Theodore Tiron
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates
- For another Saint Theodore, see: Theodore Stratelates or Saint Theodore (disambiguation).
Saint Theodore (Άγιος Θεοδώρος), distinguished as Theodore of Amasea, Theodore the Recruit (Θεοδώρος ό Τήρων), and by other names, is a Christian saint and Great Martyr, particularly revered in the Eastern Orthodox Churches but also honored in Roman Catholicism and Oriental Orthodoxy. According to legend, he was a legionary in the Roman army who suffered martyrdom by immolation at Amasea in Galatian Pontus (modern Amasya, Turkey) during the Great Persecution under Diocletian in the early 4th century. Venerated by the late 4th century, he became a prominent warrior saint during the Middle Ages, attracted a great deal of additional legends including accounts of battle against dragons, and was often confused with (or was the original source of) the similar Theodore Stratelates of Heraclea.
NamesEdit
Theodore is the English form of the Latin masculine given name {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} from Ancient Greek Theódōros ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) from Theós ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, "God") + dō̂ron ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, "gift"). In Rome, he was also known to locals as St Toto.Template:Sfnp He was eventually distinguished from other saints named Theodore as Theodore the Recruit,Template:Sfnp Theodore the Tyro,<ref name=OCA/> or Theodore the Soldier<ref name=comecome>Template:Harvp.</ref> (Template:Langx or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; Template:Langx or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Theódōros Tḗrōn or ho Tḗrōn).Template:Efn The same name is variously anglicized as Theodore Tiron,Template:Sfnp Tiro,Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> Tyron,Template:Sfnp Tyro,Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> and Teron.<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> (Nilles argued that this epithet was a later mistake and that, rather than being a recruit, Theodore's name had originally referenced his service in the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.)Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The saint is also distinguished as Theodore of Amasea,Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Citation.</ref> Theodore of Euchaita,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp and Theodore Martyr. The epithets are not generally needed, as Theodore Tiron is generally the intendend saint when the name "St Theodore" is used without other clarification.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
LegendEdit
MartyrdomEdit
Theodore was a Greek,Template:Sfn born in Amasea. The basic legend recounts that Theodore's cohort was sent to Pontus for winter quarters.Template:Sfnp Christianity was still illegal and Galerius, prior to his 311 Edict of Toleration at Serdica, enforced his co-emperor Diocletian's Great Persecution. When the soldiers of Theodore's cohort were obliged to perform pagan sacrifice at Amasea in Galatian Pontus (modern Amasya, Turkey, about Template:Convert south of the Black Coast at Sinop), he refused and recounted a confession of faith in the divinity of Jesus Christ.Template:Sfnp Rather than immediately execute him, the judgesTemplate:Mdashtaking pity on his youthTemplate:Mdashdelayed their sentence to allow him to change his mind.Template:Sfnp Theodore then burned the city's temple of Magna Mater (Cybele), whereupon he was again arrested, tortured, and martyred by immolation.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The year of his martyrdom is cited as 287 in the legenda aurea, but later tradition including Butler has the year 306.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp His relics were later carried to Euchaita, possibly his birthplace, by the Christian empress Eusebia<ref name=comecome/> sometime before her death in 360.
Dragon slayingEdit
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Iconography of a horseman with a spear overcoming evil as personified as a dragon was widespread throughout the Christian period.<ref>Charles Clermont-Ganneau, "Horus et Saint Georges, d’après un bas-relief inédit du Louvre". Revue archéologique, 1876</ref> Iconographic representations of St Theodore as dragon-slayer are dated to as early as the 7th century, certainly by the early 10th century (the oldest certain depiction of Theodore killing a dragon is at Aghtamar, dated Template:Circa).<ref name=Johns2016/> Theodore is reported as having destroyed a dragon near Euchaita in a legend not younger than the late 9th century. The earliest image of St Theodore as a horseman (named in Latin) is from Vinica, North Macedonia and, if genuine, dates to the 6th or 7th century. Here, Theodore is not slaying a dragon, but holding a draco standard.
