Saint Alban

Saint Alban

Infobox Saint
name=Saint Alban
birth_date=unknown
death_date= disputed: 22 June 209, c.251 or 304
feast_day=22 June
venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church; Anglican Communion; Eastern Orthodox Church


imagesize=200px
caption=Saint Alban
birth_place=Verulamium
death_place=Holywell Hill (formerly Holmhurst Hill), St Albans
titles=Martyr
beatified_date=
beatified_place=
beatified_by=
canonized_date=
canonized_place=
canonized_by=
attributes=Soldier with a very tall cross and a sword; decapitated, with his head in a holly bush and the eyes of his executioner dropping out
patronage=converts, refugees, torture victims
major_shrine=Cathedral and Abbey Church of St Alban
suppressed_date=
issues=
prayer=
prayer_attrib=

Saint Alban was the first British Christian martyr. [ [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01252b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Alban ] ] [ [http://www.stalbans.gov.uk/tourism/attractions.htm St Albans District Council - Tourism - Attractions ] ] Along with his fellow saints Julius and Aaron, Alban is one of three martyrs remembered from Roman Britain. Alban is listed in the Church of England calendar for 22 June and he continues to be venerated in the Anglican, Catholic, and Orthodox Communions. St Alban is mentioned in "Acta Martyrum", and also by Constantius of Lyon in his "Life of St Germanus of Auxerre", written about 480. He also appears in Gildas's 6th century polemic "De Excidio Britanniae".

In 2006 some Church of England clergy suggested that Alban should replace St George as the patron saint of England. [ [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=393651&in_page_id=1770&in_page_id=1770&expand=true "Will George be slayed as England's patron saint?"] , Daily Mail, 2 July 2006] . There have also been claims that he should be patron saint of Britain as a whole.

Life

According to Bede's "Ecclesiastical History of the English People," I.vii and xviii, Alban was a pagan living at Verulamium (now St Albans), who converted to Christianity, and was executed by decapitation on a hill above the Roman settlement of Verulamium. St Albans Abbey was later founded near this site.

The date of the execution is best left to the venerable Bede: "when the cruel Emperors first published their edicts against the Christians". In other words, sometime after the publication of the edicts by Eastern Roman Emperor Diocletian in 303 and before the proclamation of the toleration Edict of Milan by co-ruling Roman Emperors Constantine I and Licinius in 313. The year 304 has been suggested.Fact|date=December 2007

In 1968, English historian John Morris suggested that St Alban's martyrdom took place during the persecutions under Emperor Septimus Severus in 209. Morris bases his claims on earlier manuscript sources, unknown to Bede, especially an 8th-century copy of a 3rd century manuscript found in Turin which states, ""Alban received a fugitive cleric and put on his garment and his cloak ("habitu et caracalla") that he was wearing and delivered himself up to be killed instead of the priest.... and was delivered immediately to the evil Caesar Severus." St Gildas knew this source, but mistranslated the name "Severus" as an adjective, and wrongly identified the emperor as Diocletian. Bede accepted this identification as fact, and dated St Alban's martyrdom to this later period. As Morris points out, Diocletian reigned only in the East, and would not have been involved in British affairs in 304; Severus, however, was in Britain from 208 to 211. Morris thus dates Alban's death to 209 [ [http://www.roca.org/OA/35/35e.htm Orthodoxy’s Western Heritage – St. Alban the Martyr ] ] . Subsequent scholars (W.H.C. Frend and Charles Thomas for example) have argued that such a single, localized British martyrdom in 209 would have been unusual, and have suggested the period of 251-259 as more likely.

Alban sheltered a Christian priest (Geoffrey of Monmouth's later interpolation giving his name as "Amphibalus", the name for the cloak) in his home, and was converted and baptised by him. When the "impious prince", as Bede has called him, sent Roman soldiers to Alban's house to look for the priest, Alban exchanged cloaks with the priest and was arrested in his stead at Chantry Island. Alban was taken before the magistrate, who was furious at the deception and ordered that Alban be given the punishment due to the priest if he had indeed become a Christian. Alban declared, "I worship and adore the true and living God who created all things." These words are still used in prayer at St Albans Abbey. St Alban was eventually sacrificed to the Roman gods and was condemned to death. He was taken out of the town across the River Ver to the top of the hill opposite. The reputed place of his beheading is where St Albans Cathedral now stands.

Cult of Saint Alban

A cult connected with Alban was already in existence in the 6th century, for Bede quotes a line from one of the "Carmina" of Venantius Fortunatus, "Albanum egregium fæcunda Britannia profert" ("Fruitful Britain holy Alban yields").

Bede tells several legends associated with the story of Alban's execution. On his way to the execution, Alban had to cross a river, and finding the bridge full of people, he made the waters part and crossed over on dry land. And the executioner was so impressed with Alban's faith that he also converted to Christianity on the spot, and refused to kill him. Another executioner was quickly found (whose eyes dropped out of his head when he did the deed), and the first was killed after Alban, thereby becoming the second British Christian martyr.

Alban is represented in art as carrying his head between his hands, having been beheaded.

The "Albanifest", the largest annual festival to be held in a historic town in Switzerland, is named after him. This takes place in Winterthur, where Alban is one of the three city-saints.

Feast day: June 22.

The Fellowship of Saint Alban and Saint Sergius is named in part after Alban.

Besides his abbey, churches in England dedicated to Saint Alban include St Alban, Wood Street in the City of London, another in Withernwick in the East Riding of Yorkshire, and one in Southampton.

The Washington National Cathedral, an Episcopal Church in Washington DC, USA, is located on Mount St. Alban.

aint Alban of Mainz

Some details added to St Alban's tradition come from confusing him with another Saint Alban of Mainz, or Albinus, who was martyred at Mainz, where he was decapitated by the Vandals in 406.

An example is the coat of arms for the Austrian community of Matrei: it depicts St Alban with his head in his right hand and a sword in the left hand, although the local church is dedicated to Albinus.

hrine

In June 2002 a clavicle (collar bone), believed to be a relic of St Alban, was presented to St Albans Cathedral and placed inside the saint’s restored 13th century shrine. The bone was given by the Church of St Pantaleon in Cologne, Germany [http://www.sobornost.org/archive/newsletter-2002_50.html] . St Pantaleon's, like St Albans Cathedral a former Benedictine abbey church that had a shrine dedicated to St Alban, has possessed remains believed to be those of St Alban since the 10th century. It is entirely possible that further relics were acquired by the church in the 16th century at the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries in England, when many such relics were smuggled abroad to prevent their destruction. St Albans Abbey was dissolved in 1539.

The largest relic of St Alban in England is the thigh of the protomartyr preserved at St Michael's Benedictine Abbey, Farnborough, Hampshire, which was removed from the St Pantaleon's reliquary in the 1950s.

ee also

* Protomartyr
* Saint Alban's Cross

References

External links

* [http://kingsgarden.org/English/Organizations/LCC.GB/LCIS/Scriptures/LivesOfSaints/SaintAlban/BedeTheVenerable.html Bede, "Ecclesiastical History" Book i.vii] : the story of Saint Alban* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01252b.htm "Catholic encyclopedia":] St Alban
* [http://www.stalbanscathedral.org.uk/story-of-alban.htm "The Story of Alban"] on the Cathedral and Abbey Church of St Alban's website
* [http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/sainta34.htm "Alban"] on Catholic-Forum.com
* [http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/alban.html Early British Kingdoms: St Alban]


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