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Dominguito del Val

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Spanish child saint and murder victim


Dominguito del Val
Martyrdom of Saint Dominguito del Val by Mateo Gonzalez, circa 1793.
Martyr
Bornc. 1243
Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain
Diedc. 1250 (aged 7)
Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain
Cause of deathCrucifixion andHuman sacrifice
Venerated inCatholic Church
Canonized12 May 1807,Saint Peter's Basilica,Papal State byPope Pius VII
MajorshrineChapel of Santo Dominguito del Val,Cathedral of the Savior,Zaragoza, Spain
Feast31 August
AttributesWearing an altar server vestment, while he nailed on the cross,martyr's palm andcrown of martyrdom
PatronageAltar servers, acolytes and choirboys

Dominguito del Val (c. 1243 –c. 1250) was a legendary child in medieval Spain, allegedly achoirboyritually murdered byJews inZaragoza (Saragossa). Dominguito is the protagonist in one of the firstblood libel in the history of Spain – stories that grew in prominence in the 12th and 13th centuries of the Middle Ages, and contributed toantisemitic incidents. According to the legend, Dominguito was ritually murdered by Jews of Zaragoza.

Saint Dominguito is no longer included on the official Roman Catholic liturgical calendar; however, there is still a chapel dedicated to him in thecathedral of Zaragoza. There exists little historical evidence of Dominguito aside from the stories and legends built around him.

Dominguito's legend

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The historical basis for Dominguito is unclear. No medieval references to the legend have been found; the first texts that recount the tale date from 1583,[1] three hundred thirty-three years after the fact. The story appears to have been largely copied from the legend ofLittle Saint Hugh of Lincoln, collected by Fray Alonso de Espina. According to the accounts,Alfonso X of Castile wrote the original rendition of the story in 1250, saying: "We have heard it said that some very cruel Jews, in memory of thePassion of Our Lord onGood Friday, kidnapped a Christian boy and crucified him."[citation needed]

According to the legend, Dominguito was born on 1243 in Zaragoza and was admitted as a cathedral altar-boy and chorister atLa Seo because of his beautiful voice. He disappeared on 31 August 1250, when he was seven years old. Some months later, some boatmen discovered the decomposed corpse on the bank of Ebro river.[1]

The story goes that one day on his way home the boy met a Jew by the name of Albayuceto, who deceived him and brought him to a house in the Jewish quarter, where he was nailed to a cross and tortured until he died. In an effort to dispose of the body, they beheaded him, cut off his feet and buried the corpse on the banks of the Ebro River.[citation needed]

The child's bones were later interred in the cathedral, where in the chapel of Santo Dominguito del Val they are still revered as holy relics. Though he was officially removed from theRoman Martyrology after theSecond Vatican Council due to lack of historical proof,[2] Dominguito was still revered as a saint and celebrated in 31 August in thediocese of Zaragoza up to 2017.[3]

The story resembles others like the so-called "Holy Child" ofLa Guardia (inspired by a real inquisitorial process in 1491).

The story has similarities with other tales circulating in medieval Europe alleging the murder of a child at hands of Jews. These were symptomatic of the growing anti-Semitism in the Middle Ages. During the Middle Ages it was very frequent that in the face of any misfortune -weather, droughts, etc.- the Jewish community was blamed.[4] Often, these stories were used to rationalize imposing greater repressive measures against the Jews.[1]

References

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  1. ^abcGil, Sergio Martinez. "The Martyrdom of Santo Domenguito de Val", Historia de Aragon
  2. ^Kuznitzky, Adolfo (4 September 2014).Spanish Attitudes Toward Judaism: Strains of Anti-Semitism from the Inquisition to Franco and the Holocaust. McFarland. pp. 112, 181.ISBN 978-0-7864-7662-6. Retrieved25 May 2025.
  3. ^page 286 on the Spanish Catholic Liturgical Calendar 2016–2017.
  4. ^Winkler, Albert (2005)."The Medieval Holocaust: The Approach of the Plague and the Destruction of Jews in Germany, 1348-1349 Destruction of Jews in Germany, 1348-13".Faculty Publications: 7. Retrieved27 October 2022.

Sources

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