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Helena Of Constantinople

Saint Helena

Eastern Orthodox icon of Saint Constantine the Great and Saint Helena, his mother
Mother of Constantine the Great
Bornca. 250,
Diedca. 330
Venerated inRoman Catholic, Orthodox and Lutheran authorities.
CanonizedHer canonization precedes the practice of formal Canonization by the Pope[1] or the relevant Orthodox and Lutheran churches.
FeastAugust 18 (RC), May 21 (L & O), May 19 (L), 9 Pashons (Coptic Orthodox)
AttributesCross
Patronagearcheologists, converts, difficult marriages, divorced people, empresses, Helena, the capital of Montana


Flavia Iulia Helena, also known as Saint Helena, Saint Helen, Helena Augusta or Helena of Constantinople (ca. 250 – ca. 330) was consort of (though may have been married to) Constantius Chlorus, and the mother of Emperor Constantine I. She is traditionally credited with finding the relics of the True Cross.

Family life

Many legends surround her. She was allegedly the daughter of an innkeeper. Her son Constantine renamed the city of Drepanum on the Gulf of Nicomedia as "Helenopolis" in her honour, which led to later interpretations that Drepanum was her birthplace.

Constantius Chlorus divorced her (c.292) to marry the step-daughter of Maximian. Constantine, became emperor of the Roman Empire, and following his elevation she became a presence at the imperial court, and received the title Augusta.

Sainthood

She is considered by the Orthodox and Catholic churches as a saint, famed for her piety. Her feast day as a saint of the Orthodox Christian Church is celebrated with her son on May 21, the Feast of the Holy Great Sovereigns Constantine and Helen, Equal to the Apostles [1]. Her feast day in the Roman Catholic Church falls on August 18. Her feast day in the Coptic Orthodox Church is on 9 Pashons. Eusebius records the details of her pilgrimage to Palestine and other eastern provinces (though not her discovery of the True Cross). She is the patron saint of archaeologists.

Relic discoveries

Enlarge picture
Helena's sarcophagus
Enlarge picture
Helena on a coin.


At the age of 80, Helena was said by some accounts to have been placed in charge of a mission to gather Christian relics, by her son Emperor Constantine I, who had recently declared Rome as a Christian city. Helena travelled the 1400-plus miles from Rome to Jerusalem. The city was still rebuilding from the destruction of Hadrian, a previous emperor, who had built a Temple to Venus over the site of the Jesus' tomb, near Calvary. According to legend, Helena entered the temple with Bishop Macarius, and chose a site to begin excavating, which led to the recovery of three different crosses. Refusing to be swayed by anything but solid proof, Helena, according to the story, touched pieces of the crosses to the sick; when a woman touched by a cross suddenly recovered, Helena declared the cross with which the woman had been touched to be the true cross. She also found the nails of the crucifixion. To use their miraculous power to aid her son, Helena allegedly had one placed in Constantine's helmet, and another in the bridle of his horse. Helena left Jerusalem and the eastern provinces in ca. 327 to return to Rome, and after her journey to the East Helena died in the presence of her son Constantine (Eusebius, Vita Constantine, 3.46). Some of the relics which she had located were then stored in her palace in Rome, which was later converted into the Abbey of Santa Croce.On St. Helena "Name day" the custom of walking across burning coal is still honored in northern Greece.

Depictions in English folklore

In Great Britain, later legend, mentioned by Henry of Huntingdon but made popular by Geoffrey of Monmouth, claimed that Helena was a daughter of the King of Britain, Cole of Colchester, who allied with Constantius to avoid more war between the Britons and Rome. Geoffrey further states that she was brought up in the manner of a queen, as she had no brothers to inherit the throne of Britain. Monmouth and Huntingdon's source may have been Sozomen. However, Sozomen doesn't claim Helena was British though he does claim in Historia Ecclesiastica that her son, Constantine I, picked up his Christianity there.[2] There is no other surviving evidence to support this legend[3], which may be due to confusion with St. Elen, wife of the later Emperor, Magnus Maximus.

At least twenty-five holy wells currently exist in the United Kingdom that are dedicated to a Saint Helen or Elen. [2] She is also the patron saint of Colchester and Abingdon.

Depictions in fiction

Helena is the main character of Priestess of Avalon (2000), a fantasy novel by Marion Zimmer Bradley and Diana L. Paxson. She is given the name Eilan and depicted as a trained priestess of Avalon.

Helena is also the protagonist of Evelyn Waugh's novel Helena.

In the anime and manga, Hellsing, the Nail of Helena is a powerful artifact used by the Paladin Alexander Anderson to gain supernatural power.

References

1. ^ GermanCulture.com.ua: August 18 in German History. Retrieved on September 23, 2006.
2. ^ Sozomen, Salminius Hermias. Historia Ecclesiastica. Bk I, Ch. V.
3. ^ Gibbon, Edward (1776). The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire

External links

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8 Pashons - Coptic calendar - 10 Pashons

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All fixed commemorations below are observed on 9 Pashons by the Coptic Orthodox Church

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patron saint of a particular group of people is a saint who has special affinity for that group and its members. Prayers by such people are considered more likely to be answered by their patron saint.
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Helena is a given name. It may refer to:

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State of Montana

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Nickname(s): Treasure State, Big Sky Country
Motto(s): Oro y plata (Gold and silver)

Official language(s) English

Capital Helena
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Constantius Chlorus
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Constantine I
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True Cross is the name for physical remnants traditionally believed to be from the cross upon which Jesus was crucified.[1]

According to a number of early writers, the Empress Helena, (c.250–c.
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Nicomedia (Greek: Νικομήδεια, modern İzmit) was founded by Nicomedes I of Bithynia at the head of the Gulf of Astacus which opens to the Propontis. In earlier antiquity, the city was called Astacus or Olbia (founded 712 BC).
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