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Who was St George? What is myth and what is fact? Did he
really slay the Dragon? Why is he such a popular Saint, celebrated in so many
Countries, Races, Religions and Organisations?
The celebration of St George's Day is currently fairly
low key in England and much more celebrated elsewhere. However, the Society and
its members are clearly succeeding in their constant efforts to revive St.
George's Day as the day on which to celebrate being English.
There are many legends in many cultures about St. George,
but they all have a common theme; he must have been an outstanding character in
his lifetime, for his reputation to have survived for almost 1,700 years!
Most authorities on the subject seem to agree that he was
born in Cappadocia in what is now Turkey, in about the year 280 AD. It is
probable that from his physical description, he was of Darian origin, because
of his tall stature and fair hair. He enlisted into the Cavalry of the Roman
Army at the age of 17, during the reign of the Emperor Diocletian and very
quickly established a reputation amongst his peers, for his virtuous behaviour
and physical strength; his military bearing, valour and handsome good looks.
He quickly achieved the rank of Millenary or Tribunus
Militum, an officer's rank roughly equivalent to a full Colonel, in charge of a
regiment of 1,000 men and became a particular favourite of his Emperor.
Diocletian was a skilled military tactician and strict disciplinarian, who set
himself the task of rejuvenating the morale of the citizens of Rome by reviving
the prevailing traditions and paganism of Rome. It may be recalled that this
was a time of high inflation and civil unrest and one outcome of this was the
increasing influence of Christianity.
Diocletian's second in Command was Galerius, the
conqueror of Persia and an avid supporter of the Pagan religion. As a result of
a rumour that the Christians were plotting the death of Galerius, an edict was
issued that all Christian Churches were to be destroyed and all scriptures to
be burnt. Anyone admitting to being a Christian, would lose his rights as a
citizen, if not his life.
As a consequence, Diocletian took strict action against
any alternative forms of religion in general and the Christian faith in
particular. He achieved the reputation of being perhaps the cruellest
persecutor of Christians at that time.
Many Christians feared to be loyal to their God; but,
having become a convert to Christianity, St. George acted to limit the excesses
of Diocletian's actions against the Christians. He went to the city of
Nicomedia where, upon entering, he tore down the notice of the Emperor's edict.
St. George gained great respect for his compassion towards Diocletian's
victims.
As news spread of his rebellion against the persecutions
St. George realised that, as both Diocletian and Galerius were in the city, it
would not be long before he was arrested. He prepared for the event by
disposing of his property to the poor and he freed his slaves.
When he appeared before Diocletian, it is said that St.
George bravely denounced him for his unnecessary cruelty and injustice and that
he made an eloquent and courageous speech. He stirred the populace with his
powerful and convincing rhetoric against the Imperial Decree to persecute
Christians. Diocletian refused to acknowledge or accede to St. George's
reasoned, reproachful condemnation of his actions. The Emperor consigned St
George to prison with instructions that he be tortured until he denied his
faith in Christ.
St George, having defended his faith was beheaded at
Nicomedia near Lyddia in Palestine on the 23rd of April in the year 303 AD.
Stories of St. George's courage soon spread and his
reputation grew very quickly. He soon became known in Russia and the Ukraine as
the Trophy Bearer and his remains are said to have been buried in the church
that bears his name in Lydda. However, his head was carried to Rome, where it
was preserved in the Church that is also dedicated to him.
St George was beatified by the Roman Catholic Church and
is recognised in the liturgy of the Russian Orthodox and Greek Orthodox
Churches as well as the Roman Catholic Church. He has been revered in the
Ukraine since Christianity was established in 988 AD by Volodymyr the Great the
Prince of the Kyivan Empire. The Romanesque Monastic order in Prague
established St. George's Church in the Castle in the year 920AD and in the year
1119 AD the Cathedral of St George was founded in Novgorod. His reputation for
virtue and chivalrous conduct became the spiritual inspiration of the Crusaders
and by this time the pennant or flag with a red cross on a white or silver
background became prominent as a means of recognition by English Knights. It
was also worn on breast plates.
