- Iolande de Bar
Iolande de Bar (1428 – 1483) [http://www.exagonline.com/grand/plus/eng/soulosse.htm] was the daughter of
René d'Anjou . In 1445 she was married toFerri , lord ofSion-Vaudémont - which, under her auspices, was extended from a local pilgrimage center to a sacred site for the whole of Lorraine. In the distantpagan past the place had already enjoyed such status, and a statue ofRosemerthe , an oldGallo-Teutonic mother-goddess , was subsequently found there. Even in earlyChristian times the site was regarded as holy - although its name then wasMount Semita , implying something moreJudaic than Christian. [ [http://www.eliki.com/ancient/myth/celts/nf/gaul.htm Portail d'informations Ce site est en vente! ] ]During the
Merovingian epoch a statue of theVirgin had been erected there, and in 1070 the ruling count had publicly proclaimed himself 'vassal of theQueen of Heaven '. TheVirgin of Sion was officially declared 'Sovereign of the Comté of Vaudémont ', festivals were held in her honour every May and she was acknowledged Protectress of all Lorraine. [ [http://www.pantheon.org/mythica/articles/l/lugh.html Lugh ] ]A charter, dating from 1396, pertains to a specific
confraternity based on the mountain, theConfraternity of Chevaliers de Sion - which reputedly traced its origin to the old abbey on Mount Sion just outsideJerusalem . By the 15th century, however, Sion-Vaudémont seems to have lost some of its significance. Iolande restored to it something of its former glory. Her son, René, subsequently becameduke of Lorraine . On his parents instructions he was educated inFlorence , thus becoming well versed in theesoteric tradition and orientation of the academies. His tutor wasGeorges Antoine Vespucci , one ofBotticelli 's chief patrons and sponsors. [ [http://www.interchg.ubc.ca/fmuntean/POM2a1.html Interchange - UBC Information Technology ] ]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.