(urth) King Olaf the Holy

brunians at brunians.org brunians at brunians.org
Wed Jun 23 22:32:01 PDT 2010


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So high did Olaf's legal arrangements for the Church of Norway come to
stand in the eyes of the Norwegian people and clergy, that when Pope
Gregory VII attempted to make clerical celibacy binding on the priests of
Western Europe in 1074-5, the Norwegians largely ignored this, since there
was no mention of clerical celibacy in Olaf's legal code for their Church.
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> Just in case anyone doubts lupine relevance.
>
> ___
> Olaf was the subject of several biographies, both hagiographies and sagas,
> in the Middle Ages, and many of the historical facts concerning his reign
> are disputed. The best known description is the one in Snorri Sturluson's
> Heimskringla, from c. 1230. That saga cannot be taken as an accurate
> source for Olaf's life, but most of the following description is based on
> the narrative there (from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olaf_II_of_Norway).
> ---
>
> .
>
>
>
>> On Wed, June 23, 2010 8:53 pm, Jane Delawney wrote:
>>> On 23/06/10 12:38, Lee Berman wrote:
>>>> There has been some debate in the past whether Severian is a
>>>> "Christian
>>>> figure"
>>>> or a "Christ figure". A recent article in Ultan's Library reminds us
>>>> Severian
>>>> was marked by stigmata on the forehead after viewing Tzadkiel in the
>>>> book. Now
>>>> we are reminded that Severian was also pierced by a thorn. There is
>>>> the
>>>> desert
>>>> garden and some other stuff that would seem to relate directly to
>>>> Jesus
>>>> and not
>>>> just Christianity in general.
>>>
>>> By the end of BOTNS / UOTNS Sev has acquired at least two of the
>>> orthodox Wounds of Christ and also a couple more long-term injuries
>>> which have Christian or semi-Christian mythic associations.
>>>
>>> First there is the chest injury from an avern-leaf (I haven't the book
>>> in front of me at the moment but I think I remember this wound being
>>> described as 'the size and shape of a willow leaf' or something like,
>>> rather like the wound that would be made by the blade of a Roman
>>> spear);
>>> this injury is later reopened and presumably made more obvious in the
>>> throne-room scene at the end of Citadel where the resurrected assassin
>>> kills Valeria and injures Severian. Sev tells us that the knife reopens
>>> the avern-wound.
>>>
>>> Then there is the 'crown of thorns' stigma which appears when he looks
>>> into the face of Tzadkiel in the Mirror-book.
>>>
>>> The lameness, the thigh injury from an energy weapon which Sev acquires
>>> in battle and which is later first healed and then reopened, seems to
>>> relate to the Judean kingship ritual Robert Graves postulates in his
>>> novel King Jesus (...
>>>
>>> There's also much emphasis on Severian's facial scarring from Agia's
>>> weapon. ... .... The whole
>>> subject is spooky enough already.
>>>
>>> regards
>>>
>>> JD
>>> _______________________________________________
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Good post. I can chew on that for a while.
>>
>>
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