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Saint Barbara
Sainte barbe
Saint Barbara in her tower, by Robert Campin, 1438
Virgin and Martyr
Born 3rd century AD, Nicomedia (in one version of her legend)
Died circa December 4, 306 AD, Nicomedia (in one version of her legend)
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church, Oriental Orthodoxy
Feast December 4
Attributes Three-windowed tower, palm, chalice, lightning, a crown of martyrdom
Patronage Artillerymen, masons, mathematicians, miners, military engineers, stonecutters, those who are afraid of lightning, and anyone who works at risk of sudden and violent death;

Saint Barbara, known in the Eastern Orthodox Church as the Great Martyr Barbara (3rd century - December 4, 306), was a Christian saint and martyr. Although there is no reference to her in the authentic early Christian writings, nor in the original recension of Saint Jerome's martyrology, veneration of her was common from the seventh century. Because of doubts about the historicity of her legend,[1] she was removed from the liturgical calendar of the Roman rite in 1969. However, she continues to be a popular saint in modern times, perhaps best known as the patron saint of artillerymen, military engineers, miners and others who work with explosives because of her old legend's association with lightning, and also of mathematicians. Many of the thirteen miracles in a 15th-century French version of her story turn on the security she offered that her devotees would not die without making confession and receiving extreme unction.[2]

Life[]

According to the legendary accounts of her life, Barbara was the daughter of a rich pagan named Dioscorus. She was carefully guarded by her father who kept her shut up in a tower in order to preserve her from the outside world. Having secretly become a Christian, she rejected an offer of marriage that she received through him. Before going on a journey, he commanded that a private bath-house be erected for her use near her dwelling, and during his absence Barbara had three windows put in it, as a symbol of the Holy Trinity, instead of the two originally intended. When her father returned, she acknowledged herself to be a Christian; upon this he drew his sword to kill her, but her prayers created an opening in the tower wall and she was miraculously transported to a mountain gorge, where two shepherds watched their flocks. Dioscorus, in pursuit of his daughter, was rebuffed by the first shepherd, but the second betrayed her and was turned to stone and his flock changed to locusts. Dragged before the prefect of the province, Martinianus, who had her cruelly tortured, Barbara held true to her faith. During the night, the dark prison was bathed in light and new miracles occurred. Every morning her wounds were healed. Torches that were to be used to burn her went out as soon as they came near her. Finally she was condemned to death by beheading. The father himself carried out the death-sentence, but in punishment for this he was struck by lightning on the way home and his body consumed.[3] Barbara was buried by a Christian, Valentinus, and her tomb became the site of miracles.

According to one version, she died on December 4,[4] 306[5] in her native Nicomedia, Bithynia, Asia Minor.

Veneration[]

Icon 01005 Sv. vmch

Russian icon of St. Barbara.

Saint Barbara is one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers (also known as Helpers in Need). Her association with the lightning that killed her father has caused her to be invoked against lightning and fire; by association with explosions, she is also the patron of artillery and mining. Her feast on 4 December was included in the Tridentine Calendar, having been introduced in Rome in the twelfth century. In 1729 that date was assigned to the celebration of Saint Peter Chrysologus, reducing that of Saint Barbara to a commemoration in his Mass.[6] In 1969, because the accounts of her life and martyrdom were judged to be entirely fabulous, lacking clarity even about the place of her martyrdom, it was removed from that calendar.[7] But she is still mentioned in the Roman Martyrology,[8] which, in addition, lists another ten martyr saints named Barbara.

Orthodox Christians have never ceased to venerate Saint Barbara, who is very popular among them. For them too her feast day is 4 December. In the 12th century, the relics of Saint Barbara were brought from Constantinople to the St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery in Kiev, where they were kept until the 1930s, when they were transferred to St. Vladimir's Cathedral in the same city.

Historicity of her legend[]

Although the legend of Saint Barbara is included in Vincent of Beauvais's Speculum historiale (xii.64) and in later versions of the Golden Legend[9] (and in William Caxton's version of it) and although she was one of the most popular saints of the Middle Ages, some scholars doubt its veracity and even her existence. There is no mention of her in the earlier martyrologies, though her name was known in Rome in the seventh century.[10] Her cultus did not spread until the ninth century, at first in the East.[11] Various versions, who include two surviving mystery plays, differ on the location of her martyrdom, which is variously given as Tuscany, Rome, Antioch, Heliopolis, and Nicomedia.[12]

The name "Barbara" literally means "a barbarian woman". Since the saint's family are described as being respectable Roman citizens, Barbara must have been already in use as a plain given name.

