The Stained Glass in Saint Pauls Church,
Brighton
The North Aisle (14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19) Eback to Plan
The Saints of the English Church
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(14) S Joseph of Arimatha, the disciple who begged Pontius Pilate to allow him to
bury the body of Jesus. Old tradition
associates him with the religious foundation of Glastonbury, in which case he
would have been the first to bring Christianity to England. S Nicodemus, the disciple who assisted brought the myrrh and aloes for
the burial of Jesus and so is associated with Joseph of Arimatha. |
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(15) |
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S George, (d. circa 300) a soldier martyred during the great
persecution of Diocletian, he was popular with the Crusaders and patron of
soldiers and of the great Duchy of Aquitaine, in the South of present day
France. When the Duke of Aquitaine
ascended the throne as Richard I, S George became Patron of England. |
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S Nicholas of Myra, (d. circa 350) Patron of sailors and of the first parish
church of Brighton. |
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(16) S Helena, (c.250-330)gave birth to Constantine the Great in York, where
her husband, the Emperor Constantius Chlorus, was stationed. She used her
influence to establish many of the great church buildings of Christendom,
including the great foundations of Rome and of the Holy Land. S Alban, (3rd or 4th cent.) the first British
martyr. King Offa built a Benedictine abbey over the site of his martyrdom. |
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S Alban detail |
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S David |
S Gregory the Great |
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(17) S David, (5th - 6th cent.) Patron of Wales. S Gregory the Great, (c.540-604) Doctor of the Church. When he was Prefect of
Rome he turned his ancestral home into a monastery. Later he became bishop of
Rome. As Pope he sent S Augustine to Canterbury. |
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(18) |
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S Augustine of Canterbury, (d.604) a Benedictine, brought Christianity to Kent from
where it spread throughout Southern England. |
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S Ceadda or Chad, (d.673) an abbot, briefly archbishop of York,
who submitted to S Theodore the archbishop of Canterbury following the Synod
of Whitby. |
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(19) S Etheldreda, (d.679) daughter of King Anna of East Anglia, she became
abbess of Ely. S Bede the Venerable, (673-735) a Benedictine of the double abbey of SS Peter
and Paul at Wearmouth-Jarrow. He is famous for writing the History of the
English Church and People. |
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