Saint Thomas
Apostle
Apostle
After his martyrdom in India, the body of Saint Thomas was kept at Mylapore before being partially transferred to Edessa and then to Ortona. In 1522, the Portuguese rediscovered his remains and transported them to Goa. Notable relics, such as his right hand, were also venerated in France at Saint-Denis and Chartres.
Guided reading
6 reading sections
CULT AND RELICS.
Burial and sacred objects
The disciples of Saint Thomas buried his body in the church he had built, placing therein the iron of the spear of his martyrdom, his traveler's staff, and an urn of blood-stained earth.
The disciples of Saint Thomas saint Thomas Apostle of the Indies whose tomb is visited by Gregory. took his body and buried it in the church he had caused to be built; they placed in his sepulcher the iron of the spear with which he had been pierced, the staff he used in his travels, and an urn full of earth stained with blood.
Decline and restoration of the faith in the Indies
After a period of fervor, the faith declined in the Indies before being restored by a Syrian named Maritome, allowing for a new missionary expansion toward the Orient.
Since that time, the faith was preserved for a very long time in the country, such that the bishops of the Indies were even called to the General Councils of the Church. But, in the following centuries, it weakened so much and admitted so many errors that it was in danger of being entirely ruined, had not a Syrian of great merit, nam ed Marit Maritome A Syrian of great merit who restored the Christian religion in the Indies. ome, that is to say Lord Thomas, traveled there by an inspiration of God, and re-established the almost abolished religion there.
The good he did there was marvelous, and Christianity became so flourishing through his means that missionaries went forth from it for the conversion of other oriental nations; and this is what gave the name of Patriarch of the Indies to the metropolitan of India and China. However, Nesto rianism later Nestorianisme A Christian heresy that spread within the churches of India. entered these Churches, and with Nestorianism a strange mixture of all its errors, which gave cause in the 16th century for the kings of Portugal to send missionaries there to purge the Lord's threshing floor.
Discovery and transfer of the relics by the Portuguese
In 1522, Portuguese missionaries discovered the bones of the Apostle in Mylapore and solemnly transferred them to Goa under the authority of King John III.
In 1522, they found there the sacred bones of the holy Apostle, in an ossuary that still remained among the ruins of the city of Mylapor e, and th Méliapour Pilgrimage site in India housing the relics of Saint Thomas. ey transported them to Goa wit h m Goa Place of transfer of the apostle's relics by the Portuguese. arvelous pomp and solemnity. The city of Mylapore then changed its name by the order of King John III, and took that of roi Jean III King of Portugal who ordered the renaming of Mylapore. Saint Thomas. The stone upon which he had been massacred was placed in his chapel, at the back of the altar.
Historical translations to Edessa and Ortona
The text explains the presence of relics in different locations through ancient translations to Edessa and then Ortona, suggesting a division of the Apostle's remains.
As we find in all martyrologies two much older translations of the body of Saint Thomas: one, from the Indies to Edessa, in Syria; the other, Édesse Birthplace of Saint Simeon in Syria. from Edessa to Ortona (Abruzzo Citeri Ortona City in the Abruzzo region housing a portion of the apostle's relics. ore), which gave cause to build very magnificent churches for him, and whose pilgrimage has always been very famous, it must be said, with Cardinal Baronius, t hat the holy reli cardinal Baronius Church historian who inserted the saint into the Roman Martyrology. cs of this Apostle were divided, and that one part remained in the Indies where it was discovered in 1523, and the other transferred very anciently to Edessa. And these different parts have led to the claim that the body of Saint Thomas was in these different places.
Presence of relics in France
France possessed notable relics, notably an arm at Chartres and the right hand of the Apostle at Saint-Denis, gifted by the Duke of Berry.
France was not entirely deprived of such a great treasure: for before the Revolution, there was shown at Notre-Dame de Chartres a notable bone from an arm of this Apostle; and at Saint-Denis, the right hand which he placed in the side of Our Lord. The reliquary in which it was enclosed was given by J ohn, Duke of Berry Jean, duc de Berry Son of King John, donor of the reliquary of the hand of Saint Thomas at Saint-Denis. , third son of King John; the following inscription was engraved upon it: Hæc est manus beati Thomæ, apostoli, quam posuit in latus Domini nostri Jesu Christi.
Source of the narrative
The narrative is based on the work of Father Giry, revised and completed by the author.
This narrative i s by Fath Père Giry French hagiographer, author of the version of the narrative presented. er Giry; but we have revised and completed it.
Annexes & related entities
Structured data for exploration: events, miracles, quotes, places, attributes, patronages, and important entities cited in the text.
Key Events
- Burial by his disciples in a church he had built
- Restoration of religion by Maritome
- Discovery of the relics in 1522 in Mylapore
- Translation of relics to Goa by the Portuguese
- Ancient translation to Edessa then to Ortona
Quotes
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Hæc est manus beati Thomæ, apostoli, quam posuit in latus Domini nostri Jesu Christi
Inscription on the reliquary of Saint-Denis