Galgano Guidotti

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Saint

Galgano Guidotti
Pietro di giovanni d'ambrogio, adorazione dei pastori tra i ss. galgano e agostino, da. agostino, 12.JPG
15th-century portrait by Giovanni d'Ambrogio
Born1148
Chiusdino, Siena, Italy
Died1181
Montesiepi, Tuscany, Italy
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Canonized1185 by Pope Lucius III
Feast30 November

Galgano Guidotti (1148 – 3 December 1181)[a] was a Catholic saint from Tuscany born in Chiusdino, in the modern province of Siena, Italy. His mother's name was Dionigia, while his father's name (Guido or Guidotto) only appeared in a document dated in the 16th century, when the last name Guidotti was attributed.

The canonization process to declare Galgano a saint started in 1185, only a few years after his death, and his canonization was the first conducted with a formal process by the Roman Church.[1] A lot of Galgano's life is known through the documents of the canonization process in 1185[2] and other Vitae: Legenda beati Galgani[3] by anonymous, Legenda beati Galgani confessoris by an unknown Cistercian monk,[4] Leggenda di Sancto Galgano,[5] Vita sancti Galgani de Senis,[6] Vita beati Galgani.[7]

Biography[]

The son of a feudal lord, Galgano became a knight, and is said to have led a ruthless life in his early years.[8] He abandoned his military life in favour of living as a pious hermit in the place now known as Montesiepi, near the present-day ruins of the Abbey of San Galgano. His mother, Dionigia, later explained this by reporting that Galgano had had two visions, both involving the Archangel Michael: in the first, the Archangel told Galgano that he was going to be protected by the Archangel himself; in the second, Galgano was following the Archangel and they arrived at the hill of Montesiepi, where they met the twelve Apostles and God himself. After this, it was reported that Galgano's horse refused to obey his orders and led him to the top of Montesiepi, where he received further visions. Convinced that this was a sign, Galgano wished to plant a cross. Since he had no way to make one of wood, he planted his sword in the ground. The sword is said to have immediately become fused with the ground, so that nobody could remove it. One story says that, in one of the visions, Galgano was told to renounce material things. Stating that this would be as easy as splitting a rock, he decided to make his point by plunging his sword into one. As the legend has it, the sword went through the stone like a knife through butter.[9]

The sword in the stone at Montesiepi Chapel

Galgano died in 1181. Soon after, in 1184, a round chapel was built over his claimed tomb to commemorate him;[10] pilgrims came there in large numbers, and miracles were claimed. In that year, Cistercian monks took over Montesiepi at the request of Hugh, bishop of Volterra, but most of Galgano's monks left, scattered over Tuscany, and became Augustinian hermits. By 1220, San Galgano Abbey, a large Cistercian monastery, had been built below Galgano's hermitage: he was then claimed and recognized as a Cistercian saint. His cult was lively in Siena and Volterra, where numerous representations survive. The ruins of his hermitage can still be seen, while his cloak is kept in the church of Santuccio at Siena.[11]

The sword in the stone[]

The sword in the stone can be seen at the Rotonda at Montesiepi, near the ruins of the Abbey of San Galgano. The handle of a sword protrudes from a stone, and is said to be the sword of Galgano. An analysis of the metal done in 2001[12] by Luigi Garlaschelli confirmed that the "composition of the metal and the style are compatible with the era of the legend". The analysis also confirmed that the upper piece and the invisible lower one are authentic and belong to one and the same artifact.[13]

In the media[]

Television[]

Galgano's "sword in the stone" story was featured in a season 7 episode of TV series, Forged in Fire. Bladesmiths had to recreate "Excalibur", a medieval broadsword inspired by Galgano's story.[14] The episode explained the story as follows: the actual Sword in the Stone is located in Siena, Italy, and believed to have belonged to Galgano.

See also[]

  • Excalibur

References[]

Footnotes

  1. ^ His alleged date of death is 3 December 1181, but other scholars assign it to 30 November 1180. The Roman Catholic Church celebrates Saint Galgano on 30 November, as ordered in 2004 by Pope John Paul II.

Citations

  1. ^ As reported by A. Vauchez in "La santità nel medioevo", Il Mulino, Bologna, 1989
  2. ^ Inquisitio in partibus, transcribed by Sigismondo Tizio in Historiae Senenses and transcribed in "Analecta Toscana IV; Der Einsiedler Galgano von chiusino und die Anfange von San Galgano" by Fedor Schneider (1914–1924).
  3. ^ Codice Laurenziano, 14th century
  4. ^ Codice di Siena, 15th century
  5. ^ Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, cod. Chigi M. V. 118, 15th century.
  6. ^ Codice di Veroli, 15th century.
  7. ^ Codice Laurenziano, 15th century.
  8. ^ Rory Carroll, Tuscany's Excalibur is the real thing, say scientists, The Guardian, 16 September 2001, accessed 25 April 2021
  9. ^ Ḏḥwty (28 April 2015). "The Legendary Sword in the Stone of San Galgano". Ancient Origins. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  10. ^ Haegen, Anne Mueller von der; Strasser, Ruth F. (2013). "Chiusdino". Art & Architecture: Tuscany. Potsdam: H.F.Ullmann Publishing. p. 424. ISBN 978-3-8480-0321-1.
  11. ^ “Galgano” in David Hugh Farmer, Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford University Press, 1997)
  12. ^ Carroll, Rory (16 September 2001). "Tuscany's Excalibur is the real thing, say scientists". the Guardian. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
  13. ^ Chodyński, Antoni Romuald (2014). Fasciculi Archaeologiae Historicae. Fasc. 27 (2014). Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of Polish Academy of Sciences.
  14. ^ "Watch The Sword in the Stone Full Episode - Forged in Fire". HISTORY. Retrieved 12 March 2021.

External links[]

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