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    • Image courtesy of norbreckclub.org

      norbreckclub.org

      • We celebrate St. George’s Day on April 23 — the anniversary of his death in 303 AD. The patron saint of England has captivated British imaginations since the Crusades and the Hundred Years’ War. Perhaps the most British of all holidays, this special day is a chance to let your English flag fly, literally and figuratively.
      nationaltoday.com › st-georges-day
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  2. A feast day of St George has been celebrated in England for hundreds of years on 23 April, which was possibly the date of his martyrdom. Following the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, St George's Day became one of the most important feast days in the English calendar.

  3. Saint George's Day is the feast day of Saint George, celebrated by Christian churches, countries, regions, and cities of which he is the patron saint, including Albania, Bulgaria, England, Ethiopia, Greece, Georgia, Portugal, Romania, Syria, Lebanon, Castile and León, Catalonia, Alcoi, Aragon, Genoa, and Rio de Janeiro. [1]

    • Did St George really exist? Not necessarily... Despite popular belief, St George is not English. Very little is known about the actual man. If he ever existed (and there’s no proof he did), George would likely have been a soldier somewhere in the eastern Roman empire, probably in what is now Turkey.
    • St George's earliest legends were so outlandish that the Pope condemned them. Early Christians were known to exaggerate the tortures endured by their martyrs, but St George is in a league all of his own.
    • St George was one of several military saints honoured in the Byzantine empire. Others included Theodore, Demetrius, and Mercurius. All of these saints had been soldiers when alive, and continued their patronage of the Byzantine army in death – especially St George, who became the most popular.
    • St George had some competition… Although St George was well known in early medieval England, Edmund the Martyr, Gregory the Great and Edward the Confessor were chief contenders for the title of the country’s patron saint.
  4. Apr 23, 2024 · Getty: Images. St. George's Day is upon us! St. George's Day is celebrated on the 23rd of April in the United Kingdom every year. This Christian holiday is not reserved for just England. Both Spain and Portugal also recognize the day, although their celebrations don't rival those of England.

    • Sally Coffey
    • St George’s Day takes place on 23 April, which is traditionally accepted as being the date of his death in AD 303.
    • St George was beheaded for resigning his military post and protesting against his pagan leader, the Emperor Diocletian (245-313 AD), who led Rome’s persecution of Christians.
    • The Emperor’s wife was so inspired by St George’s bravery and loyalty to his religion, that she too became a Christian and was subsequently executed for her faith.
    • Before the cult of St George was brought back from the Crusades, the top choice for England’s patron saint was Edmund the Martyr, one of the Whuffings, East Anglia’s ruling family.
  5. Apr 23, 2012 · Daniel Berehulak. The cross of St George features on the flag of England. Very little is actually known about George and there's a lot of stories about him that are full of myth and legend. It...

  6. annual. Related to. St George's Day in other countries. Saint George is the patron saint of England in a tradition established in the Tudor period, based in the saint's popularity during the times of the Crusades and the Hundred Years' War . Veneration of the saint in folk religion declined in the 18th century.

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