Saint George
| Saint George of Lydda | |
|---|---|
"St. George fighting the Dragon" by Raphael (1505) | |
| Martyr and Victory Bringer | |
| Born | Born::275 AD, Lydda, Judaea, Roman Empire |
| Died | Died::April 23, 303 AD, Nicomedia, Bithynia, Roman Empire |
| Venerated in | Roman Catholicism Eastern Orthodoxy Oriental Orthodoxy Anglicanism Lutheranism |
| Major shrine | St. George's Church, Lod, Israel |
| Feast | April 23 (Roman Catholic) November 3 (Russian Orthodox) May 5-May 6 (Palestine) Fouth Sundy in June (Malta) Third Sunday in July (Gozo) November 23 (Georgia) |
| Attributes | Lance, Dragon, Horseback Rider, Knighthood, Military, St. George's Cross. |
| Patronage | Aragon, Bulgaria, Catalonia, England, Ethiopia, Georgia, Greece, Lithuania, Malta, Palestine, Portugal and Russia. |
Saint George (Latin: Georgius; Greek: Γεώργιος, Geōrgios; "Name means::worker of the land") (Born::275 AD–Died::April 23, 303 AD) was a Roman soldier in the Guard of Diocletian who, following his torture and execution for having renounced the Emperor's edict against Christians serving in the Roman Army and declaring his worship of Jesus Christ, became venerated as a Christian martyr.
Biography
Dragon Slaying
Saint George is best known for slaying a dragon. The tale of St. George and the Dragon was included in Jacobus de Voragine's Legenda Aurea (or Golden Legend), a collection of Saints' lives compiled around the year 1260 and translated into English and published by William Caxton in 1483.
Cathedrals have been built in recognition of and named after St. George in Ontario, Canada (1828), Perth, Australia (1888), and London, England (1848). There are also several in the United States. These cathedrals all proudly display a painting or relic somewhere depicting the slaying of the dragon by St. George.
A modern version of the legend says:
Gallery
Battle of the Archangel Michael with the Dragon - by Raphael
Battle of St. George the dragon - by Lucas Cranach
References
External Links
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