Showing posts with label St George's Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St George's Day. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 April 2008

St Georges Day

Today, we celebrate St George's day in England.

I am partaking of my own celebration, by wearing this stylish Knight's outfit



Complete with a sword!




Admittedly, I do not have a real dragon to sleigh but I DO have an inept human slave who has serious dragons breath.

So you see, we all have our own battles and should draw our inspiration from where we can.









HAPPY ST GEORGE'S DAY!

Monday, 23 April 2007

St George on Monday

HAPPY ST GEORGE'S DAY EVERYONE!



Here are some facts about St George. Note: the human is making me include this. I would much rather talk about myself, naturally.

Who was St George?

A good question and one that's hard to answer with any great degree of accuracy. Generally though, it's held that he was born in Turkey to Christian parents in the third century AD. When his father died, he and his mother moved to Palestine, where he became a soldier during the reign of Roman emperor Diocletian (245-313). Unfortunately, Diocletian was a bitter opponent of Christianity. George apparently told the Emperor that he was too harsh in his treatment of Christians, and when he left the army George was imprisoned and tortured for seven years. Eventually, after refusing to recant, George was beheaded at Lydda in Palestine.

How did St George become England's patron saint?

The elevation of St George to patron saint status took some time but began when he was accorded a minor religious feast day by the Oxford synod in 1222. By the end of the 14th century he'd been adopted as England's patron saint and in 1415, the year of the battle of Agincourt, Archbishop Chichele ordered St George's Day to be observed like Christmas Day.

Where does the St George's flag come from?

The flag of St George – which is shown as a red cross on a white background, symbolising his martyrdom – became the uniform for English soldiers probably as far back as the reign of Richard 1 and became England's flag at some point in the late Thirteenth century. The cross was incorporated into the Union Jack when the Act of Union took place in 1707.

Is he purely an English saint?

Far from it – in fact St George is also the patron saint of Portugal and Lithuania and St George's Day is a huge event in Catalonia where everyone wears red roses to commemorate it. In many countries St George is associated with fertility and his day marks the very beginning of summer.


For more info go to: http://www.raisingkids.co.uk/fea/fea140_stgeorge.asp