Crispin Mark Jeremy Day
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Saints Crispin and Crispinian are the Christian patron saints of Shoemaking, cobblers, curriers, Tanning (leather), tanners, and leather workers. They were beheaded during the reign of Diocletian; the date of their execution is given as 25 October 285 or 286.


Legend

Born to a noble Roman Empire, Roman family in the 3rd century AD, Crispin and Crispinian fled persecution for their faith, ending up at Soissons, where they preached Christianity to the Gauls while making shoes by night. It is stated that they were twin brothers. They earned enough by their trade to support themselves and aid people experiencing poverty. Their success attracted the ire of Rictus Varus, governor of Belgic Gaul, who had them tortured and thrown into the river with millstones around their necks. Though they survived, they were Decapitation, beheaded by Diocletian, the emperor 286.


Veneration

The feast day of Saints Crispin and Crispinian is 25 October. Although this feast was removed from the Roman Catholic Church's universal Liturgical year, liturgical calendar following the Second Vatican Council, the two saints are still commemorated on that day in the most recent edition of the Roman Church's martyrology. In the sixth century, a stately basilica was erected over these saints' graves at Soissons, and St. Eligius, a famous goldsmith, made a costly shrine for the head of St. Crispinian. Their remains were afterwards removed, partly by Charlemagne to Osnabrück, and partly to the church of San Lorenzo in Panisperna in Rome. They are the patron saints of cobblers, glove makers, lace makers, lace workers, leather workers, saddle makers, saddlers, shoemakers, tanners, and weavers. Especially in France, but also in England and other parts of Europe, the festival of St Crispin was for centuries the occasion of solemn processions and merry-making, in which guilds of shoemakers took the chief part. Crispin and Crispinian are Calendar of saints (Church of England), remembered in the Church of England with a Commemoration (Anglicanism), commemoration on October 25, 25 October.


Cultural references

The Battle of Agincourt was fought on Saint Crispin's Day, Saint Crispin's feastday. (The English tradition placed the twins at Canterbury rather than Gaul.) Shakespeare's St. Crispin's Day Speech (sometimes called the "Band Of Brothers" Speech) from his Shakespeare's plays, play Henry V (play), ''Henry V'' has immortalized the day. Also, for the Midsummer's Day Festival in the third act of ''Die Meistersinger'', Wagner has the shoemakers' guild enter singing a song of praise to St. Crispin. A 16th-century legend links them to the town of Faversham, Kent, England. A plaque at Faversham commemorates their association with the town. They are also celebrated in the name of the old public house, pub "Crispin and Crispianus" at Strood in Kent.


See also

*St Crispin Street Fair *Daughters of St. Crispin *Order of the Knights of St. Crispin *Zunft, City livery companies


Footnotes


External links


St Crispin and St Crispinian in Faversham, Kent
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crispin And Crispinian 286 deaths 3rd-century births 3rd-century Christian saints 3rd-century Gallo-Roman people Christian martyrs executed by decapitation Gallo-Roman saints Groups of Christian martyrs of the Roman era Shoemakers Brother duos Anglican saints Patron saints