The "Christianisation" of the Thracian horseman iconography can be traced to the Cappadocian cave churches of Göreme, where frescoes of the 10th century show military saints on horseback confronting serpents with one, two or three heads. One of the earliest examples is from the church known as Mavrucan 3 (Template:Illm), generally dated to the 10th century,<ref>Template:Harvp "Thierry 1972, who dates the fresco to as early as the seventh century. However, this seems unlikely, as it would be three hundred years earlier than any other church fresco in the region."</ref>Template:Sfnp which portrays two "sacred riders" confronting a two serpents twined around a tree, in a striking parallel to the Dioskuroi stela, except that the riders are now attacking the snake in the "tree of life" instead of a boar. In this example, at least, there appear to be two snakes with separate heads, but other examples of 10th-century Cappadocia show polycephalous snakes.<ref name=Stephenson179>Template:Harvp</ref> A poorly preserved wall-painting at the Template:Illm ("Snake Church") that depicts the two saints Theodore and George attacking a dragon has been tentatively dated to the 10th century,<ref>Template:Harvp "the pairing of the two holy dragon-slayers has no narrative source, and the symbolic meaning of the scene is spelled out in an inscription written on both sides of the central cross, which compares the victory of the two saints over the dragon to Christ's triumph over evil on the cross."</ref> or alternatively even to the mid-9th.Template:Sfnp A similar example, but showing three equestrian saints, Demetrius, Theodore and George, is from the "Zoodochos Pigi" chapel in central Macedonia in Greece, in the prefecture of Kilkis, near the modern village of Kolchida, dated to the 9th or 10th century.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
A 12th-century depiction of Theodore as equestrian dragon-slayer is found in four muqarna panels in the nave of the Cappella Palatina in Palermo.<ref name=Johns2016>Template:Harvp</ref>
The dragon motif was transferred to the George legend from that of his fellow soldier saint, Saint Theodore Tiro.<ref name=Robertson>Template:Cite book</ref> The transfer of the dragon iconography from Theodore, or Theodore and George as "Dioskuroi" to George on his own, first becomes tangible in the early 11th century. The oldest certain images of St. George combatting the serpent date are still found in Cappadocia, in particular the image in the church of Saint Barbara, Soganh (dated 1006 or 1021).<ref>Template:Harvp, citing G. de Jerphanion, Les églises rupestres de Cappadoce, II 1, Paris (1936), p. 322, pl. 187, 2; 189, 2-3.</ref>
The two TheodoresEdit
The emergence of Theodore Stratelates as a separate saint is attested from the late 9th century. The two Theodores were frequently depicted alongside one another in the later Byzantine period. Theodore Stratelates had a shrine at Euchaneia, but was said to have originally been from Euchaita.Template:Sfnp His "lives" are listed in Bibliotecha Hagiographica Graeca 1760–1773.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Numerous conflicting legends grew up about the life and martyrdom of St Theodore so that, in order to bring some consistency into the stories, it seems to have been assumed that there must have been two different saints, St Theodore Tiron of Amasea and St Theodore Stratelates of Heraclea.Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn
There is much confusion between these two saints, and each of them is sometimes said to have had a shrine at Euchaita in Pontus. In fact the shrine existed before any distinction was made between these two saints. The separate shrine of Stratelates was at Euchaneia, a different place.Template:Efn They were distinguished at least by the 9th century. However it is now generally accepted, at least in the west, that there was in fact only one St Theodore.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Delehaye wrote in 1909 that the existence of the second Theodore had not been historically established,Template:Sfnp and Walter in 2003 wrote that "the Stratelates is surely a fiction".Template:Sfnp Blackburn et al. treat the second figure as a promotion in rank of the former.Template:Sfnp
There were several churches dedicated to both saints, Theodore Tiron and Theodore Stratelates. For instance at Dobarsko and at Serres, at the monastery of Kuprianou at Constantinople and at Pergamon.Template:Sfnp
VenerationEdit
The veneration of St Theodore is attested by the late 4th century, when Gregory of Nyssa preached an encomium or homily<ref name=comecome/> in his honor at his sanctuaryTemplate:Sfnp<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Thierry Ruinart, 505.Template:Fcn</ref> in the winter of 381.<ref name=comecome/> It is uncertain if this sanctuary was located at Amasea or Euchaita, but a church at Euchaita related to pilgrimage in Theodore's honor is known to have existed from at least Template:C.. His cult spread rapidly and he became highly popular. The patriarch Nectarius preached a sermon on Theodore at Constantinople before 397.<ref name=comecome/> There was a church dedicated to him in Constantinople in 452,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Verification failed</ref> a mosaic created of him at Rome's Church of SS Cosmas & Damian Template:C., and San Teodoro al Palatino, a separate circular church in his honor at the foot of the Palatine, was consecrated in the 6th or 7th century.
