| Index: > A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
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| Saint Catherine of Alexandria | |
|---|---|
| Martyr | |
| Born | after AD 282 (?) |
| Died | after AD 300 (?) |
| Venerated in | Eastern Orthodoxy; formerly by Roman Catholics |
| Feast | November 25, formerly |
| Attributes | Wheel |
| Patron saint of | Gunners, wheelwrights |
Saint Catherine of Alexandria, known as Saint Catherine of the Wheel, is an apocryphal figure claimed to have been a noted scholar in the early 4th Century who, at the age of only 18, is said to have visited the Emperor Maximinus II and to have convinced him of the error of his ways in persecuting Christians. According to legend, she also converted many pagans, who were subsequently murdered. The legend of Catherine continues that she was condemned to death on the wheel (an instrument of torture), but that it broke when she touched it, so she was beheaded. Her symbol is the spiked wheel, which became known as the Catherine wheel, and her feast day was formerly 25 November.
In an elaboration of the legend, angels carried her body to Mt. Sinai, where in the 6th century AD, the Eastern Emperor Justinian established Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai, the church being built between 548-565. Saint Catherine's Monastery survives, a famous repository of early Christian art , architecture and illuminated manuscriptAn illuminated manuscript is a manuscript, often of a religious nature, in which the text is supplemented by the addition of colourful ornamentation, such as decorated initials, borders and the like. Motifs used in illumination are frequently taken from hs.
In another development of the legend, having rejected many offers of marriage, she was transported to heaven in vision and betrothed to Christ by the Virgin Mary, the ancient theme of the mystical marriage to the deity that is familiar in the ecstatic mythology of the eastern Mediterranean and Anatolia.
Catherine (literally 'the pure one') probably did not exist. She was more an ideal exemplary figure than a historical one. In 1969, the Catholic Church removed her feast day from its general calendar, citing a lack of historical evidence for her existence. Secular scholars confirm this view [1]. She did certainly form an exemplary counterpart to the pagan philosopher Hypatia of AlexandriaHypatia of Alexandria (d. 415) was a neo-Platonic philosopher, mathematician, and teacher who lived in Alexandria, then a Greek settlement. Several works are attributed to her by later sources, including commentaries on Diophantus's Arithmetica on Apollon in the medieval mindset; and it has been suggested that she was invented specifically for that purpose. Like Hypatia, she is said to have been highly learned (in philosophy and theology), very beautiful, sexually pure, and to have been brutally murdered for publicly stating her beliefs; conveniently 105 years before Hypatia's death (although first records mentioning her, or one of her variants, date much later).
The 1908 Catholic EncyclopediaThe Catholic Encyclopedia is an English-language encyclopedia published in 1913 by the Roman Catholic Church, designed to give "authoritative information on the entire cycle of Catholic interests, action and doctrine". Starting in 1993, the encyclopedia ( describes the historical importance of the belief in her as follows:
[1] See, for example, Harold Thayler Davis: "Alexandria: The Golden City" (Principia Press of Illinois, 1957).
Christian martyrs Christian mythology