MARTYRS
Saint Podcast Season 1 is about martyrs, saints who died for their beliefs. We’ll meet ten martyrs including a man with a dog’s head, a vanquisher of dragons, the patron saint of music, a gay icon, and the princess who inspired the fairy tale Rapunzel.
001 Saint Stephen the Protomartyr
Since this is the debut episode of Saint Podcast, it seems only appropriate to begin with the story of Saint Stephen, the protomartyr, or first martyr. Saint Stephen is one of the few saints whose story has a Biblical source, but his tale continues beyond the Bible in medieval legends, traditional celebrations, and even a French football club. Discover how the bones of a Greek-speaking Roman citizen changed the face of Christianity. Find out why wrens are considered treacherous birds by Celts and Vikings. And why many people around the world have Saint Stephen to thank for that public holiday on Boxing Day.
Bing Crosby’s version of Good King Wenceslas, a song about Saint Stephen’s Day - the day after Christmas, also known as Boxing Day
The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Mackem sing the Wrens Song (above). Modern Wrens Day revellers in costume, Dingle, Ireland (left).
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
The Dossier on Stephen, the First Martyr, article by François Bovon in the Harvard Theological Review Vol. 96, No. 3
The Holy Bible, King James edition published by Collins
A Treasury of British Folklore: Maypoles, Mandrake, and Mistletoe by Dee Dee Chaiey
002 Saint Sebastian the Gay Icon
Episode two of Saint Podcast's Martyr series is about Saint Sebastian, the patron saint of pandemics, athletes, archers, and outcasts. He's one of the most well-known saints - and a gay icon. No other saint has as many works of art dedicated to them from paintings to films to books and pop songs. Tune in to learn more about this 3rd-century Roman citizen from Gaul who was famously shot full of arrows. And discover how a battle-weary Praetorian Guard transformed into a barely legal pin-up that inspired impure thoughts from 16th-century parishioners during mass.
Performance of Gabrielle D’Annunzio’s 1911 play, The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian with a score by Claude Debussy
Scene inspired by Saint Sebastian from Brain De Palma’s 1976 Carrie. This scene is violent. Viewer discretion is advised.
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time
Sebastian Melmoth and Selected Poems of Oscar Wilde
Confessions of a Mask by Yukio Mishima
Suddenly Last Summer by Tennessee Williams
Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice
Special thanks to Brian Robinson provided the readings for this episode.
003 Saint Margaret the Vanquisher of Dragons
Episode 3 of Saint Podcast's Martyrs series is about Saint Margaret. She's one of the most popular saints around the world, despite having been declared apocryphal by the Catholic Church in the 5th century - and then again in the 1960s. Nevertheless, her legend as a vanquisher of dragons has made her a perennial favourite. Tune into hear her story, and find out what Saint Margaret has in common with Sleeping Beauty, Aphrodite, and margaritas.
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman
The Greek Myths: The Complete and Definitive Edition by Robert Graves
Special thanks to Sue Behrent who provided the readings for this episode and Amy Vanacore who composed and performed the piano interludes.
004 Saint Barbara the Disney Princess
Episode 4 is about Saint Barbara, a maiden who was locked in a tower by her father. She's the patron saint of firefighters, Lebanon, lightning, mathematicians, and the Russian Missile Strategic Forces - among many other things. Find out why Saint Barbara is associated with explosions. Discover the pre-holiday festivals celebrated in her honour. Tune in to this episode to hear about Saint Barbara's connection to powerful Afro-Cuban deities and also to a Disney Princess.
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
Shahnameh by Ferdowsi
Petrosinella by Giambattista Basile, picture book edition
The Original Folk and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm: The Complete First Edition
The Book of the City of Ladies by Christine de Pizan
The House of Bernarda Alba by Garcia Lorca
Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day
Selected Short Plays by George Bernard Shaw, including Glimpse of Reality
Special thanks to Amy Slonaker from Santa Barbara who provided the readings for this episode and Amy Vanacore who composed and performed the piano interludes.