In the year 1348 King Edward Ill established the Knights
of the Garter, which is the oldest order of Chivalry in Europe. The Order of
the Garter was dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary, Edward the Confessor and
St George. The Insignia of the order consists of a collar and badge appendant
known as the George, the Star, the Garter and the Sash with the Investment
Badge called the lesser George. This is a gold and richly enamelled
representation of St George on horseback slaying the dragon.
A similar representation of St George can be seen in our
Armorial Bearings and in the collar and appendant that officers of The Royal
Society wear.
In 1352 the College of St George was established in
Windsor, with 6 Chorister boys and since then, St George's school has played an
important role in the daily worship and on State Occasions in the Queen's Free
Chapel of St George in Windsor Castle. By providing free education and
sustenance for the boys, a priceless musical inheritance in choral worship has
been established and their numbers increased until the Plague struck in 1479
when the numbers were reduced from thirteen to six again but recovered to
thirteen by Michaelmas in 1482.
It was in the year 1415 AD that St. George became the
Patron Saint of England when English Soldiers under Henry V won the battle of
Agincourt.
In 1497 in the reign of Henry VIII, the pennant of the
Cross of St. George was flown by John Cabot when he sailed to Newfoundland and
it was also flown by Sir Francis Drake and Sir Walter Raleigh. In 1620 it was
the flag that was flown by the Mayflower when the Pilgrim Fathers arrived in
Plymouth Massachusetts. It is also the flag of the Church of England and as
such is known throughout Christendom.
In the year 1728 AD Maximilian II Emanuel, the Elector of
Bavaria, established by Papal Bull The Royal Military Order of St George, as a
means of honouring distinguished military service for it was clear that by this
time, his name had become associated with the purity of spirit, selfless
devotion to duty and boundless courage and valour in the face of adversity. In
more recent times, St George was chosen as the patron saint of Scouting,
because of the ideals that he represents and it is interesting to note that he
is also the Patron Saint of Barcelona in Catalonia, Aragon, Russia, Bavaria,
Beirut, Czechoslovakia, Portugal, Lithuania and Hungary, to name but a few.
Virtually every country in Europe and the Commonwealth has a church dedicated
to St. George.
During World War 2 King George V1 established the George
Cross for outstanding acts of Civilian Valour and one of the earliest
recipients was the Island of Malta, for its outstanding courage in~ the face of
the constant bombardment by the Italian and German Airforce. It is,
coincidentally, the Island that was so closely associated and governed by the
Crusaders who arrived from the Island of Rhodes in the 14" Century,
following their 200 year war with the Turks.
The legends about St George spread far and wide and it
was claimed that near the town of Silene in Libya, a dragon dwelt, keeping the
population in terror. To satiate him the population tethered an animal, until
they had no more. They then provided human sacrifices and in ultimate
desperation, a young princess was selected, the king's daughter named
Cleolinda. The story then relates how St. George rode up on his white charger,
dismounted and fought the monster on foot; until it eventually succumbed. He
then dragged the dying monster into the city, using the girdle of the Princess
and slew the dragon in front of the people. St. George was greeted as their
saviour and the King offered him a bag of gold as a reward for saving his
daughter. This he refused and asked that it be given to the poor.
The story is a powerful allegory, emblematic of the
triumph of good over evil; but it also teaches of enduring Christian faith in
the extreme and the trust that at all times should be placed in the Almighty by
the invocation of the name of St. George, Soldier, Saint and Martyr.
In the 13" Century, there was a Guild of St. George
to which the Honourable Company of Pikemen were related before evolving into
the Honourable Artillery Company. Many regiments of the Army still celebrate
St. George's Day with great ceremony.
In Barcelona, it is traditional to give a book as a token
of St. George's Day, whilst in Russia and the Ukraine the day is celebrated by
Spring Festivals and Picnics to celebrate the end of winter. In the world of
Scouting, it is the first day for camping.
Source: The Royal Society of St George.