Difference between revisions of "Category:Relics of Stephen (subject)"

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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Stephen%27s_Episcopal_Pro-Cathedral_(Wilkes-Barre,_Pennsylvania) St. Stephen's Episcopal Pro-Cathedral], Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania -- Construction of the neo-Romanesque building was completed in 1897-99. St. Stephen's is the Pro-Cathedral in the Diocese of Bethlehem.
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Stephen%27s_Episcopal_Pro-Cathedral_(Wilkes-Barre,_Pennsylvania) St. Stephen's Episcopal Pro-Cathedral], Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania -- Construction of the neo-Romanesque building was completed in 1897-99. St. Stephen's is the Pro-Cathedral in the Diocese of Bethlehem.
== External links ==


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 11:17, 25 November 2021


According to Christian traditions, Relics of Stephen are (or were) preserved in several locations, notably, the Church of Saint Lawrence outside the Walls in Rome [Italy], the Church of Saint Stephen in Venice [Italy] and the Church of the Holy Trinity of St. Sergius Lavra at Sergiyev Posad [Russia].

Overview

According to the Acts of Apostles, Stephen was the first Christian martyr, being stoned in Jerusalem around 36 CE; see Martyrdom of Stephen. Relics of Stephen include remains of his body, and places associated to his death and burial

The Body of Stephen

The Acts claim that the body of Stephen was buried by some (unnamed) "devout men"; see Burial of Stephen, which some later Christian traditions identified with Nicodemus and Gamaliel.

In 415 CE a certain priest named Lucian claimed to have learned by revelation that the remains of Stephen were in Caphar Gamala, some distance to Jerusalem, together with those of Nicodemus, Rabbi Gamaliel, and of one of his two sons, Abibos. The relics were then exhumed and carried first to the church of Mount Sion, then, in 460, to the basilica erected by Eudocia outside the Damascus Gate, on the spot where, according to tradition, the stoning had taken place.

During the reign of Emperor Theodosius the Younger (408-450), the relics of Stephen were translated to Constantinople.

According to a tradition, (some) relics of Stephen reached Rome at the end of the 6th century where they have been venerated until today in the Church of St Lawrence outside the Walls, along with those of St Lawrence.

After the sack of Constantinople in 1204, relics of Stephen resurfaced and were venerated in many churches and sanctuaries across Europe.

A tradition locates the tomb of Stephen in the Church of St Stephen in Venice [Italy]. The whole right arm of Stephen is said to be preserved at the Holy Trinity of St. Sergius Lavra, established by St. Sergius of Radonezh in 1345, at Sergiyev Posad, Russia.

The Stoning Place of Stephen at Jerusalem

There are two different traditions about the site of the stoning of Stephen. One locates the scene of St. Stephen's martyrdom east of Jerusalem, near the Lions' Gate (called since St. Stephen's Gate), and developed by the thirteeenth century. The site is now marked by the Orthodox Church of St. Stephen.

The site of the Eudocian basilica, built in the 5th century on the location where Stephen died according to the earliest tradition of the Martyrdom, was instead identified in the late nineteenth century by the Franciscans outside the Damascus Gate. Marie-Joseph Lagrange played a major role in the identification of the site and wanted it to become the location of the Ecole Biblique et Archéologique Français de Jérusalem. A new edifice was erected on the old foundations by the Dominican Fathers and a large church was consecrated in 1900.

The Burial place of Stephen at Bet Gamal

In 1916, the Salesians of Dom Bosco at Beit Jimal Monastery discovered a mosaic floor during excavations for a small construction. In 1923 Maurice Gisler identified the ruins as those of a Byzantine church at the burial site of Stephen, Nicodemus, Gamaliel and Abibos. The Salesians built a church over the mosaics in 1930, and called it the "Church of St Stephen. In 1999 Andrzej Strus found nearby the remains of a circular structure he identified as a Byzantine funeral monument. In 2006 Emile Puech claimed that he had found evidence that the structure carried an inscription to Stephen.

Other Places, Churches & Monuments dedicated to the memory of the Protomartyr Stephen

  • NOTE: Some Churches of St. Stephen are not dedicated to Stephen the Protomartyr but to either Pope Stephen I (3rd cent) or King Saint Stephen I of Hungary (10th cent.).

Holy Land (Israel/Palestina)

  • The Lions' Gate, one of the gates of the Old City of Jerusalem, is known by Christians as the St. Stephen's Gate because it is believed that the first Christian martyr Stephen was stoned to death outside the wall here. Other traditions locates the site just outside the Damascus Gate.
  • St. Stephen's Basilica (Jerusalem, Israel) -- The actual church was built in 1900 on the traditional site of Stephen's martyrdom.
  • St. Stephen's Church (Beit Jimal, Israel) -- The Church of St. Stephen is located at Beit Jimal, a Catholic monastery built in 1930 by Salesian monks near Beit Shemesh, Israel. The Christian tradition identifies the site with the Roman- and Byzantine-era Jewish village of Caphargamala (כפר גמלא‎), and believes that a cave there is the tomb of St. Stephen or to have conserved his relics. Inside the church, there are frescoes with stories of the Life of St. Stephen. Just outside the church stands a sculpture commemorating the martyrdom of St. Stephen contributed in 2000 by renowned Israeli artist Yigal Tomarkin.

Russia

  • Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius (Sergiyev Posad, Russia) -- According to Christian traditions, the remains of St. Stephen were transported to Constantinople during the reign of Emperor Theodosius the Younger (408-450). The Orthodox Church celebrates the Translation of the Relics of Protomartyr Stephen on August 2. Today, it is claimed that the whole right arm of St. Stephen is preserved at the Russian monastery.

Albania

  • St. Stephen's Cathedral, Shkodër, Albania -- Built in 1858-67, the Roman Catholic church is the cathedral of the city of Shkodër (Scutari) in northwestern Albania and one of the city's most important religious buildings.

Australia

  • Cathedral of St Stephen, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia -- Construction of the gothic revival building started in 1863. The church serves as cathedral of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Brisbane and seat of its archbishop in Brisbane,

Austria

  • St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna, Austria -- The mother church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vienna and the seat of the Archbishop of Vienna is the most important religious building in Vienna and one of the city's most recognizable symbols.

Francia

  • Cathédrale Saint-Étienne Bourges, France -- Construction of the Gothic Cathedral began in 1195 and was completed in 1230. The church is the seat of the Archbishop of Bourges and one of most important religious monuments of France.

Italy

United States

  • St. Stephen's Episcopal Cathedral, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania -- Construction of the neo-Romanesque building started in 1826. St. Stephen's became the diocesan cathedral on January 27, 1932.
  • St. Stephen's Episcopal Pro-Cathedral, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania -- Construction of the neo-Romanesque building was completed in 1897-99. St. Stephen's is the Pro-Cathedral in the Diocese of Bethlehem.

External links

  • [ Wikipedia]