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Saint Eustace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christian Roman general martyred in AD 118
This article is about the 2nd-century saint. For the 6th-century saint, seeSaint Eustase. For the Lithuanian saint, seeAnthony, John, and Eustathios. For the abbot of Luxeuil, seeEustace of Luxeuil.


Eustace
Greek Orthodox icon of St. Eustathios
Martyr
Died118
Venerated inAnglican Communion
Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Oriental Orthodoxy
CanonizedPre-Congregation
Feast20 September (Western Christianity,Byzantine Christianity)
Thout 22 (Coptic Christianity)
AttributesChristian Martyrdom, bull; crucifix; horn; stag; oven
Patronageagainst fire; fire prevention; firefighters; hunters; hunting; huntsmen; trappers; against family discord; difficult situations; torture victims; Madrid

Saint Eustace (LatinizedEustachius orEustathius; Greek: Εὐστάθιος ΠλακίδαςEustathios Plakidas)[1] is revered as aChristian martyr. According to legend, he was martyred in AD 118, at the command of emperorHadrian. Eustace was a pagan Roman general, who converted to Christianity after he had a vision of the cross while hunting. He lost all his wealth, was separated from his wife and sons, and went into exile in Egypt. Called back to lead the Roman army by emperorTrajan, Eustace was happily reunited with his family and restored to high social standing, but after the death of Trajan, he and his family were martyred under Hadrian for refusing to sacrifice to pagan Roman gods.

Eustace was venerated in theByzantine Church from at least the 7th century. His veneration is attested for the Latin Church for the 8th century, but his rise to popularity in Western Europe happened in thehigh medieval period, during the 12th to 13th centuries. There are many versions and adaptations of his legend, in prose, in verse, and in the form of plays, inLatin,French and other languages. The saint, and scenes from his legend, were also frequently depicted in the figurative arts.[2]

Eustace is counted as one of theFourteen Holy Helpers. His feast day, both in Eastern and Western tradition, is on 20 September. TheArmenian Apostolic Church commemorates St. Eustace on 1 October.[3]

Legend

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GreekVita

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Great-martyr Eustathius Placidas with his family: wife Martyr Theopistes, and sons Martyrs Agapius and Theopistus. Fragment of Russian Menaion calendar icon (17th century)

The original tradition of the saint'spassion is Greek, the oldest surviving version (BHG 641) was composed at some point during the 5th to 7th centuries. Already in the Greek version, the later saint is a pagan general (στρατηλάτηςstratēlátēs) under Trajan, calledPlakidas. The Greek text also has all of the main elements found in the medieval Western accounts. Plakidas converted after he had a vision of a cross while hunting a stag and heard a divine voice prophesying his misfortune. Plakidas was baptized and took the nameEustathios ("steadfast"), his wife Tatiana took the baptismal nameTheopiste. Their two sons were namedAgapios andTheopistos.

Eustathios lost his estates and his wealth, and he and his family emigrated to Egypt. They could not pay for the passage, hence the ship's captain demanded to keep Theopiste for himself. Eustathios escaped with his two sons by swimming. But later, when crossing a river, his sons were taken by wild animals. Eustathios believed them dead, but they were saved.

Years later, Trajan called Eustathios back to Rome to fight the barbarians, and Eustathios once again took the rank of general and raised an army. Among the soldiers were, unbeknownst to him, his two sons.After defeating the barbarians, the general and his staff stayed in the house of an old woman. Agapios and Theopistos recognized each other. The old woman turned out to be their mother, Theopiste, who managed to escape from the ship's captain before he could dishonour her. She recognized her husband, and the entire family was reunited.

When Trajan was succeeded by Hadrian, the new emperor asked his general to sacrifice to the gods, and when Eustathios refused, he threw him and his family to the lions, but the wild animals lay down at their feet. Therefore, Hadrian ordered them to be killed in abrazen bull.The bodies of the martyrs were recovered in secrecy by Christians and buried in a "well-known place".

FrenchVita

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AVita in French prose was composed around the middle of the 13th century.[4]

Vision of Saint Eustace, fresco atOratorio di Santa Maria,Garbagna Nov. (Italy), late 15th century

In this version, the narrative begins with Placidus (Eustace's name before he wasbaptized) out hunting. He follows adeer into some woods and becomes separated from the group of hunters; the deer turns towards him. Placidus is then awestruck by a vision where he sees thecross between the antlers of the deer, and in that moment, he is commanded by the voice ofGod to be baptized along with his family on that very night by the Bishop of Rome. He is baptized and has his name changed to Eustace,[5] and then he receives another vision from a voice warning him of future trials for him and his family. They lose their goods, servants, livestock, andsocial status. They attempt to travel by boat, but cannot afford the voyage. Eustace and his two sons Agapius and Theopistus are then removed from the boat and separated from Eustace's wife Theopista. They arrive at a river where Eustace has to carry them across one at a time. After successfully taking one to the other side, Eustace attempts to collect the other. However, both of his sons are taken by animals while he is crossing the river: one by a lion and the other by a wolf. Unknown to Eustace, his sons are saved and raised independently.[2]

