Monday, April 20, 2009

St. Genevieve


St. Genevieve, the patron saint of Paris, stands watch over the city here from her perch above the Pont de la Tournelle. Legend has it that she was a lowly peasant woman. Truth is she was from a wealthy family in what is now the suburb of Nanterre. In any case, she is best loved for bringing grain to starving Parisians when the city was blockaded by the Huns in the 5th century. What is now known as the Pantheon was originally built as a church in her name by Louis XV. The revolution broke out before the church could be dedicated and her relics were publicly burnt in 1793 in one of many actions taken by revolutionaries against the Catholic Church. Although separation of church and state are now absolute in France, saint's days are widely observed. St. Genevieve's day is January 3rd.

4 comments:

lady jicky said...

She is also in the Luxemburg gardens!

Cécile Qd9 said...

I woulnotsay "widely observed", I would say that tey are pretexts to offer presents and to shown our friends that we think them

starman1695 said...

Isn't she somehow connected to Église Saint-Étienne-du-Mont?

lady jicky said...

Yes Bob she is and there is a wonderful statue of her there!

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