First Master of the Prayerbook of Maximilian, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary From the Hours of Isabella the Catholic Flemish, c. 1500 Cleveland, Museum of Art Acc # 1963, 256, fol. 197v |
“When one finds a worthy wife,
her value is far beyond pearls.
Her husband, entrusting his heart
to her,
has an unfailing prize.
She brings him good, and not
evil,
all the days of her life.
She obtains wool and flax
and works with loving hands.
She puts her hands to the
distaff,
and her fingers ply the spindle.
She reaches out her hands to the
poor,
and extends her arms to the
needy.
Charm is deceptive and beauty
fleeting;
the woman who fears the LORD is
to be praised.
Give her a reward for her labors,
and let her works praise her at
the city gates.”
Proverbs 31:10-13, 19-20, 30-31
First Reading for the Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A
Sunday, November 15, 2020
On reading and hearing the first reading from the Sunday Mass yesterday, I thought it was an appropriate Biblical quotation to begin this essay on the iconography of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary. As a woman, married to an important nobleman, she certainly fulfilled the words of the writer of this proverb for she brought good and not evil, worked at spinning wool, reached out her hands to the poor and extended her arms to the needy. In her short time on earth she fulfilled this passage and modeled her life on that of Christ. And she has been remembered for it through many generations.
I don’t recall when I first heard about Saint Elizabeth of
Hungary but I know it was when I was very small. I remember my mother telling me the story of
what I now know is called the Miracle of the Roses. This is probably the best known tale attached
to Saint Elizabeth. It is probably a
pious fiction, although it does reveal a deeper truth about the woman. I remember thinking, that it was a sweet and
helpful miracle, but not much more than that.
Main Altar with Miracle of the Roses windows German, c, 1920s New York, Church of Saint Elizabeth, Wadsworth Avenue |
However, this saint seems to follow me around. When I was 16 my family was forced to move
from the Bloomingdale area on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, where I grew up, to
a more distant location in upper Manhattan known as Fort George. The parish in that area is known as Saint
Elizabeth, period, no further description.
So, it could refer to the Virgin Mary’s cousin, Elizabeth, or to someone
else. Once we relocated, it was obvious
that the Elizabeth who is patron of the parish is not the mother of Saint John
the Baptist but the medieval Elizabeth of Hungary. Indeed, there was (and is) a beautiful
stained glass window behind the main altar that depicts the Miracle of the
Roses.
We finally found a suitable new apartment and moved to the Upper
East Side to the area historically known as Yorkville. To my surprise, in addition to the big parish
churches of which I had always been aware, the area was sprinkled with small,
“national” churches, founded in the early part of the 20th century,
when immigrants were flooding into New York from many diverse language
groups. While, at the time, in every parish Mass was
offered in Latin, the national churches allowed newcomers to hear preaching and
receive other sacraments, such as Penance, in their own language. These parishes also functioned as social
centers for their communities, offering a haven in an Anglophone and sometimes
hostile city. One language group that
settled in the area was Hungarian, another was Slovak. Consequently, my apartment was within one
block each way of both a Hungarian and a Slovak Catholic church. The Hungarian church was named for Saint
Stephen of Hungary and the Slovak church was named for Saint Elizabeth of
Hungary.1
Devotional Image of Saint Elizabeth Origin Unknown, c. 1900 London, Wellcome Trust |
So, why would a Slovak church be named in honor of a Hungarian saint? It was a puzzle, but not one sufficiently intriguing to cause me to do any research. (And, to be fair, simple research of this kind wasn’t quite as easy then as now, when you just have to enter a few words in a search engine).
Having decided to honor the feast day of Saint Elizabeth of
Hungary, which is November 17, with an iconographic essay I finally did that
research, and what an interesting woman I found!
