feasts of some of the Apostles. Numberless chapels were placed under her patronage and her statue was found in nearly all churches, representing her according to medieval inconography with a wheel, her instrument of torture. Whilst, owing to several circumstances in his life, St. Nicholas of Myra, was considered the patron of young bachelors and students, St. Catherine became the patroness of young maidens and female students. Looked upon as the holiest and most illustrious of the virgins of Christ, it was but natural that she, of all others, should be worthy to watch over the virgins of the cloister and the young women of the world.
The spiked wheel having become emblematic of the saint, wheelwrights and mechanics placed themselves under her patronage. Finally, as according to tradition, she not only remained a virgin by governing her passions and conquered her executioners by wearying their patience, but triumphed in science by closing the mouths of sophists, her intercession was implored by theologians, apologists, pulpit orators, and philosophers. Before studying, writing, or preaching, they besought her to illumine their minds, guide their pens, and impart eloquence to their words. This devotion to St. Catherine which assumed such vast proportions in Europe after the Crusades, received additional eclat in France in the beginning of the fifteenth century, when it was rumoured that she had spoken to Joan of Arc and, together with St. Margaret, had been divinely appointed Joan's adviser.

Footnotes

  • See, for example, Harold Thayler Davis: "Alexandria: The Golden City" (Principia Press of Illinois, 1957).
  • News
  • Santez Katell a Aleksandria

Kateřina Alexandrijská Katharina von Alexandrien Aleksandria Katariina Catherine d'Alexandrie Catharina van Alexandrië Katarina av Alexandria Katarzyna z Aleksandrii Katarina av Alexandria


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Catherine_of_Alexandria". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.