Agnes of Rome Biography

Christian virgin and saintFor other uses, see Saint Agnes (disambiguation).

Agnes of Rome (c. 291:– c.  304) is a virgin martyr, venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church, Oriental Orthodox Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church, as well as the Anglican Communion and Lutheran Churches. She is one of several virgin martyrs commemorated by name in the Canon of the M*.

Biography

Substantially the broader social cir*stances of her martyrdom are believed to be authentic, though the legend cannot be proven true, and many details of the fifth-century Acts of Saint Agnes are open to criticism. A church was built over her tomb, and her relics venerated.

According to tradition, Agnes was a member of the Roman nobility, born in AD 291 and raised in an early Christian family. She suffered martyrdom at the age of twelve or thirteen during the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian, on 21 January 304.

A beautiful young girl from a wealthy family, Agnes had many suitors of high rank, and the young men, slighted by her resolute devotion to religious purity, submitted her name to the pagan authorities as a follower of Christianity.

The Prefect Sempronius condemned Agnes to be dragged naked through the streets to a brothel. In one account, as she prayed, her hair grew and covered her body. It was also said that all of the men who attempted to rape her were immediately struck blind. The son of the prefect was struck dead but revived after she prayed for him, causing her release. There commenced a trial from which Sempronius recused himself, allowing another figure to preside and sentence St. Agnes to death. She was led out and bound to a stake, but the bundle of wood would not burn, or the flames parted away from her, whereupon the officer in charge of the troops drew his sword and beheaded her, or, in some other texts, stabbed her in the throat. It is also said that her blood poured to the stadium floor where other Christians soaked it up with cloths.

Agnes depicted on the medieval Royal Gold Cup in the British Museum

Agnes was buried beside the Via Nomentana in Rome. A few days after her death, her foster-sister, Emerentiana, was found praying by her tomb; she claimed to be the daughter of Agnes' wet nurse, and was stoned to death after refusing to leave the place and reprimanding the people for killing her foster-sister. Emerentiana was also later canonized. The daughter of Constantine I, Constantina, was said to have been cured of leprosy after praying at Agnes' tomb. She and Emerentiana appear in the scenes from the life of Agnes on the 14th-century Royal Gold Cup in the British Museum.

An early account of Agnes' death, stressing her young age, steadfastness and virginity, but not the legendary features of the tradition, is given by Ambrose.

Veneration

Agnes was venerated as a saint at least as early as the time of St Ambrose, based on an existing homily. She is commemorated in the Depositio Martyrum of Filocalus (354) and in the early Roman Sacramentaries.

Saint Agnes' bones are conserved beneath the high altar in the church of Sant'Agnese fuori le mura in Rome, built over the catacomb that housed her tomb. Her skull is preserved in a separate chapel in the church of Sant'Agnese in Agone in Rome's Piazza Navona.

Agnes is remembered in the Anglican Communion with a Lesser Festival on 21 January.

Patronage

Santa Inés, Guarino, 1650

Because of the legend around her martyrdom, Saint Agnes is patron saint of those seeking chas*y and purity. She is also the patron saint of young girls and girl scouts. Folk custom called for them to practise rituals on Saint Agnes' Eve (20–21 January) with a view to discovering their future husbands. This supers*ion has been immortalised in John Keats's poem The Eve of Saint Agnes.

Iconography

Since the Middle Ages, Saint Agnes has traditionally been depicted as a young girl with her long hair down, with a lamb, the symbol of both her virginal innocence and her name, and a sword (together with the palm branch an attribute of her martyrdom). The lamb, which is agnus in the Latin language, is also the linguistic link to the traditional blessing of lambs referred to below.

Blessing of the lambs

On the feast of Saint Agnes, two lambs are traditionally brought from the Trappist abbey of Tre Fontane in Rome to be blessed by the Pope. In summer, the lambs are shorn, and the wool is used to weave the pallia, which the Pope gives on the feast of Saint Peter and Paul to the newly appointed metropolitan archbishops as a sign of his jurisdiction and their union with the pope. This tradition of the blessing of the lambs has been known since the 16th century.