Pietro Lorenzetti and Workshop, Crowned Female Figure (Saint Elizabeth) Italian, c. 1336-1340 London, National Gallery |
The very first thing I found out is that Elizabeth was not born in today’s Hungary, but in what is today’s Slovakia. In fact, she was born in 1207 in the capital city of Slovakia, Bratislava. However, in her day (the early 13th century) this area was part of the kingdom of Hungary. Bratislava was then known as Pozsony in Hungarian and Pressburg in German.2 She was born a princess, daughter of King Andrew II of Hungary and his queen, the Bavarian countess, Gertrude. Interestingly, her mother’s sisters were Hedwig, now Saint Hedwig, who was married to the Grand Duke of Poland and is now one of that country’s patron saints, and Agnes, who was married for a time to King Philip II Augustus of France.3 Thus Elizabeth’s parents were very well connected as well as very pious.
Jean le Tavernier and Follower, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary From a Book of Hours French (Oudenarde), c. 1450-1460 The Hague, Koninklijk Bibliotheek MS KB 76 F 2, fol. 277v |
As was common among the aristocracy of Europe in this period (and for years before and after) royal children were political bargaining chips. No matter how much their parents may have loved them it was understood that they would be used in ways that may seem to us to be barbaric. So, like many other children, Elizabeth was betrothed to Herman, the son of the Duke of Thuringia, at the age of four. Shortly thereafter she was sent to Thuringia to be brought up along with her betrothed and his siblings. There were practical reasons for this kind of arrangement of course. Although it must have been devastating to the child to be taken from the only home she knew, it guaranteed the political association which her marriage was intended to make permanent and guaranteed that she would be familiar with the language and all the customs of what would become her country.
In her new homeland Elizabeth seems to have grown up to be a very devout child. There are stories about her spending a great deal of time in church, even trying to get into the chapel when it was closed, of private devotions and penances. What may have been a refuge for her in the strangeness of her early days there seems to have developed into a deep and serious piety.
Charles Allston Collins, The Devout Childhood of St. Elizabeth of Hungary English, 1851-1852 Detroit, Institute of Arts |
What was always questionable about childhood betrothals was whether they would ever see fruition. As happened many times in history, Elizabeth’s betrothed died before the wedding could take place. Since she was part of an agreement between Hungary and Thuringia which both wanted to retain, Herman was replaced as her betrothed by his next younger brother, Ludwig (often referred to as Louis). And this was surely a marriage made in heaven. At the time of their wedding Ludwig was 20 years old and Elizabeth was 14. This sounds drastically young to our modern thinking, but was not uncommon in its time.
Ludwig succeeded his father as Duke of Thuringia in 1217 and, at their marriage three years later, Elizabeth became Duchess of Thuringia. The marriage seems to have been a very happy one. They had three children, Herman, Sophia and Gertrude, the youngest being born three weeks after her father’s death. The capital of the duchy was at Eisenach, and the ducal residence was the castle of the Wartburg, which towers above it. There is an irony here, as those of you familiar with the story of Luther will realize. For, it was the Wartburg where Luther holed up, under the protection of the Duke of Saxony, a descendant of Ludwig and Elizabeth, in order to escape imprisonment following his condemnation at the Diet of Worms and where he made his famous translation of the Bible into German. However, in the period during which it was the home of Ludwig and Elizabeth, it was the home of some of the most celebrated of the German troubadours, especially Walter von der Vogelweide and Wolfram von Eschenbach. It was here that the Battle of the Bards, the central piece of Wagner’s opera, Tannhäuser, actually took place. So, Elizabeth was the chatelaine of a very important location, wife of a very important local ruler within the larger Holy Roman Empire.
Anton Dietrich, Count Ludwig and Saint Elizabeth German, c. 1850-1890 Dresden, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen |
But, in addition to being a wife, mother and consort of an important man, Elizabeth was a serious and devout Christian. She did all she could to alleviate the sufferings of the poor in the area around Eisenach. She gave them alms in money and she gave them food with her own hands. This is the context from which the story of the Miracle of the Roses comes. The story is that one day, as Elizabeth and her ladies in waiting were on their way to feed the poor they encountered Ludwig and a hunting party of lesser nobles and court officials. There seems to have been some suspicion of Elizabeth on the part of some of the courtiers because Ludwig wanted to prove that she and her ladies were not stealing treasures from the castle. So, he insisted that she show them all what she was carrying in her skirts and baskets. When she unveiled the contents of her cloak and baskets everyone saw only roses. She was exonerated of suspicion of theft and her true purpose hidden as well.