In the French tradition, Eustace then worked for fifteen years as a guard protecting fields until he was approached by two envoys ofRoman emperorTrajan who were sent to persuade him to return toRome and repel an uprising; Eustace complied. There in Rome, he was reinstated his original rank of general, led an army, and coincidentally, achieved victory in the home country of the captain who abducted his wife Theopista. Trading life stories after the battle, two soldiers discover they were the brothers abducted by animals, and overhearing them, Theopista recognizes her husband Eustace. Eustace and his family then return to Rome to celebrate at a victory dinner under the new Roman emperorHadrian who was less tolerant towardsChristians. Following the dinner, Hadrian requested Eustace and his family to make an offering to pagan gods; They refused. Eustace and his family were then thrown in a den of lions, but the lions did not touch them. Eustace and his family were then put into abrazen bull. They died, but their bodies were untouched by the flames.[6]

The Vision of St. Eustace, anonymous, German, 16th century, afterAlbrecht Dürer

Variants and adaptations

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Numerous adaptations of the saint's legend were composed, in verse and in prose, during the high medieval period, both in France and in Italy. There is "rhythmic Life" of 220 verses (BHL 2771) of the 9th or 10th century, and a 13th-century version of 2052 rhyming octosyllabic verses.The legend was also adapted into at least ten different medieval plays in varying forms.[7][8]

The legend up to St. Eustace's martyrdom is a variant of the narrative type "the Man Tried By Fate", which is also popular inchivalric romance in general.[9] Except for anexemplum inGesta Romanorum,[10] all such tales are highly developed romances, such asSir Isumbras.[11] One of the medieval adaptations of the Eustace material as chivalric romance is the SpanishBook of the Knight Zifar.

Historicity

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The historicity of Eustace cannot be substantiated, and he is widely seen as a "fictitious saint", i.e. an adaptation in the form of hagiography of what was originally a didactic or entertaining fiction.Hippolyte Delehaye (1919) did not believe in the saint's historicity.[12]TheBollandist commentator (Acta Sanctorum vol. 46, p. 209) considers two possibilities: that of the saint being entirely fictitious, or that of an unknown early oriental martyr whose original cult has vanished without a trace.The veneration of Eustace cannot be substantiated for times earlier than the 7th century, more than 501 years after his supposed martyrdom. The legend has little or no geographic detail, except for the "flight to Egypt", paralleling that of the Holy Family. The village ofBadioson (Βαδιοσών) where Eustace retires after the loss of his family is unknown, the riverHydaspes where Eustace fights his victorious battle with the "barbarians" alludes toAlexander the Great and bears no relation to any historical conflict fought by emperor Trajan (Trajan's Parthian campaign resulted in an uneasy stalemate and was interrupted by Trajan's death in 117); nor is Hadrian known to have actively persecuted Christians.[13]The origin of the Greek legend is most likely found in the Orient, likely Anatolia, perhapsCappadocia,where the stag has long been venerated in local cults.[14]

The similarity of the stag hunting scene with certain tales of theMabinogion have been explained by Vielle (1990) as reflecting an underlying "Celto-Galatian" model.[15]A distant Indian origin for the element of the "separated family" has been proposed by Gaster (1893), specifically the Buddhist tale ofPacatara andVisvantara from thePali canon (Dhammapada).[16]

Veneration

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In an unusually early image, Eustace accompaniesSaint George on a 10th-century Byzantine ivoryHarbaville Triptych (Louvre Museum).
MedievalReliquary of St. Eustace from the cathedral at Basel, Switzerland, now in theBritish Museum.

The veneration of Eustace originated in theEastern Orthodox Church wherein he is venerated asSaint Eustathios theGreat Martyr (Greek:Ἅγιος Εὐστάθιος ὁ Μεγαλομάρτυς). N. Thierry postulated that the tradition may have originated inCappadocia, pointing out that a large repertoire of images of the Vision of Eustace exist as frescoes in this region's early-Christian rock-cut churches. Thierry also notes a 7th-century Armeno-Georgian stele at theDavit Garedja monastery in present-day Georgia with a relief depicting the Vision of Eustace, and a relief on the chancel ofTsebelda inAbkhazia, dated variously from the 7th to the 9th century, that also depicts the Vision.[14]

Anon. (France),Untitled (St. Eustace), 19th century, woodcut,Department of Image Collections, National Gallery of Art Library, Washington, DC
In the wall painting in Canterbury Cathedral, St Eustace sees Jesus standing between the horns of a stag without a cross.

