Martin of Tours was a pastor who was martyred for his faith
on this day in 397. Also on this day
in 655, Martin of Umbria was martyred during the great Monothelite
controversy. Both men demonstrated
perseverance in the face of political persecution, personal humiliation,
torture, starvation, and eventually, death, made them models of faith during
the early medieval period.
According to legend, Martin of Tours once cut his own coat
in half to share it with a beggar.
Part of the cloak was saved and considered a holy relic in France, with
monarchs going so far as to carry it into battle. The cloak was kept in a “chapelle,” from the French word
“chape,” meaning “cape,” and its overseer was the "chapelain", from
which, of course, we get our words "chapel" and
"chaplain".
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Who is the artist?
The artist is Trento Longaretti. The work is a small oil on canvass, painted in 1975, entitled "St. Martino e il Povero." It is in the Paolo VI Sull'arte Moderna e Contemporanea in Brescia, in the shadow of the Italian Alps in Lombardy.
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