Sainte Barbe bis

Saint Barbara and her tower, French, (Villeloup, Aube) ca 1520-30 polychromed limestone

Patronage[]

Saint Barbara became the patron saint of artillerymen. She is also traditionally the patron of armourers, military engineers, gunsmiths, miners and anyone else who worked with cannon and explosives. She is invoked against thunder and lightning and all accidents arising from explosions of gunpowder. She is venerated by every Catholic who faces the danger of sudden and violent death in work.

The Spanish word santabárbara, the corresponding Italian word santabarbara, and the obsolete French sainte-barbe signify the powder magazine of a ship or fortress. It was customary to have a statue of Saint Barbara at the magazine to protect the ship or fortress from suddenly exploding.

Saint Barbara's Day, December 4, is celebrated by the British (Royal Artillery, RAF Armourers), Australian (RAAF Armourers), Canadian (Royal Canadian Artillery, Canadian Military Engineers), New Zealand (RNZAF Armourers, RNZA), Irish Defence Forces Artillery Regiments and other Artillery formations. The units and sub-units celebrate the day with church parades, sports days, guest nights, cocktail parties, dinners and other activities. The Order of Saint Barbara is a military honor society of the US for both the US Army and the US Marine Corps Artillery, including field artillery and Air Defense Artillery.

The day is also celebrated by the Artillery Corps of the Greek Army and the Cypriot National Guard. The Artillery camps throughout the two countries host celebrations in honor of the saint, where the traditional sweet of loukoumades is offered to soldiers and visitors, allegedly because it resembles cannonballs.[13]

The city of Santa Barbara, California, located approximately 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles, is so called because of the Franciscan mission there that was dedicated to her; it received that name in 1602, as a result of explorer Sebastian Vizcaino's gratitude for surviving a violent storm just offshore on December 3, the eve of her feast day. Other Spanish and Portuguese settlements named Santa Barbara were established in Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Honduras, Mexico, Philippines and Venezuela.[14] There were many churches dedicated in her name in Russia, including one in Moscow, next to Saint Basil's Cathedral, and in Yaroslavl.

Because of her identification with lightning, royalty, towers, and cannons, in Santería she is identified with Iansa, god of lightning and war.

In Georgia, Saint Barbara's Day is celebrated as Barbaroba on December 17 (which is December 4 in the old style calendar).[15] The traditional festive food is lobiani, bread baked with a bean stuffing.

In Macedonia Saint Barbara's day is celebrated as Варвара (Varvara) on 17 December. Most Macedonians make a celebration with their closest family and friends at home, while others stay at home and don't go anywhere due to believing that people who step in their house on Saint Barbara's day will give them either good or bad luck for the rest of the year.

In modern popular culture[]

Saint Barbara is mentioned in Federico García Lorca's play, La Casa de Bernarda Alba (1936). According to this drama, a popular Spanish phrase regarding this saint in the early 20th century was:

Blessed Santa Barbara, / Your story is writ in the sky, / With paper and holy water.

The first Spanish-language Telenovela filmed in color for TV in the US, was the 1973 production of Santa Bárbara, Virgen y Mártir, filmed entirely on location in Hialeah, Florida.

Saint Barbara is referenced in the song "Don't Let Me Explode" by the rock band The Hold Steady. Before performing the song at a 2006 Lollapalooza music festival, lead singer Craig Finn told the story of Saint Barbara to the crowd of several thousand fans. He compared being a Christian in her time to having facial tattoos.

GK Chesterton wrote the Ballad of Saint Barbara, interweaving the Legend of the Saint with the contemporary account of the huge artillery barrages that turned the First Battle of the Marne.

Saint Barbara is written into a central role in the Jimmy Buffett bestseller, A Salty Piece of Land, as well referenced in the song "Trouble on the Horizon."