Miracle of the Roses Austrian, c. 1525 Mariahof, Parish Church |
In the town of Eisenach Elizabeth also founded a hospital to care for the sick and dying. The medieval hospital was a combination of what we would today consider a hospital, where ailments are treated (and hopefully cured) and a nursing home/hospice, where the chronically sick and the dying are cared for. Needless to say, the treatments available at the time were primitive and the secondary function had more numerous clients than the first. What is most significant about this particular institution is that Elizabeth invested a great deal of herself into it. She made it a point of every day to be at the hospital and to care for the sick herself rather than to just provide money and oversight. With her own hands she washed and fed the sick, including the most abject of medieval patients, the lepers. In this she sounds remarkably like a saint of our own time, Saint Teresa of Calcutta.
Saint Elizabeth Washing a Beggar Slovak, Second Half of the 15th Century Kosice, Cathedral of Saint Elizabeth |
One interesting element in her attempts to make common cause with the poor sounds surprisingly modern. This has to do with her diet. Among other privations, Elizabeth insisted that she would not eat any meat that was obtained in ways that were not ethical. This suggests that she refused to eat meat from animals who might have been abused either in their living conditions or in the manner in which they were slaughtered. Consequently, it seems that bread formed a significant portion of her diet, even as she reigned over grand ducal banquets. Contemporary vegans and vegetarians might find some resonances in this aspect of her life.
Elizabeth’s life changed dramatically when Ludwig died suddenly in September, 1227. He had left the pregnant Elizabeth in August in order to follow the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II Barbarossa, on the sixth crusade to the Holy Land. Unfortunately, Ludwig got no farther than Otranto in southern Italy before dying of the plague on September, 11. When she received news of his death, Elizabeth, who had just given birth to her last child, Gertrude, is reported to have said “He is dead. He is dead. It is to me as if the whole world died today."4
Farewell of Saint Elizabeth and Her Husband, Ludwig of Thuringia Swiss, 1480s Eisenach, Wartburg Museum |
From this point Elizabeth went through a period of great
trial and suffering. Throughout history
native suspicions of non-native queens following the death of their husbands
has been frequent. This seems to have
occurred with Elizabeth. Her
brother-in-law, Heinrich Raspe, assumed the role of regent for her son, Herman,
and seems to have taken over her girls as well.
Whether she was forced to remove from the Wartburg (and even from
Eisenach) by physical or psychological force is unclear, but she did move to
Marburg and there does seem to have been some elements of coercion involved.
Moritz von Schwind, Flight of Saint Elizabeth from the Wartburg German, 1854 Eisenach, Wartburg Castle |
Her uncle, the bishop of Bamberg, offered her shelter, but also proposed to find her another noble husband, to further enhance the family fortunes. She refused this suggestion and returned to Marburg.
St. Elizabeth and the Franciscians From Office and Life of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish (Seville), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition latine 868, fol.7 |
About the same time, she came into contact with members of the recently founded Franciscan order and was in communication with Saint Francis himself. She was greatly attracted by his ideals of poverty, prayer and service to the poor. She also placed herself under the spiritual guidance of a cleric called Conrad of Marburg, who was not a Franciscan, but seems to have acted for them at times. He seems to have been determined to break whatever within Elizabeth might still have felt privileged. He is said to have subjected her to severe and unnecessary penances which she accepted with humility.
The following year, 1228, her husband’s remains were brought home to Thuringia and interred. Following this, she was given the dowry money which she had brought to the marriage. With the dowry funding she built another hospital in Marburg and renounced all her earthly rank and possessions, much in the manner of Saint Francis himself. This renunciation and her adoption of a simple form of dress based on the Franciscan habit has caused her to be considered as one of the first members of the lay branch of the Franciscan order, the Third Order, and she is one of their patron saints. However, she was not an actual member of this branch of the Franciscans, as it did not yet exist at the date of her death.
