Saint Giles

Saint Giles (Latin gidius) was a 7th-8th century Christian hermit saint.

Life

Giles was first in retreats near the mouth of the Rhne and by the River Gard, in today's southern France. (A noble Athenian parentage is probably an embellishment of his early hagiographers.) Finally he withdrew deep into the forest near Nmes, where in the greatest solitude he spent many years, his sole companion being a deer, or hind. This last retreat was finally discovered by the king's hunters, who had pursued the hind to its place of refuge. The king, by legend an anachronistic Visigoth but who must have been a Frank at the period, conceived a high esteem for the solitary hermit whose humility rejected all honors save some disciples, and built him a monastery in his valley, which he placed under the Benedictine rule. Here he died in the early part of the 8th century, with the highest repute for sanctity and miracles.

Memory

Round his tomb in the Abbey sprang up the town of St-Gilles-du-Gard. His cult spread rapidly far and wide throughout Europe in the Middle Ages, as is witnessed by the numberless churches and monasteries dedicated to him in France, Germany, Poland, Hungary, and Great Britain; by the numerous manuscripts in prose and verse commemorating his virtues and miracles; and especially by the vast concourse of pilgrims who from all Europe flocked to his shrine. He is the patron saint of Edinburgh, Scotland.
   
In 1562 the relics of the saint were secretly transferred to Toulouse to save them from the anger of the Huguenots and the pilgrimage declined. With the restoration of a great part of the relics to the church of St. Giles in 1862, and the publicized rediscovery of his former tomb there in 1865, the pilgrimages recommenced. Besides the city of St-Gilles, which sprang up around the abbey, nineteen other cities bear his name. St-Gilles, Toulouse, and a multitude of French cities, Antwerp, Bridges, and Tournai in Belgium, Cologne and Bamberg, in Germany, Prague and Gran, Rome and Bologna in Italy, possess relics of St Giles. In medieval art he is depicted with his symbol, the hind. His emblem is also an arrow, and he is the patron saint of cripples. Churches named after him include St Giles-without-Cripplegate in London and St Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh, while in Chalfont St Giles both church and village are named after him. His feast day is September 1.

Other Saint Giles

He shares his feast day with another St Giles, an Italian hermit of the 10th century and a Blessed Giles, (d. about 1203) a Cistercian abbot of Castaneda in the Diocese of Astorga, Spain. Blessed Aegidius of Assisi is also known as Blessed Giles.

External link

Giles

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
national cycle network
pitcher
first air
john madden (director)
john madden (hockey)
john madden (football)
glory of their times
southland region
it sticks out half a mile
wilbur schwandt
matamata piako district
barbara jordan
wanganui
noe valley (san francisco)
blue cross
lees
blue shield
tab
hard news
soft news
dr. john
roadshow
soyuz 15
directive on the patentability of computer implemented inventions
soyuz 16
1914 in science
vauxhall and i
soyuz 17
otto of freising
lev demin
abortion in canada
language recognition chart
gennadi sarafanov
1870 in science
1951 in science
1888 in science
sky father
georgi grechko
fhn wind
close reading
tay syndrome
mr
fdf
diablo wind