In Robert A. Heinlein's Space Cadet (1948), Saint Barbara was referenced as the patron saint of Rocketmen due to the high likelihood of their deaths being sudden and caused by explosions. This may be seen as a natural progression from her use by Artillery units. In Space Cadet, a mass is dedicated to her after the deaths of several trainee patrolmen in a rocket crash.

In Shaenon K. Garrity's webcomic Narbonic, mad scientist Lupin Madblood exclaims, "What in the name of Saint Barbara was that?" in response to a massive explosion in his secret lair.

Saint Barbara's day or Eid il-Burbara is celebrated in Syria, Lebanon and Palestine among Arab Christians annually on December 4, in a feast day similar to that of North American Halloween.[16] The traditional food for the occasion is Burbara, a bowl of boiled barley, pomegranate seeds, raisins, anise and sugar offered to masquerading children.[17][18] The general belief among Lebanese Christians is that Saint Barbara disguised herself in numerous characters to elude the Romans who were persecuting her.

In art[]

Saint Barbara is depicted in art as standing by a tower with three windows, carrying a palm branch and a chalice, sometimes with cannons depicted by her side.

Gallery[]

See also[]

Religious[]

Artillery[]

  • Air Defense Artillery
  • Artillery
  • Oozlefinch
  • Field Artillery
  • Royal Artillery

References[]

  1. Medieval historian Norman F. Cantor referred to Barbara in passing as "entirely mythical', in In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World It Made 2002:84.
  2. Harry F. Williams, "Old French Lives of Saint Barbara" Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 119.2 (16 April 1975:156-185), with extensive bibliography.
  3. "St. Barbara"; this summary omits picturesque details, supplemented from old French accounts in Williams 1975:156f,
  4. in Legenda Aurea it is December 5;
  5. "in the reign of emperor Maximianus and Prefect Marcien (i.e. 286-305); 267 in the French version in Williams 1975.
  6. Calendarium Romanum (Libreria Editrice 1969), p. 98
  7. Calendarium Romanum (Libreria Editrice 1969), p. 147
  8. Martyrologium Romanum (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2001 ISBN 88-209-7210-7)
  9. B. de Gaiffier (Analecta bollandiana77 (1959)5-41, suggests that the Legenda Aurea version was inspired by one from the late 15th-century Augustinian Jean de Wackerzeele, also known as Jean de louvain (noted by Williams 1975:1758 note 17.
  10. Williams 1975:156-185.
  11. Alexander Joseph Denomy, "An old French life of Saint Barbara", Medieval Studies 1 (1939:148-78) publishes a 13th- or 14th-century poem in octasyllabic couplets; Willhelm Weyh, Die syrische Barbara-Legende (Schweinfurt, 1912), concludes that the first legenda was in Greek.
  12. Bulfinch, (2001). One Hundred Saints. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company.
  13. Cyprus Army notes on Saint Barbara
  14. Hammond Atlas of the World (1997), gazetteer.
  15. Saint Barbara's Day in Georgia, December 17
  16. Gervers, Michael; Bikhazi, Ramzi Jibran (1990). Conversion and Continuity: Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic Lands Eighth to Eighteenth Centuries. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. ISBN 0888448090, 9780888448095. 
  17. Terry Carter. Syria and Lebanon. p. 66. 
  18. Wilhelmina and George Baramki (February 2007). Winter Traditions in Palestine. Issue 106. http://www.thisweekinpalestine.com/details.php?id=2046&ed=136&edid=136. Retrieved 2008-12-04. 

External links[]

br:Barba bg:Варвара (светица) ca:Bàrbara (màrtir) cs:Barbora z Nikomédie eo:Barbara (Sankta) ka:წმინდა ბარბარე ko:바르바라 hr:Sveta Barbara lb:Helleg Bäerbel lt:Šv. Barbora li:Barbara hu:Szent Borbála arz:القديسه برباره ja:バルバラ (聖人) pt:Bárbara de Nicomédia ro:Sfânta Barbara qu:Barbara Nikomidyamanta ru:Варвара Илиопольская sk:Svätá Barbora sl:Sveta Barbara sr:Света Барбара fi:Pyhä Barbara sv:Barbara (helgon) tr:Barbara uk:Свята Варвара

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