Philip Hermogenes Calderon, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary's Great Act of Renunciation English, 1891 London, Tate Britain |
During this period, she lived in the new hospital she had founded. Her life there consisted of prayer, penance, tending the sick and finding money to finance the work. To bring in money, she spun wool and sold it to aid in financing the hospital and, in addition, sewed garments for the patients. Her life must have been a busy one. This routine, coupled with her continuing fasting and penances, was also wearing on her body.
Bartolomeo Schedoni, Charity of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Italian, 1611 Naples, Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte |
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and Thuringia died in Marburg at the surprisingly early age of 24 in 1231.
Death of St. Elizabeth of Hungary Flemish, c. 1540 Paris, Fondation Custodia |
Conrad of Marburg encouraged devotion to her and began the medieval process of canonization. Miracles took place, especially for the poor and sick. Evidence was collected from Conrad and from her ladies in waiting and others who had known her during her life and on May 28, 1235 she was formally canonized by Pope Gregory IX in Perugia. The bull of canonization is still extant in a Viennese church.
Sandor Liezen-Mayer, Canonization of St. Elizabeth of Hungary in 1235 Hungarian, 1863 Budapest, Magyar Nemzeti Galeria |
She became a very popular saint in medieval European culture. Her iconography spread widely. Through her daughter, Sophia, she is an ancestor of many of the noble and royal families of Europe. Unfortunately, at the time of the iconoclasm associated with the Protestant Reformation, her tomb was destroyed by one of those descendents and her remains desecrated and spread far and wide. They remain widely dispersed to this day. She is the patron saint of the homeless, exiles, nurses, widows, young brides, charity workers, the Third Order Franciscans, bakers and those who are falsely accused of wrongdoing.
Shrine of St. Elizabeth of Hungary German, c. 1235-1249 Marburg, Elisabethkirche |
Iconography of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and Thuringia
The iconography of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary is not unlike
the iconography of many medieval saints.
There are areas of focus, such as her early life, her marriage to Ludwig
IV of Thuringia, the events which followed his early death, her asceticism, her
own death and her place among the saints.
There are some miracle stories, but the most common of these has to do
with the famous Miracle of the Roses.
What is remarkable about her iconography is that it is so varied and, especially, that it has been remarkably consistent and long-lived. It continued to be produced throughout the twentieth century and continues into the twenty-first using the same motifs and stories as in the fifteenth.
Elizabeth’s Early Life
Albrecht de Vriendt, The Youth of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Belgian, 1872 Private Collection |
Her Marriage
The Death of Her Husband in 1227
Moritz von Schwind, Farewell of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and Her Husband Ludwig IV of Thuringia Hand Colored Lecture Slide German, 1854 Eisenach, Carl Simon Coll |
The Difficulties of Her Life Following Ludwig's Death
Saint Elizabeth Giving Up Worldly Titles German, 1490 Überlingen, Cathedral |
Théophile Marie Francois Lybaert, Saint Elizabeth and Her Children at Their Refuge
Belgian, 1890
Private Collection
The Charitable Work – Saint Elizabeth as Role Model for
Enacting the Corporal Works of Mercy
Théophile Marie Francois Lybaert, Saint Elizabeth and Her Children at Their Refuge Belgian, 1890 Private Collection |
In Christian thought the corporal works of mercy are comprised of seven charitable acts: Feeding the Hungry, Clothing the Naked, Giving Drink to the Thirsty, Caring for the Sick, Giving Alms, Visiting Prisoners, Burying the Dead. Saint Elizabeth personally performed all but the last two and probably did these as well. In this aspect she set an example for European royalty and nobility, many of them her descendants.