The initial center of veneration was in the district around Amasea. From at least the 9th century (and possibly much earlier), Euchaita housed the relics of the saint and became an important place of pilgrimage, to the point it was also known as Theodoropolis.Template:Sfnp In a tradition recorded in the 10th or 11th century, a woman from Euchaita named Eusebia had transferred the saint's relics according to his wishes.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The same tradition also associates Theodore with the dragon slayer motif. In the late 11th century, the Amasea province was gradually overwhelmed by the Turkish invasion and Euchaita became depopulated.
St Theodore became especially important in the Eastern Orthodox Church, where his cult spread widely. Gregory of Nyssa said nothing about St Theodore's life beyond the basic legend as given above, but he told how he could influence the lives of his hearers and specifically mentioned that he could intervene in battles. This became a particularly important attribute of St Theodore.Template:Sfnp Theodore was one of the important military saints of Byzantium and eventually had 15 churches in his honor in Constantinople. He was also widely venerated in Asia Minor, Syria, and PalestineTemplate:Sfnp and there are churches dedicated to him in Jerusalem and Damascus.Template:Sfnp The oldest Georgian Bir el Qutt inscriptions mention him twice. After the period of iconoclasm, from the 9th century, he was depicted as a soldier in military dress. A tradition origating in Cappadocia from the 9th or 10th century depicted him as dragon-slayer alongside Saints Demetrius and George. He was adopted as a military saint by the crusaders.
In Western Europe, Theodore was the patron saint of Venice during its period under Byzantine hegemony and the doge's chapel was dedicated to him until the 9th century, when Venice largely replaced him with St Mark as a sign of its growing independence. His cult spread during the Crusades. His body was said to have been transferred to Brindisi in the 12th century, after which he was honored as that city's patron.Template:Sfnp Gaeta claimed to have taken his head.Template:Sfnp Chartres Cathedral in France has a 13th-century stained glass window with 38 panels depicting Theodore's life,Template:Sfnp but his cult did not become common beyond Italy.Template:Sfnp
San Teodoro in Rome was made a collegiate church by Pope Felix IVTemplate:Sfnp and was made available to the Orthodox by Pope John Paul II in 2000, with services beginning in 2004.
IconographyEdit
In mosaics and icons, he is most often shown in military dress from the 6th century,Template:Cn but sometimes in civilian or court dress. When on horseback, he is always in military dress, possibly spearing a dragon, and often accompanied by St George.Template:Sfnp Both he and St Theodore Stratelates are shown with thick black hair and pointed beards, usually one point for Theodore Tiron and two points for Stratelates.Template:Sfnp
His encounter with a dragon was increasingly transferred to the more-widely venerated Saint George beginning in the 13th century.<ref name=Robertson/>
Feast daysEdit
In the Eastern church, St Theodore of Amasea is celebrated on 8 February in the Slavonic Byzantine calendarTemplate:Sfnp or on 17 FebruaryTemplate:Sfnp or on the 1st Saturday in Lent. In the western church, his date was 9 November but, since 1969 after the Second Vatican Council, he is no longer liturgically celebrated except in certain local calendars.Template:Sfnp
The Eastern Orthodox Church and those Eastern Catholic churches which follow the Byzantine Rite, celebrate a miracle attributed to St. Theodore Tyro on the First Saturday of Great Lent. At the end of the Presanctified Liturgy on Friday evening (since, liturgically, the day begins at sunset) a special canon to St. Theodore, composed by St. John of Damascus, is chanted. Then the priest blesses kolyva (boiled wheat with honey and raisins) which is distributed to the faithful in commemoration of the following miracle worked by St. Theodore on the First Saturday of Great Lent:
Fifty years after the death of St Theodore, the emperor Julian the Apostate (361-363) commanded the governor of Constantinople during the first week of Great Lent to sprinkle all the food provisions in the marketplace with the blood offered to pagan idols, knowing that the people would be hungry after the strict fasting of the first week. Thus he would force the Christians to unknowingly eat food "polluted" (from the Christian perspective) with the blood of idolatry. St Theodore appeared in a dream to the Archbishop of Constantinople, Eudoxius, ordering him to inform all the Christians that no one should buy anything at the market, but rather to boil the wheat they had at home and eat it sweetened with honey.
