Thursday, February 4, 2010

Just missed it – St. Blaise Day

I got the 2010 Spin-Off wall calendar for Christmas and it hangs in my office.  It has all kinds of interesting fiber-related events and holidays on it, some of which are new to me.Yesterday (February 3) was St. Blaise Day.  Who is St. Blaise?  Well, you could read the Wikipedia entry and hope that it’s generally correct.  And if you’re a librarian and can’t help it, you cross-check this information in a reputable, reliable source.  In this case, I checked the New Catholic Encyclopedia (which we have convenient online access to via GVRL) and found this:

BLAISE OF SEBASTE, ST.

Bishop and martyr under the Emperor Licinius; b. Sebaste, Armenia; d. c. 316. According to legend, during persecution he withdrew from his bishopric of Sebaste to a cave, remaining until he was discovered in a hunt for beasts. Agricolaus, Governor of Cappadocia and Lesser Armenia, had him tortured and later beheaded for his faith. In prison he healed a boy with a fishbone stuck in his throat. Blaise had become the patron of throat diseases in the East by the 6th century, and in the West by the 9th century. He became one of the FOURTEEN HOLY HELPERS. The blessing of throats with candles began in the 16th century, when his cult was at its peak. He is the patron of the city of Ragusa and also of many tradesmen, including woolcarders (the iron comb was an instrument of his tortures). He is invoked to protect animals against wolves and to bring fair weather. His feast day was observed in the West on February 15 until the 11th century; it is celebrated on February. 11 in the East, bringing winter to a close.

Feast: Feb. 3

Bibliography: R. JANIN, Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie ecclésiastiques, ed. A. BAUDRILLAT et al. (Paris 1912–) 9:69. P. WIERTZ, Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche, ed. J. HOFER and K. RAHNER, 10 v. (2d, new ed. Freiburg 1957–65) 2:525–526. M. C. CELLETTI, Biblioteca sanctorum (Rome 1961–) 3:158–165.

[M. J. COSTELLOE]

Okay, did you get the part about iron wool combs being his instrument of torture?  That is NASTY!  Here is a photo of a set of iron combs from 18th century England on an antiques website:

ELM AND IRON CARDING COMBS

All I have to say is OUCH.

And that concludes our history lesson for today.

1 comment:

  1. Holy crap! I love the name St. Blaise. It sounds so breezy. Not like the name of a cave-dwelling hermit who gets stabbed with pointy things.

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