In the West, an early medieval church dedicated to him that existed inRome is mentioned in a letter ofPope Gregory II (731–741).[17]Hisiconography may have passed to the 12th-century West, before which time European examples are scarce, inpsalters, where the vision of Eustace, kneeling before a stag, illustratedPsalm 96, ii-12: "Light is risen to the just..."[18]

An early European depiction of Eustace, the earliest one noted in theDuchy of Burgundy, is carved on aRomanesque capital atVézelay Abbey.[19]Abbot Suger mentions the firstrelics of Eustace in Europe, at an altar in the royalBasilica of St Denis;[20]Philip Augustus of France rededicated the church of Saint Agnès, Paris, which becameSaint-Eustache (rebuilt in the 16th–17th centuries). The story of Eustace was popularized inJacobus de Voragine'sGolden Legend (c. 1260). Scenes from the story, especially of Eustace kneeling before the stag, then became popular subjects of medieval religious art: examples include a wall painting atCanterbury Cathedral andstained glass windows at theCathedral of Chartres.

Eustace became known as apatron saint of hunters and firefighters, and also of anyone facing adversity; he was traditionally included among theFourteen Holy Helpers.[21] He is the patron of hunters especially inBavaria andAustria, while in France, Belgium and Western Germany, it is more common to findHubert of Liège in this role.In theAnglican tradition, he has a (hunter's) horn as his attribute.[22] He also is one of thepatron saints ofMadrid,Spain.Saint Eustace is honored in County Kildare, Ireland. There is a church dedicated to him on the campus ofNewbridge College in Newbridge, County Kildare, and the schools' logo and motto is influenced by the vision of Saint Eustace. (However, the nearby village ofBallymore Eustace refers to the FitzEustace family.)

InArmenia, Erewmanavank ("Convent of the Holy Apparition") nearEgin was said to be built on the actual location of the encounter of Placidus with the deer. The earliest surviving text detailing this is a manuscript from 1446, but the monastery is far older than that and probably a Byzantine foundation; J.-M. Thierry considers it to be a 10th-century foundation, perhaps by Greeks from Cappadocia. Although the monastery was destroyed during theArmenian genocide, Thierry, in the 1980s, noted that a transmitted form of the legend still existed among local Muslim Kurds who talked of a "deer of light" appearing at the site.[23]InGeorgian mythology, Saint Eustace became associated with the hunting deityApsat, patron of game animals.[24]

Saint Eustache's feast day in theRoman Catholic Church, as is also in the Eastern Orthodox Church, is September 20, as indicated in theRoman Martyrology.[25] The celebration of Saint Eustache and his companions was included in theRoman Calendar from the twelfth century until 1969, when it was removed because of the completely fabulous character of the saint'sActa,[25][26] resulting in a lack of sure knowledge about them. However, his feast is still observed by Roman Catholics who follow the pre-1970 Roman Calendar.Saint Eustace's commemoration was removed from the General Roman Calendar in 1970, though he continued to be commemorated in the latest edition of the Roman Martyrology.[25] Local observance is still practiced.[27]

Chiesa di S. Eustachio, Tocco da Casauria

Sant'Eustachio is also honoured inTocco da Casauria, a town in the province of Pescara in the Abruzzo region of central Italy. The town's church, built in the twelfth century, was dedicated to Saint Eustace. It was rebuilt after being partially destroyed by an earthquake in 1706.

The island ofSint Eustatius in theCaribbean Netherlands is named after him.Also St Eustachius church is situated in Pakiapuram village, Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu, India. Another church is situated in the name of St. Eustachius (St. Esthakiyar in Tamil) in Mittatharkulam, near valliyoor in Tirunelveli district.


