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ST See also: recent version of the See also: legend, See also: Veronica was a pious woman of Jerusalem, who, moved with pity by the spectacle of Jesus carrying His See also: cross to Golgotha, gave Him her kerchief in See also: order that He might wipe the drops of agony from His brow
.
The See also: Lord accepted the offering, and after using the napkin handed it back to her with the image of His face miraculously impressed upon it
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This, however, is not the See also: primitive See also: form of the legend, which a close examination shows to be derived from the following See also: story related by See also: Eusebius in his Historia Ecclesiastica (vii
.
18)
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At Caesarea See also: Philippi dwelt the woman whom the Lord healed of an issue of See also: blood (Matt. ix
.
20), and at the door of her See also: house stood, on one See also: side a statue of a woman in an attitude of supplication, and on the other side that of a See also: man stretching forth his See also: hand to the woman
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It was said that the male figure represented Christ, and that the See also: group had been set up in recognition of the miraculous cure
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Legend was not long in providing the woman of the Gospel with a name
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In the West she was identified with Martha of See also: Bethany; in the See also: East she was called Berenike, or Beronike, the name appearing in as early a See also: work as the Ada Pilati, the most See also: ancient form of which goes back to the 4th century
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Towards the 6th century the legend of the woman with the issue of blood became merged in the legend of See also: Pilate, as is shown in the writings known in the See also: middle ages as Cura sanitatis Tiberii and Vindicta Salvatoris
.
According to the former of these accounts Veronica, in memory of her cure, caused a portrait of the Saviour to be painted
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The emperor Tiberius, when afflicted with a grievous sickness, commanded the woman to bring the portrait to him, worshipped Christ before her eyes, and was cured . The legend continued to gather accretions, and a miraculous origin came to be assigned to the image . It appears that in the 12th century the image began to be identified with one preserved atSee also: Rome, and in the popular speech the image, too, was called Veronica
.
It is interesting to note that the fanciful derivation of the same Veronica from the words See also: Vera icon (eucdrv) " true image "βis not, as has been thought, of See also: modern origin, since it occurs in the Otia Imperialia (iii
.
25) of Gervase of Tilbury (fl
.
1211), who says: " Est ergo Veronica pictura Domini vera." In several churches the office of St Veronica, matron, is observed on various See also: dates
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See Acta Sanctorum, See also: February, i
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449-57; L
.
F
.
C
.
Tischendorf, Evangelia apocrypha (2nd ed., See also: Leipzig, 1877), p
.
239; E. von Dobschutz, Christusbilder (Leipzig, 1899); H
.
Thurston, The Stations of the Cross ( See also: London, 1906)
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(H
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