St. Elizabeth Washing the Feet of a Poor Man From Livre d'images de Madame Marie Flemish (Hainaut), c. 1285-1290 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition francaise 16251, fol. 103v |
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Feeding the Poor From a Psalter-Hours French (Metz), c. 1370-1380 New York, Pierpont Morgan Library MS M 88, fol. 21v |
Cologne Master, Saint Elixabeth of Hungary Giving Clothing to the Poor and Feeding a Sick Man Scenes From the Life of St. Elizabeth German, End of the 14th Century Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum & Fondation Corboud |
Jacques de Besancon, St. Elizabeth Feeding the Poor at Her Hospital From Legenda aurea by Jacobus de Voragine French (Paris), c. 1480-1490 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France Ms Francais 245, fol. 175r |
Saint Elizabeth Distributing Clothing to the Poor From the Hastings Hours Flemish (Bruges), c.1480 London, British Library MS Additional 54782, fol. 64v |
Master of the Housebook, Saint Elizabeth Performing the Works of Mercy From an Altarpiece German, 1495 Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum & Fondation Corboud |
Erhard Schoen, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Giving Food and Drink to a Beggar German, c. 1515-1517 London, Trustees of the British Museum |
Saint Elizabeth Giving Bread and Wine to Beggars German, c. 1515 Pedralbes, Fundacion Coleccion Thyssen-Bornemisza |
Attributed to Hans Weiditz, Saint Elizabeth Washing the Hair of a Sick Man German, c. 1520-1530 London, Trustees of the British Museum |
Pieter de Jode the Elder, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Feeding a Beggar, Surrounded by Scenes from Her Life Flemish, c. 1585-1634 London, Trustees of the British Museum |
Adam Elsheimer, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Bringing Food to the Inmates of Her Hospital German, c. 1598 London, Wellcome Collection |
Hieronymous Francken, Saint Elizabeth Caring for a Sick Woman at Her Hospital Flemish, c. 1600-1625 Beaune, Musée des Beaux-Arts et Musée Marey |
Raphael Sadeler the Elder After Johann Matthias Kager, Saint Elizabeth Washing the Feet of Beggars Flemish, 1615 Philadelphia, Museum of Art |
Bartolome Esteban Murillo, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Tending the Sick and Lepers Spanish, c. 1671-1674 Seville, Charity Hospital |
Lucas de Valdes, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and Her Ladies Caring for a Sick Man as Other Beggars Wait Spanish, c. 1700-1725 Seville, Museo de Bellas Artes de Sevilla |
Daniel Gran, The Charity of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Austrian, c. 1720-1736 Sheffield (UK), Museum |
Giambattista Pittoni, Saint Eliabeth Distributing Alms Italian, 1734 Budapest, Szépmûvészeti Múzeum |
Karl Ballenberger, Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Giving Alms German, 1833 New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art |
Sandor Liezen-Mayer, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Giving Her Cloak to a Poor Woman Hungarian, 1882 Budapest, Magyar Nemzeti Galeria |
Edmund Blair Leighton, The Charity of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary English, 1915 Private Collection |
Among her other works it is attested that she spun and wove woolen yarn to make clothing for the inmates of her hospitals and to sell in order to obtain additional funds when her private resources were exhausted. She is also reputed to have made clothing for the poor with her own hands.
