James Intercisus: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox saint |
{{Infobox saint |
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|name= Saint James Intercisus |
|name= Saint James Intercisus |
Revision as of 03:19, 30 October 2018
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Implies he was cut into many pieces then implies that was just his limbs, use of words like "Somehow" basically not written to encyclopedic standards. (October 2018) |
Saint James Intercisus | |
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Born | Persia |
Died | 421 Persia |
Venerated in | Eastern Orthodox Church Roman Catholic Church Eastern Catholic Churches Oriental Orthodoxy |
Feast | November 27 |
Saint James Intercisus, also known as Saint James the Mutilated (died 421) was a Persian Christian saint. His surname, Intercisus, is derived from the Latin word for "cut into pieces," which refers to the manner of his martyrdom: he was slowly cut into twenty-eight pieces. He survived this loss of limbs before being ultimately beheaded.
Tradition states that he was a military officer and courtier to Yazdegerd I who had apostatized after this ruler began to persecute Christians. Under the influence of his Christian family, however, he expressed his faith to Yazdegerd's successor, Bahram V, and was tortured and killed.[1] His death started the Roman-Sassanid War (421-422). He was killed in Gundishapur. The ruins of this city are near Dezful, Iran. Somehow, his body was sent to the Portuguese cathedral of Braga and put into a sarcophagus in the Relics Chapel.
James' story is recounted in The Golden Legend.
The Church of St. James Intercisus in the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem is dedicated to him.[2]
The Monastery of St. Jacob Persian in Sireţi, Străşeni Moldova, the Monastery of St. Jacob Persian in Deddeh, Lebanon and the monastery of St James the Mutilated in Qara, Syria are all dedicated to him.
His feast day is November 27.
References
External links
- Template:It icon San Giacomo l'Interciso (il Solitario) Martire in Persia
- The Holy Martyr James the Persian [1]
- Template:Ro icon Monastery of St. Jacob Persian
Bibliography
- Thieleman J. van Braght, Martyr's Mirror, 1660