Notable churches

The relic of the skull of Saint Agnes in Sant'Agnese in Agone, Rome
  • Basilica of St James and St Agnes, Nysa, Poland
  • St Agnes Cathedral, Rockville Centre, New York
  • St Agnes Church, New York City
  • Sant'Agnese in Agone, Rome
  • Sant'Agnese fuori le mura, Rome
  • Sainte-Agnès:, Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, Canada
  • St Agnes, St Agnes, Cornwall, England
  • St Agnes, Cologne, Germany
  • St Agnes, Cawston, Norfolk, England
  • St Agnes' Church, St Agnes, Isles of Scilly, England
  • St Agnes Cathedral, Springfield, Missouri, US
  • St Agnes Church, Saint Paul, Minnesota

Legacy

The Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes is a Roman Catholic religious community for women based in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, US. It was founded in 1858, by Father Caspar Rehrl, an Austrian missionary, who established the sisterhood of pioneer women under the patronage of Agnes, to whom he had a particular devotion.

St. Agnes vs Rome

The city of Santa Ynez, California is named after her.

Cultural references

Hrotsvitha, the 10th-century nun and poet, wrote a heroic poem about Agnes.

In the historical novel Fabiola or, the Church of the Catacombs, written by Cardinal Nicholas Wiseman in 1854, Agnes is the soft-spoken teenage cousin and confidant of the protagonist, the beautiful noblewoman Fabiola.

The Eve of St. Agnes is a Romantic narrative poem written by John Keats in 1819.

The instrumental song "Saint Agnes and the Burning Train" appears on the 1991 album The Soul Cages by Sting.

The song "Bear's Vision of St. Agnes" appears on the 2012 album Ten Stories by rock band mewithoutYou.

The St. Agnes Library is a branch of the New York Public Library located on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, on Amsterdam Avenue between West 81st and West 82nd Streets.

Gallery

  • 18th-century statue of Saint Agnes and the Lamb of God by Vincenzo Felici, located in the Pantheon, Rome, Italy
  • 9th-century mosaic in the Church of St. Praxedes, Rome
  • 16th-century polychrome statue in Burgos Cathedral, Spain
  • The saint's statue is among those on the colonnade in St. Peter's Square.
  • 1593 by Girolamo Campagna Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari
  • Statue in Gora Oljka, Slovenia
  • Saint Agnes (M*imo Stanzione) in Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya
  • Matthias Grünewald, c. 1500, tempera on coniferous wood, Kunsammlungen der Veste Coburg, Coburg
  • Statue of Saint Agnes, Camarin, Caloocan, Philippines
  • Santa Inês by Francisco de Zurbarán
  • 17th-century painting by Cesare Dandini
  • Sculpture in the Parish church of Urtijëi
  • A statue of Saint Agnes that survived the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, formerly of Urakami Cathedral, now on display at the United Nations Headquarters
  • Saint Agnes with John the Baptist by Quentin Matsys
  • Pencil drawing by Johann Friedrich Overbeck
  • Saint Agnes Protected by an Angel, painting by Alessandro Turchi

See also

  • List of Catholic saints
  • Saint Agnes of Rome, patron saint archive

References

    Further reading

    • Of Saint Agnes in "Ælfric's Lives of Saints", by Ælfric of Eynsham London, Pub. for the Early English text society, by N. Trübner & co. (1881).
    • Henry Gardiner Adams, ed. (1857). "Agnes, Saint". A Cyclopaedia of Female Biography: 14. Wikidata:Q115376221.
    • Kirsch, Johann Peter (1907). "St. Agnes of Rome":. In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol.:1. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

    External links

    Wikisource has original text related to this article:The Eve of St. AgnesWikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Agnes of Rome.
    • "St Agnes – St Peter's Square Colonnade Saints"
    • Satucket.com, St. Agnes of Rome
    • "Saint Agnes" at the Christian Iconography website
    • "Of Saint Agnes" from the Caxton translation of the Golden Legend
    • Remarks on the feast of St. Agnes from St. Ambrose of Milan, On Virgins
    • Saint Agnes – The patron saint of young girls.
    Agnes of Rome