St. Elizabeth Spinning From Office and Life of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish (Seville), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition latine 868, fol. 22v |
Marianne Stokes, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Sewing for the Poor Austrian, c. 1920 Sydney, Art Gallery of New South Wales |
Saint Elizabeth's Prayer and Fasting
The Young Saint Elizabeth Praying a the Chapel Door While Her Attendants Play Chess From Office and Life of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish (Seville), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition latine 868, fol. 4v |
St. Elizabeth Eating a Frugal Meal From Office and Life of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish (Seville), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition latine 868, fol. 19v |
St. Elizabeth At Prayer From Vies des saints French (Paris), ca. 1325-1350 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Francais 185, fol. 223r |
Richard de Montbaston, Vision of St. Elizabeth From Legenda aurea by Jacobus de Voragine French (Paris), 1348 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Francais 241, fol. 305r |
Master of the Lives of the Emperors and Workshop, Vision of Saint Elizabeth From a Breviary Italian (Milan), c. 1425-1450 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Latin 760, fol. 573r |
Attributed to Joost de Paepe, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Prays for the Salvation of Berthold von Leimbach Flemish, c. 1630 Warsaw, Muzeum Narodowe |
Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary in Prayer French, c. 1735 Dijon, Musée national Magnin |
The Death and Canonization of Saint Elizabeth
Saint Elizabeth on Her Deathbed Surrounded by Christ, the Vigin Mary, Saints John the Baptist, John the Evangelist, Catherine of Alexandria, Peter and the Landgrave Konrad of Thuringia German, c. 1370 Marburg, Elisabethkirche |
The Last Years, Death and Funeral of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Dutch, c. 1490-1495 Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum |
Moritz von Schwind, Death of Saint Elizabeth German, 1854 Eisenach, Wartburg Castle |
Moritz von Schwind, Funeral of Saint Elizabeth German, 1854 Eisenach, Wartburg Castle |
Miracles of Saint Elizabeth
Miracle of St. Elizabeth From Office and Life of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish (Seville), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition latine 868, fol. 12r |
Miracle of St. Elizabeth From Office and Life of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish (Seville), c. 1275-1300 Paris, Bibliotheque nationale de France MS Nouvelle acquisition latine 868, fol.11r |
The Miracle of the Roses
Karl von Blaas, Miracle of the Roses Austrian, 1839 Private Collection |
Moritz von Schwind, Miracle of the Roses German, 1854 Eisenach, Wartburg |
Gustave Moreau, Miracle of the Roses French, 1879 Private Collection |
Károly Senyei, Saint Elizabeth Hungarian, 1890s Budapest, Saint Stephen's Cathedral |
George James Frampton, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary English, 1895 Bath (UK), Victoria Art Gallery |
Saint Elizabeth as Saint Among Others
Simone Martini, Saints Clare of Assisi and Elizabeth of Hungary Italian, c. 1320-1325 Assisi, Basilica of San Francesco, Lower Church, St. Martin Chapel |
Simone Martini, Saints Elizabeth, Margaret and Henry of Hungary Italian, c. 1320-1325 Assisi, Basilica of San Francesco, Lower Church |
Giotto, Coronation of the Virgin Italian, c. 1328-1330 Florence, Church of Santa Croce, Baroncelli Chapel 6 |
Giotto, Coronation of the Virgin, Detail of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Italian, c. 1328-1330 Florence, Church of Santa Croce, Baroncelli Chapel |
Her image appeared elsewhere as well, although often in a Franciscan context.
Saint Francis Giving His Rule to Franciscan Saints Italian, c. 1340 Naples, Museo dell-Opera di San Lorenzo Maggiore Here, Saint Elizabeth appears as the saint wearing a light colored veil to the right of Saint Clare. In an enlargement it is just possible to see that she wears a tiara around her head, on top of the veil as an indication of her worldly rank. |
Giovanni di Paolo, Saints Clare of Assisi and Elizabeth of Hungary Italian, c. 1445 Private Collection |
Nikolaus Obilman, Saints Hedwig of Silesia, Elizabeth of Hungary and Mary Magdalene Polish, c. 1466 Warsaw, Muzeum Narodowe Here we have the image of two related saints, Elizabeth and her aunt, Hedwig, alongside the Biblical saint, Mary Magdalene |
Master of the View of Saint Gudule, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary with Saints Catherine of Alexandria and Dorothy Flemish, c. 1480 Private Collection Here we have a "modern" saint, Elizabeth of Hungary, on a par with two early Christian martyrs. |
Solo Images of Saint Elizabeth
Andrea da Firenze, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Italian, c. 1365 Houston, Museum of Fine Arts |
Saint Elizabeth with the Model of a Church Possibly French, c. 1470 Marburg, Elisabethkirche Here she holds a model of the church in which this image stands. |
Wolfgang, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary German, c. 1470 New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art Here the attributes are loaves of bread and a bowl of soup representing her efforts at feeding the poor. |
