Saint Severus of Ravenna | |
---|---|
Bishop of Ravenna | |
Born | Ravenna, Roman Empire |
Died | circa 348 |
Venerated in | Catholic Church Western Orthodoxy |
Canonized | Pre-Congregation |
Major shrine | Pavio/Pavia (original) Erfurt, Germany |
Feast | 1 February |
Patronage | Hatters, wool weavers,[1] spinners, policemen, cloth, stocking, and glove makers. |
Saint Severus of Ravenna was a 4th-century Bishop of Ravenna who attended the Council of Sardica in 343. He was ordained as a bishop due to his personal virtue and because of "the sign of a dove". He is commemorated on February 1.
Life
According to legend, Severus, a wool weaver, went with his wife, Vincentia, to observe the election of a successor to Bishop Agapitus for Ravenna. When he arrived at the church a white dove landed three times on his shoulders, so the people took this as a sign elected him.[2] When he became bishop, his wife and daughter, Innocentia, took the veil.
He attended the Council of Sardica in 343.[2]
Veneration
He was purported to be an example of not only a married priest, but a married archbishop.[3]
Andreas Agnellus, in his Liber Pontificalis Ecclesiae Ravennatis, mentions the founding of a church dedicated to Severus at Classe and the later translation of his relics from a nearby monasterium dedicated to Rophilius, which appears to have taken place around the year 500.[4]
On the feast of Pentecost 582, Archbishop John II "Romanus" consecrated the Basilica of San Severo in Ravenna-Classe at his burial place and in his honor - it was destroyed in 1820 (and excavated from 1964 to 1967).
A Gallic priest named Felix stole Severus' bones together with those of his wife Vincentia and daughter Innocentia and brought them to Pavia.[1] In 836 Bishop Otgar of Mainz acquired the relics and transferred them to first to Mainz, Germany, and eventually to a predecessor building of St Severus' Church, Erfurt, where they were buried and still lie today.[5][6] Severus is depicted in Justinian's mosaics in Saint Apollinaire in Classis, and his name is recorded in early martyrologies.[3]
There is a Saint Severus Parish Church in Boppard, Germany.
A different St. Severus was martyred in Ravenna during the reign of Maximian, and some early records confused him with the bishop.
References
- 1 2 "Severus von Ravenna", Die Mainzer Heiligen
- 1 2 3 "Severus von Ravenna". Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon (in German). Retrieved 29 May 2022.
- 1 2 Berman, Constance H. (2005). Medieval religion new approaches. Routledge. p. 127. OCLC 1267427298.
- ↑ Trzeciak, Frances. Cult of Saints, E05789, University of Oxford
- ↑ Oppermann, Johann M., Der heilige Severus von Ravenna, Patron der Stiftskirche zu Erfurt: sein Leben, die Geschichte seiner Reliquien, sowie seine Verehrung in Lied und Gebet, Schöningh, 1878
- ↑ "Saint Severus of Ravenna". CatholicSaints.Info. 31 January 2010.