005 Saint Lawrence the Saviour of the Holy Grail
Episode five of Saint Podcast's Martyrs series is about Saint Lawrence, an extremely popular saint whose story is relatively unknown yet it intersects with one of the most well-known legends in the world. He was famously roasted alive, and quipped to his executioners, 'Turn me over. I'm done on this side,' making him the patron saint of comedians. Tune in to discover what connects this historic figure with King Arthur, Sailor Moon, the Da Vinci Code, and Indiana Jones.
Trailer for the 1974 film, Monty Python and the Holy Grail starring John Cleese
Super Sailor Moon and the Holy Grail from the 90s anime and manga, Sailor Moon
T.S. Eliot reading his poem, The Waste Land, a musing of British society in a retelling of the Fisher King and Holy Grail legend.
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
Prudentius’ Crown of Martyrs, Liber Peristephanon
Saint Laurence and the Holy Grail: The Holy Chalice of Valencia by Janice Bennett
The Golden Legend, William Caxton translation
Tales of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table by Thomas Mallory
The Waste Land and Other Poems by T.S. Eliot
Trilogy of Arthurian Prose Romances attributed to Robert de Boron
Special thanks to Roderick Potts who provided the readings for this episode. Rod hosts the podcast, Hasta La Visa, Baby, a deep dive into the relationship between U.S. immigration law and fictitious characters from some of your favourite television shows and movies. Check out Hasta La Visa, Baby here. The piano interludes were composed and performed by Amy Vanacore’s piano student, Joshua Lewis, whose father is named Lawrence!
006 Saint Ursula the Leader of 11,000 Virgins
Episode six is about a saint whose name means little bear. She’s a British saint, a princess from Britannia, the name of the British Isles when England and Wales were part of the Roman Empire. Her legend is based around a pilgrimage that included an entourage of 11,000 virgins. They met their end in modern-day Germany and inspired a monastic order of nuns whose French chapter in Loudun was scandalised by a witch trial.
Performance of The Devils of Loudun opera by Krzysztof Pendereck
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Story of Saint Ursula by John Ruskin
The Secret History by Procopius
Relics, Reliquaries, and Religious Women: Visualizing the Holy Virgins in Cologne by Joan A Holladay
Aldous Huxley’s The Devils of Loudun
Special thanks to Angela Corcombe who provided the readings for this episode and Amy Vanacore who composed and performed the piano interludes.
007 Saint Catherine the Bride of Christ
Episode seven is about a very, very popular saint who was a princess in Roman Egypt. She’s noted for being extremely intelligent and is the patron saint of scholars, students, lawyers, educators, librarians, philosophers, and theologians. This saint’s icon is a spiked wheel. Her legend has inspired dating customs, and she’s one of a handful of saints who were married to Jesus Christ. This is the story of Saint Catherine the Bride of Christ.
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
The Golden Legend, William Caxton translation
Catherine of Alexandrias to the Adult Christ in Two Burgundian Manuscripts by Caroline Diskant Muir
The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, publisher by Faber
Article by Michael R. Dressman, Empress of Calvary: Mystical Marriage in the Poems of Emily Dickinson
The Pilgrimage of Egeria, a translation of Itinerarium Egeriae
The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, Penguin Classic
Special thanks to Emma Whittard who provided the readings for this episode. Emma is a transformational life coach. Click here for more information. The piano interludes were composed and performed by Amy Vanacore.
008 Saint Christopher the Dog-headed Giant
Episode eight is about a saint who, by all accounts, was a giant, standing 12 feet tall! He’s the patron saint of athletics, traveller, journeys and transportation in general, epilepsy, the city of Havana in Cuba, and of bachelors. His legend inspired a fashion craze with surfers in the late 1950s, and he is famously known for carrying an unbelievably heavy child across a wide river. Most unusually, this saint is often depicted with a dog’s head.