Jan Provost, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Detached wing of an altarpiece Flemish, c. 1500-1524 Genoa, Galleria di Palazzo Bianco Here our saint holds a crown and a book reminding us of her rank and of her prayer life. |
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Italian, 16th Century Richmond-Upon-Thames, London, Ham House |
Goswijn van der Weyden, Ssint Elizabeth of Hungary Reverse of Panel with Lysbeth Biers Flemish, c. 1510 Brussels, Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique I am including this image among the solo images of the saint. However, the notation that this is the reverse side of a portrait of a woman named Lysbeth (Elizabeth) places the concept behind it as that of a patroness. Saint Elizabeth is Lysbeth's patron saint. |
Crispijn de Passe the Elder, Saint Elizabeth Flemish, c. 1590-1637 London, British Museum In this rather regal image, Saint Elizabeth sits in state, surrounded by images of the assistance she gave to the poor (basket of bread loaves and containers of wine) while over her shoulder in the background we can see an image of her at her work. |
Francisco de Zurbarán, Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia Spanish, c. 1635-1640 Bilbao, Museo de Bellas Artes de Bilbao This beautiful image by Zurbaran, with her attributes of crown and book, is a somewhat stunning reminder of how very young she was at the time she died. That is something that is easy for forget in looking at her accomplishments and trials. |
Hugues Merle, St. Elizabeth of Hungary French, 1879 Detroit, Institute of Arts Another, later, portrayal that also reminds us of the youthfulness of this saint. |
Saint Elizabeth as Patroness
Jan van Eyck, The Virgin and Child with Saints Barbara and Elizabeth of Hungary and Jan Vos Flemish, c. 1441-1443 New York, Frick Collection Notes from the recent special exhibition of this and some related works at the Frick suggest that these saints were chosen because, before becoming a Carthusian monk, Jan Vos had been a member of the Teutonic order of knights. The order cared for the relics of Saint Elizabeth at Marburg and the tower attribute of Saint Barbara also resonated with them. In daily life Vos would have used the image as a focus for intercessory prayer to the Virgin and these patron saints and may have intended it as a memorial after his death.7 |
Master of the Drapery Studies, Saint Elisabeth Feeding the Poor with a Donor From The Saint Elizabeth Triptych German, c. 1480 Karlsruhe, Staatliche Kunsthalle Along the top angels hold a cloth of state which bears the inscription "Saint Elizabeth" and "Mother of the Poor". Around the head of the kneeling donor the scroll, representing his words, reads "O Saint Elizabeth, Pray for me, a miserable sinner". The name of the donor has not survived. |
Attributed to Israhel van Mechenem, The Mass of Saint Gregory, German, c. 1515-1520 Warsaw, Muzeum Narodowe The identity of the female donor has been lost. From her clothing she is either a widow or a nun. It may be that her name is Elizabeth or one of the variations of that name. |
St. Elizabeth of Hungary Presenting Six Women and One Child from the Busnes de Poucques Family Flemish, 1570 Saint-Omer, Musée de l'Hotel Sandelin |
There is one group of people with a very particular interest in this saint, those named for her. And of that group, there has always been a small, but important group of women who have an even closer relationship to this saint. They are her blood descendants. Many of them are not immediately recognizable to English speakers because we do not necessarily associate their first name with the name, Elizabeth, for their names are Isabel, Isabelle or Isabella, the Romance language version of the name.
Petrus Christus, Isabella of Portugal with Saint Elizabeth Flemish, c. 1457-1460 Bruges, Groeninge Museum |
Isabella of Austria with Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Flemish, c. 1520 Private Collection |
Peter Paul Rubens, Vision of San Ildefonso (central panel), Archduke Albert IV with Saint Albert of Louvain and Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia with Saint Elizabeth of Hungary The Saint Ildefonso Altar Flemish, c. 1630-1632 Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum |
© M. Duffy, 2020
1. In addition, just across the street from my new residence was a Byzantine Rite Catholic church also primarily attended by people from Slovakia, Hungary, Poland and Ukraine. While the church of Saint Elizabeth on Wadsworth Avenue in Fort George is still going strong, with a congregation now composed largely of immigrants from the Dominican Republic, both Saint Stephen and Saint Elizabeth on the Upper East side have been closed. These two churches have been incorporated into the nearby parish of Saint Monica, which is now known as Saint Monica-Saint Stephen of Hungary-Saint Elizabeth of Hungary (quite a mouthful). This represents the demographic shifts of the last 50-60 years in Manhattan and is equally true for Protestant congregations in the area that have the same ethnic composition, Slovak and German Lutherans and Hungarian Reformed. The Byzantine Rite church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross is still hanging on, although now administered from East 15th Street by the church of Saint Mary, the only other Byzantine Rite church left in Manhattan. (Source: Parish websites and personal experience.)