See also

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Further reading

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References

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  1. ^"Given name Eustace".Behind the Name. RetrievedOctober 29, 2015.English form of EUSTACHIUS or EUSTATHIUS, two names of Greek origin which have been conflated in the post-classical period.
  2. ^abHourihane 2002, p. 60.
  3. ^LLC, Helix Consulting."Armenian Church commemorates St. Eustatheos, his wife Theophista and others".www.panorama.am.
  4. ^La Vie de saint Eustace. Version en prose française du XIIIe siècle, éditée par Jessie Murray. Paris, H. Champion, 1929.
  5. ^"Saint Eustace".Treasures of Heaven.Columbia University. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2024.According to legend, the Roman general Placidus was out hunting a stag when an image of Jesus on the cross appeared between the animal's antlers, inspiring him to convert to Christianity and adopt the name Eustace.
  6. ^Hourihane 2002, p. 60 & 61.
  7. ^Muir, Lynette (July 5, 2007).Love and Conflict in Medieval Drama: The Plays and Their Legacy. Cambridge University Press. p. 14.ISBN 978-0-521-82756-0.
  8. ^Muir, Lynette (2007).Love and Conflict in Medieval Drama: The Plays and Their Legacy. Cambridge University Press. p. 14.ISBN 978-0-521-82756-0.
  9. ^Hibbard, Laura A. (1963).Medieval Romance in England. New York: Burt Franklin. p. 5.
  10. ^Wikisource text of the Gesta Romanorum story.
  11. ^Hibbard 1963, p. 3.
  12. ^H. Delehaye, « La légende » (1919), 181–183.
  13. ^Hadrian called for leniency towards Christians, and asked that they should be protected against false accusations; Alessandro Galimberti, "Hadrian, Eleusis, and the beginnings of Christian apologetics" in Marco Rizzi, ed., Hadrian and the Christians. Berlim: De Gruyter (2010) 77f
  14. ^abThierry, N. "Le culte du cerf en Anatolie et la Vision de saint Eustathe" in" Monuments et mémoires de la Fondation Eugène Piot" 1991, pp. 33–100.
  15. ^Christophe Vielle, « D'un mythe celtique à un roman hagiographique galate »,Ollodagos, 1/3 (1990), 75–109.
  16. ^M. Gaster, Journal of the Royal asiatic Society (London), 1893, 869–871.
  17. ^Krautheimer, R.,Corpus basilicarum christianarum Romae (1940) vol. I:216f and Krautheimer,Rome: Profile of a City 1980:80f, 252, 271.
  18. ^Kirk Thomas Ambrose,The Nave Sculpture of Vézelay: The Art of Monastic Viewing (Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies) 2006:45 gives examples.
  19. ^Ambrose 2006:45.
  20. ^The Eustace venerated at Saint-Denis may have beenEustace of Luxeuil, the second abbot of Luxueil, from 611.
  21. ^"St. Eustace • V&A Blog". September 20, 2014.
  22. ^We find on the authority of Mr. Parker in his work entitled the Calendar of the Anglican Church, and also in a work called Emblems of Saints, that St. Eustace was also sometimes represented carrying a horn (1878).The Archaeological journal. Longman, Brown, Green, and Longman. p. 281.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^THIERRY, M., "Deux couvents gréco-arméniens sur l'Euphrate taurique", Byzantion, 61 (1991): 499–506.
  24. ^Tuite, Kevin (2015).The institutional and vernacular cults of the military saints in the western Caucasus: Image-mediated diffusion and body shift in the cult of St Eustace in the western Caucasus(PDF). "On the Road to Paradise: Peripheral Visions, Unorthodox Iconographies," Canadian Anthropological Society. p. 4.
  25. ^abc"Martyrologium Romanum" (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2001ISBN 88-209-7210-7)
  26. ^"Calendarium Romanum" (Libreria Editrice Vaticana), p. 139
  27. ^"Roman Martyrology September, in English".

Sources

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Gallery

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  • Saint Eustace, from a 13th-century English manuscript.
    Saint Eustace, from a 13th-century English manuscript.
  • On a wing of the Paumgartner altarpiece, Albrecht Dürer painted Lukas Paumgartner with the banner of his patron, St. Eustace, in the contemporary armor of a Landsknecht.
    On a wing of thePaumgartner altarpiece,Albrecht Dürer painted Lukas Paumgartner with the banner of his patron, St. Eustace, in the contemporary armor of aLandsknecht.
  • Saint Eustachius, an engraving by Albrecht Dürer, ca. 1501. As in the Pisanello above, he kneels before a stag with a cross in its antlers, surrounded by dogs, including greyhounds.
    Saint Eustachius, an engraving byAlbrecht Dürer, ca. 1501. As in thePisanello above, he kneels before a stag with a cross in its antlers, surrounded by dogs, including greyhounds.
  • Saint Eustace icon, an example of the Cretan School.
    Saint Eustace icon, an example of theCretan School.
  • Francesco Ferdinandi, The Martyrdom of St. Eustace. Located behind the main altar at the Church of Sant'Eustachio, Rome, this painting follows the narrative in the Golden Legend: For refusing to sacrifice to the gods, St. Eustace and his wife and sons are to be enclosed in a Brazen bull which will be heated until they die.
    Francesco Ferdinandi, The Martyrdom of St. Eustace. Located behind the main altar at the Church of Sant'Eustachio, Rome, this painting follows the narrative in theGolden Legend: For refusing to sacrifice to the gods, St. Eustace and his wife and sons are to be enclosed in aBrazen bull which will be heated until they die.
  • The stag-and-cross symbol of
    The stag-and-cross symbol of
  • The Hunting Gonfalon, 18th C., Ukraine
    The Hunting Gonfalon, 18th C.,Ukraine

External links

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