Hang on Saint Christopher, performed by Tom Waits
Trailer for Kalifornia featuring a Saint Christopher figurine on the dash of the car
Ringo Starr recovers his beloved lost Saint Christopher medal in 1964 New York City with help from local radio DJs
John Coffey gifted a Saint Christopher medal from the Green Mile directed by Frank Darabont
Hitchhiker scene from Crash, directed by Paul Haggis, featuring a Saint Christopher figurine in Tom Hansen’s car
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
Animal-Headed Gods, Evangelists, Saints and Righteous Men by Zofia Ameisenowa
Grotesque, Fascinating, Transformative: The Power of a Strange Face in the Story of Saint Christopher by Simon Thomson
Catherine of Alexandria’s to the Adult Christ in Two Burgundian Manuscripts by Caroline Diskant Muir
The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton
Truman Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s
Monstrous Conversions: Recovering the Sacramental Bodies of The Passion of St. Christopher, Arthur J. Russell
St. Christopher, Bishop Peter of Attalia, and the Cohors Marmaritarum: A Fresh Examination by David Woods
City of God, Penguin Classics edition
Special thanks to Chris Rhodes, an English teacher in London who provided the readings for this episode. The music interludes were composed and performed by Stephen Vesecky, a musician and math teacher from Los Angeles. Check out his music on his SoundCloud account.
009 Saint Cecilia the Patron of Music
Episode nine is about a very popular virgin saint. She’s unusual in that she was married – and yet still died a virgin. She’s the patron saint of poetry and creativity. There is a historic basis to this saint, but the details of her life and the development of her legend after death seem linked with that of another ancient god and medieval Christian views on music.
Written by Paul Simon in 1970, Cecilia is about the muse of music who comes and goes like a capricious lover.
Saint Cecilia, the 2015 EP and single by the Foo Fighters
Performance of Handel’s 1739 Ode to Saint Cecilia’s Day
Performance of Benjamin Britten’s 1942 Hymn to Saint Cecilia, set to WH Auden’s poem
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
Rome and the Invention of the Papacy: The Liber Pontificalis by Rosamund McKitterick
The Book of Pontiffs by Raymond Davis
St. Cecilia's Garlands and Their Roman Origin by John S. P. Tatlock
Una Nuova Fonte Per L'invenzione Del Corpo Di Santa Cecilia: Testimoni Oculari, Immagini E Dubbi by Tomaso Montanari
Mourning into Joy: Music, Raphael and Saint Cecilia by Thomas Connolly
St. Cecilia and Music by W. H. Grattan Flood
For whom the fire burns: medieval images of Saint Cecilia and music by Lucia Marchi
Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales
Privileged Knowledge: St. Cecilia and the Alchemist in the "Canterbury Tales" by Robert M. Longsworth
Cecilia: Memoirs of an Heiress by France Burney
Hard Times by Charles Dickens
Hard Times: Dickens’ Ode to Saint Cecilia by Barbara Witucki
This episode is dedicated to my mom, Cecilia Huang. Special thanks to my cousin Cecilia Ku from Houston, Texas, who provided the readings for this episode. The music interludes were composed and performed by Amy Vanacore, a musician and piano teacher from Portland, Oregon.
010 Saint Lucy the Spirit of Christmas
Episode ten is the final episode in our Martyrs series. It’s an exploration of the legend of another virgin martyr: the patron saint of writers, sales people, Perugia, Malta, Syracuse in Sicily, and Pampanga in the Philippines. This saint is also the patron saint of the blind and optometrists because she was famously tortured by having her eyes gouged out. Her feast day used to fall on the Winter Solstice. Through the centuries, Solstice celebrations in her honour have merged with pre-Christian rituals to influence the development of Santa Claus.
Video explaining traditions around the Iranian Winter Solstice celebration of Yalda
Resources
Books and articles used for research and/or referenced in this episode:
The Golden Legend, Princeton University Press edition
The Prose Edda: Tales from Norse Mythology, Penguin Classics
Seeing is Believing: St. Lucy in Text, Image, and Festive Culture by Barbara Wisch
Heimskringla by Snorri Sturluson, Dover Press edition
Special thanks to my dear friend, Nicola Goode from Watford, England, who provided the readings for this episode. The music interludes were composed and performed by Stephen Vesecky, a musician and math teacher from Los Angeles. Check out his music on his SoundCloud account.