Sunday 21 June 2020

St Crispin



In William Shakespeare’s “King Henry V” he makes great play of the fact that the Battle of Agincourt was fought on “Saint Crispin’s Day” – “Gentlemen in England now abed shall think themselves accursed they were not here, and hold their manhoods cheap while any speaks that fought with us upon Saint Crispin’s day”.

So who was Saint Crispin?

There were actually two saints, namely Crispin (often spelled Crispian) and his twin brother Crispinian, who lived in the late 3rd century. They were nobly-born Christians who lived in Rome but who escaped the then current round of persecutions and went to live in Gaul instead, settling in the town of Noviodunum (modern day Soissons in north-east France).

They embarked on missionary work and made shoes in the evenings to earn a living, although they took care never to charge a customer more than they could afford to pay.

When Emperor Maximian visited Noviodunum some of the locals complained to him about the brothers’ missionary activities. Maximian handed them over a man called Rictius Varus, who had some novel and painful ways of getting Christians to recant their faith. However, he failed completely, which played such havoc with Varus’s mental state that he promptly drowned himself (or possibly jumped into a fire that he had lined up for the brothers – there are several versions of this story).

Maximian decided that a more reliable method of ridding Noviodunum of two troublemakers would be to behead them, and this was what was done.

Because of their nightly work as shoemakers, Crispin and Crispinian have traditionally been regarded as the patron saints of workers in leather.

There is another version of the legend in which the brothers were British and their shoemaking took place in Faversham, Kent. As with so many stories about early saints, the faithful can believe which version they want to!

In the photo above, St Crispin and St Crispinian are commemorated in the stained glass window on the left. The windows, dating from 1959, are in a church at Fougères, Brittany, France.


© John Welford

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