After the service, the kolyva is distributed to all who are present and, after Holy Communion and the antidoron, is the first food eaten after the strict fasting of the first week.
VeniceEdit
St Theodore was the patron saint of Venice before the relics of Saint Mark were (according to tradition) brought to the city in 828. The original chapel of the Doge was dedicated to St Theodore, though, after the translation of the relics of St Mark, it was superseded by the church of St Mark.
There is some doubt whether this first patron of Venice was Theodore of Amasea or Theodore of Heraclea, although Demus opted emphatically for the latter in 1960Template:Sfnp and was followed in this by Fenlon.<ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Pn</ref> However, Demus later noted that none of the 12th-century mosaics which show St Theodore mentions more than his name and that he may have become the patron of the city before the two saints were distinguished.Template:Sfnp In fact the Venetians never appear to have made any distinction between the different St Theodores. None of the mosaics in Venice's St Mark's Basilica show him in military dress.
There were 15 churches in Constantinople dedicated to St Theodore, who was a Greek saint, specially venerated by the Eastern church. Venice had originally been a subject city of the Eastern Roman Empire, and the Venetians saw St Theodore as a symbol of their subjection to Constantinople. The adoption of St Mark as their patron helped to establish their independence.
The new church of St Mark was built between the old chapel of St Theodore and the Ducal Palace. When this was enlarged and rebuilt in the late 11th century, the chapel of St Theodore disappeared in the rebuilding. There is today a small chapel dedicated to St Theodore, behind St Mark's church, but this was not built until 1486. (It was later occupied by the Inquisition in Venice).
The two Byzantine columns in the Piazzetta in Venice were set up soon after 1172. The eastern column bears a strange animal representing the winged lion of St Mark. A statue representing St Theodore was placed on the western column in 1372, but this was not the statue now to be seen there, which is a composite of several fragments, some antique, including a crocodile to represent a dragon, and was placed there in the second half of the 15th century.Template:Sfnp The statue on the pillar is now a copy of the original, which is kept elsewhere for its preservation.
Reputed relics of St Theodore were taken from Mesembria by a Venetian admiral in 1257 and, after being first placed in a Venetian church in Constantinople, were brought to Venice in 1267. They were placed in the church of San Salvatore.Template:Sfnp
GalleryEdit
- Theodore the Tyro.jpg
St Theodore in the Menologion of Basil II (11th cent.)
- Saint Theodore Tiro at Chora.jpg
St Theodore in a fresco at Chora Church in Istanbul, Turkey (12th cent.)
- Saints Theodore Tyron and Theodore Stratilates.jpg
SS Theodore of Amasea (left) and Theodore of Heraclea (right) in a fresco at Kremikovtsi Monastery, Bulgaria (Template:C. cent.)
- StratilatesandTyron.jpg
SS Theodore of Amasea (left) and Theodore of Heraclea (right) in a fresco at Rila Monastery, Bulgaria (Template:C. cent.)
See alsoEdit
- Moreška, dance performed on Sveti Todor (Saint Theodore's) day on the Croatian island of Korčula
- Theodore the Martyr
- Saints Theodore Tyro and Theodore Stratelates Church, Serres
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
CitationsEdit
BibliographyEdit
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External linksEdit
- Website of Orthodox Church
- Hagiography from the website of the Orthodox Church in America
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