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St. Piran of Cornwall (SAE 01) and His Shield Post Postcard
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Signature Matte
18 pt thickness / 120 lb weight Soft white, soft eggshell texture
-$0.30
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St. Piran of Cornwall (SAE 01) and His Shield Post Postcard
In the Early Middle Ages, Ireland was the source of many missionaries. Perhaps no Irish monk set out for his mission in a more dramatic fashion than St. Piran (Peran in Cornish; d. 480): He was thrown off a cliff in the middle of a storm with a millstone tied round his neck. Already somewhat advanced in years and with a well-deserved reputation for healing, St. Piran had incurred the jealousy of the local Irish chieftains. He did not die according to plan, however. Tradition tells us that the millstone popped up like a cork, acted as a raft, and St. Piran floated on it safely to the coast of Cornwall, England. Upon disembarking at Perran Beach, he made his first converts: a bear, a badger, and a fox. He built an oratory nearby which is, perhaps, still “the oldest place of Christian worship in England with its four walls still standing”. And, he established the Abbey of Lanpiran and several other churches, chapels, and holy wells. St. Piran died at his Oratory of natural causes on 5 March 480. + Here, St. Piran is clad in monk's robes and stands against a backdrop of his Shield. + The figure of St. Piran is a pastiche of elements—a hand here, another hand there, etc.--primarily drawn from various Pustet devotional prints grafted onto the base figure of St. Simon Stock. St. Piran’s Oratory held in his right hand is derived from a 19th-century engraving; the chough (or palores in Cornish) perched on his left hand, from heraldry. His brooch is patterned after an Irish altar stone. + Our St. Piran’s Shield is based on the Cornish Flag of St. Piran (q.v.). It is blazoned with a white cross on a sable black field. Our golden yellow background derives from the gold coins on the shield of the Duchy of Cornwall. Black, white, and gold constitute the Cornish colour scheme. + Image Credits (SAE 01): A Saints_Aplenty Exclusive and (St. Piran’s Shield): Saints_Aplenty. + St. Piran is patron saint of Cornwall, tin miners (and, by extension, miners in general), and Piran, Slovenia. [Other than the coincidence of name, we are at a loss to explain the Saint’s patronage of the Slovene city. Rather, St. George is usually cited. Clarification welcome.] + Feast: March 5
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Product ID: 256024422724342574
Posted on 29/01/2022, 10:04 AM
Rating: G