2. There is an
alternate possible birth location as well.
This is the castle of the town of Sárospatak in Hungary. Initially,
I thought that the two towns might be close enough to explain the
confusion. However, they lie at opposite
ends of Hungary. In any event, she was
born in 1207.
3. The marriages of
Philip Augustus are a bit messy. He was
initially married to Isabella of Hainaut. On her death he married Ingeborg of Denmark
(she of the famous Ingeborg Psalter)
but, like Henry VIII with Anne of Cleves, when they finally met, he was physically
repulsed by her. A three-way battle
ensued between Philip, who sought an annulment; Ingeborg and her family, who
fought the annulment; and Pope Innocent III, who sided with Ingeborg. During the annulment battle, Philip planned
to marry the daughter of the Count of Geneva, but she was kidnapped by another
suitor and hurriedly married. Finally,
Philip succeeded in marrying Saint Elizabeth’s aunt, Agnes, and they had two
children, but the marriage was eventually declared null and void by the Pope
and, under threat of an interdict, Philip was forced to take Ingeborg
back. Obviously, royal marriages didn’t
always work out as intended! On his
death Philip was succeeded by his son from his first marriage, Louis VIII, and
is, therefore, the grandfather of Louis IX, Saint Louis, another royal saint.
4. Rainer Koessling,
ed. and trans., Leben und Legende der
heiligen Elisabeth nach Dietrich von Apolda, Frankfurt am Main, Insel
Verlag, 1997, p. 52. (Cited in Elizabeth of Hungary, Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_of_Hungary)
retrieved 11/14/2020. For his part,
Ludwig IV though never officially canonized, has been thought of in Germany as
a saint himself. He is sometimes called
Saint Ludwig or Saint Louis or Ludwig the Pious in honor of his own personal
piety and as the consort of an official saint.
5. See also Bihl,
Michael. "St. Elizabeth of Hungary." The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, New York, Robert Appleton
Company, 1909. (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05389a.htm). As well as
"The ranks of saints on either side of the central Coronation strike other chords. All the Franciscan saints canonized within the first century of the order’s foundation are present. Francis not only appears in the main register but also for a second time to the right of the central Man of Sorrows in the predella: there, his pose reflects a doctrine especially dear to the order – its founder as alter Christus. In the main order is depicted also Louis of Toulouse, the young Angevin saint canonized in 1317, who was thus a contemporary of Giotto and of many of the Santa Croce friars…. Louis is shown as bishop of Toulouse, his cope spangled with gold fleurs-de-lys. Clare appears near Francis…. Anthony of Padua accompanies Louis of Toulouse, while Elizabeth of Hungary, clad very fashionably in crown and wimple, stands to the left of Clare. These ‘modern’ Franciscan saints appear alongside the prophets, apostles, martyrs, and other orders’ saints."
Rupert Maas. “The life of Charles Allstem Collins (1828-73): And his painting "The Devout Childhood of St Elizabeth of Hungary", The British Art Journal, Spring 2015, Vol. 15, No. 3 (Spring 2015), pp. 38-60.
What a marvelous treasure trove of fantastic images and information. I spent nearly an hour reading the text and enlarging the images to see the wonderful details. Thank you so much for all your hard work!
ReplyDeleteOne potential correction:
The woman identified as Margaret in this painting: "Simone Martini, Saints Elizabeth, Margaret and Henry of Hungary
Italian, c. 1320-1325
Assisi, Basilica of San Francesco, Lower Church," is thought by several Franciscan scholars to be that of Saint Clare of Assisi.