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Ulphia
French saint
French saint
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Saint Ulphia |
| birth_date | 8th century |
| feast_day | January 31 |
| venerated_in | Orthodox Church |
| Roman Catholic Church | |
| image | Sainte ulphe 1.jpg |
| imagesize | 150px |
| caption | Statue of Ulphia at Amiens Cathedral. |
| death_place | What is now Fouencamps, France. |
| attributes | Depicted as a young nun seated in prayer on a rock with a frog in the pool near her |
| patronage | Amphibians, keepers of amphibians |
| major_shrine | Amiens Cathedral |
Roman Catholic Church Ulphia (also Ulphe, Olfe, Wulfe, Wolfia, or Wulfia and other variants; d. 8th century AD) of Amiens is a Christian saint, venerated particularly at Amiens. Her feast day is January 31.
Legend
Ulphia was said to be a young girl living on the banks of the Noye, who was determined not to marry, despite having a number of suitors. She would feign madness in an effort to discourage them. At the age of twenty-five she received the veil from the Bishop of Amiens. She then retired to live as a hermit near what would become Saint-Acheul, near Amiens in the Kingdom of the Franks.
Friendship with St Domitius
There she met the elderly hermit Domitius. Baring-Gould said he was a canon of Amiens; Laurentius Surius says that Domitius was not a priest, but a deacon. He would stop at the door of her hut and they would walk to Matins together. No where was the grass so fine as where Ulphia of Picardy walked on her way to church. She looked after the aged hermit, and he provided spiritual guidance.
Her hermitage was located in a marshy wetland, inhabited by frogs whose loud croaking kept her up all night. One day, she was so tired that she slept through when Domitius knocked at her door, and he, thinking she had already gone on ahead, left without her. Legend states that Ulphia placed the frogs in the area around her under interdict as a result of their loud croaking, which kept her awake at nights.
A 19th century hagiographer noted that the frogs in the area around the oratory of Saint Ulphia were, indeed, very quiet. However, if these frogs were taken elsewhere, they became boisterous once again.
At the end of her life, she formed and directed a community of religious women at Amiens.
In iconography, she is depicted as a young nun seated in prayer on a rock with a frog in the pool near her.
Artistic depictions
A statue of Ulphia stands in the north portal of west facade of Amiens Cathedral and a painting of Ulphia with Saint Domitius by the 19th century painter Jean de Franqueville, hangs inside the cathedral.
File:Sainte Ulphe et Saint Domice.jpg|Saint Domice et Sainte Ulphe (1896) by Jean de Francqueville File:JPD 2689 DxO.jpg|Bas relief located at Amiens Cathedral File:Amiens, maison du pèlerin, statue de sainte Ulphe 1.jpg|Statue by Albert Roze
References
References
- Baring-Gould, S.. (2020-07-25). "The Lives of the Saints: Volume 1". BoD – Books on Demand.
- Ivanov, Sergeĭ Arkadʹevich. (2006-04-06). "Holy Fools in Byzantium and Beyond". OUP Oxford.
- (Ramsgate, England), St Augustine's Abbey. (1921). "The Book of Saints: A Dictionary of Servants of God Canonized by the Catholic Church: Extracted from the Roman & Other Martyrologies". A. & C. Black.
- Butler, Alban. ''Lives of the Saints'', 1866
- Mâle, Emile. (2012-11-16). "Religious Art in France of the Thirteenth Century". Courier Corporation.
- Male, Emile. (2018-02-20). "The Gothic Image: Religious Art In France Of The Thirteenth Century". Routledge.
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