Online Encyclopedia

CRISPIN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 468 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CRISPIN  and CRISPINIAN, the

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patron saints of shoemakers, whose festival is celebrated on the 25th of
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October . Their
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history is largely legendary, and there exists no trace of it earlier than the 8th century . It is said that they were brothers and members of a noble
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family in Rome . They gave up their
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property and travelled to
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Soissons (Noviodunum,
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Augusta Suessionum), where they supported themselves by shoemaking and made many converts to
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Christianity . The emperor Maximianus (Herculius) condemned them to
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death . His prefect Rictiovarus endeavoured to carry out the sentence, but they emerged unharmed from all the ordeals to which he subjected them, and the weapons he used recoiled against the executioners . Rictiovarus in disgust cast himself into the fire, or the caldron of boiling
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tar, from which they had emerged refreshed . At last Maximian had their heads cut off (c . 287–300) . Their remains were buried at Soissons, but were afterwards removed, partly by Charlemagne to
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Osnabruck (where a festival is observed annually on the loth of
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June) and partly to the
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chapel of St Lawrence in Rome . The abbeys of St Crepin-en-Chaye (the remains of which still form
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part of a farmhouse on the
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river
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Aisne, N.N.W. of Soissons), of St Crepinle-Petit, and St Crepin-le-
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Grand (the site of which is occupied by a house belonging to the Sisters of Mercy), in or near Soissons, commemorated the places sanctified by their imprisonment and
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burial . There are also relics at
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Fulda, and a Kentish tradition claims that the bodies of the martyrs were cast into the sea and cast on
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shore on Romney Marsh (see Acta SS .

Bolland, xi . 495; A .

Butler, Lives of the Saints, October 25th) . Especially in France, but also in England and in other parts of
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Europe, the festival of St Crispin was for centuries the occasion of solemn processions and merry-making, in which gilds of shoe-makers took the chief part . At
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Troyes, where the gild of St Crispin was reconstituted as
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late as 1820, an
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annual festival is celebrated in the church of St Urban . In England and Scotland the day acquired additional importance as the anniversary of the
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battle of Agincourt (cf . Shakespeare, Henry V. iv . 3); thesymbolical processions in honour of " King Crispin " at Stirling and
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Edinburgh were particularly famous . For other examples see Notes and Queries, 1st series, v . 30, vi . 243; W . S .

Walsh, Curiosities of Popular Customs (
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London, 1898) .

End of Article: CRISPIN
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FRANCESCO CRISPI (1819-1901)
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