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Saint Minas


yergatuni1

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  • 2 weeks later...

Here's a bit more information, Minas left Armenia and joined the Roman army. He was eventually ordered beheaded by the Roman Emperor Decius for refusing to give up his Christian beliefs. Hence, he became the first Christian Martyr of Florence. This was at a time when Armenia itself was still pagan.

 

This is interesting. I visited San Miniato in 1992,(before Googledom), and was curious about the name Minas, an Armenian sounding name. Then I forgot all about it. It was thrilling to think that there was this magnificent and beautiful building in honour of him. Poor man, to die for his beliefs. Here's a photo.

San Miniato in Florence.jpg

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This is interesting. I visited San Miniato in 1992,(before Googledom), and was curious about the name Minas, an Armenian sounding name. Then I forgot all about it. It was thrilling to think that there was this magnificent and beautiful building in honour of him. Poor man, to die for his beliefs. Here's a photo.

 

Here is some more information:

The story of St. Minas has all the ingredients of one of those first-class stories of the saints -- an Armenian prince serving in the Roman army under the Emperor Decius, who leaves his soldiering to become a hermit, but who is then arrested for being a Christian and is thrown to the wild beasts, but of course the beasts won't attack him and so he's beheaded, and not to be thwarted, Minas picks up his head and walks across the River Arno, as would be expected of any self-respecting saint. He walked up to the top of the hill.

 

A small shrine was built on this spot in the 8th century, but by the beginning of the 11th century construction on the large church was begun. The wonderful marble façade was started in the late 11th century and finished in the 12th century.

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moogey jan thank you

 

can you also please post the source info

 

Some sources say that he was either an Armenian or Greek merchant.

What is significant is that during 250 AD, more than 50 years before 301 AD there were Christian Armenians. As far as "picking his severed head", it may be taken from the pages of Merlin the Magician.

http://www.paradoxplace.com/Perspectives/Italian%20Images/Montages/Firenze/San%20Miniato.htm

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Some sources say that he was either an Armenian or Greek merchant.

What is significant is that during 250 AD, more than 50 years before 301 AD there were Christian Armenians. As far as "picking his severed head", it may be taken from the pages of Merlin the Magician.

http://www.paradoxplace.com/Perspectives/Italian%20Images/Montages/Firenze/San%20Miniato.htm

 

per the enscription inside the church he was Armenian. also, its doubtful he was just a merchant; otherwise the emperor wouldn't have wasted time torturing him to make him renounce his faith, he would have just fed him to the lions outright, just like most of the other christians in the empire.

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