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St. Brigid of Ireland and Her Barrel of Beer Card
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Paper Type
Signature Matte
18 pt thickness / 120 lb weight Soft white, soft eggshell texture
-$0.30
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St. Brigid of Ireland and Her Barrel of Beer Card
St. Brigid of Ireland (c. 451-c. 525) is the fourth saint featured in our Apron Series. A 6th-century Gaelic nun, St. Brigid founded the famous double monastery at Kildare (the “church of the oak") as well as several other Irish nunneries. She was a well-known miracle worker for the poor and is especially associated with beer. + Beer was an important staple of the medieval diet, not just a recreational drink. Safer to drink than the local, often polluted water, beer was considered a nutrient, earning a reputation as ‘liquid bread.’ In St. Brigid’s day, beer was a gruit, an herbal brew made from unmalted barley (Hordeum vulgare) and flavored with bog myrtle (Myrica gale) or meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria), not hops (Humulus lupulus). Hops were not used in Irish beer-making until the 16th century due to limited regional availability. + According to tradition, St. Brigid once turned ordinary bathwater into beer to provide for the patients of a leper colony when their supply ran dry. Similarly, another time, she turned bathwater into beer to fete the leper colony’s visiting clerics. Finally, one year, late in Holy Week, she miraculously furnished beer from Maundy Thursday until Easter Sunday to some 18 local churches from a single bottomless barrel. + So important was beer to her, St. Brigid wished even the saints in heaven and God Himself could enjoy its pleasures, allegedly authoring a poem to that effect. + In this artwork, St. Brigid holds an oversized glass beer mug or stein against a green background patterned with a sprig of bog myrtle (Myrica gale). The figure of St. Brigid was extracted and modified from an 1881 commemorative devotional print (holy card) originally published in chromolithography by B. K. [B. Kühlen], at Mönchengladbach, Germany, and is from the designer’s private collection of religious ephemera. The sprig of bog myrtle comes from an 1885 German botanical print. The barrel in the middle ground is from OpenClipart-Vectors; the barley ‘arch', from Clker-Free-Vector-Images. + Feast: February 1 (St. Brigid’s Day coincides with Imbolc, a traditional Gaelic seasonal festival with Celtic origins, marking the first day of spring in Ireland. Since 2023, St. Brigid’s Day has been celebrated as a national public holiday in her honor.)
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Kay C.31 October 2020 • Verified Purchase
Folded Greeting Card, Size: Standard, 12.7 cm x 17.8 cm, Paper: Signature Matte, Envelopes: White
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This card was so lovely and my granddaughter opened the card and hugged it as it had a unicorn on the front and her name
And I added a picture inside of us
And when her mummy Asked her who it was from she said my nanny and grandad and hugged the card she can’t read yet but knew who it was from. ❤️. Excellent quality of printing colour
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Kaye G.14 December 2025 • Verified Purchase
Folded Greeting Card, Size: Standard, 12.7 cm x 17.8 cm, Paper: Signature Matte, Envelopes: White
Great customer service and the cards were awesome… Could not find engagement cards in any stores so glad I came across your site.
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Anonymous8 June 2025 • Verified Purchase
Folded Greeting Card, Size: Standard, 12.7 cm x 17.8 cm, Paper: Signature Matte, Envelopes: White
Great service - was sent out from UK to New Zealand then I posted it back to the UK. Good turn around and looked even better than I had expected. thanks. .
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Product ID: 256314220947967835
Posted on 19/01/2026, 11:32 PM
Rating: G
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