The Monarchist 1.0
Defending the British Crown Commonwealth and the English-Speaking Peoples
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[+] HONOURING OUR PATRON, SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL, VICTOR OF THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLES

[+] HONOURING OUR QUEEN, ELIZABETH THE SECOND, ON THE 80TH YEAR OF HER BIRTH (1926 - 2006)

[+] HONOURING OUR KING, SAINT EDWARD THE CONFESSOR, ON THE 1000TH YEAR OF HIS BIRTH (1005 - 2005)

[+] HONOURING OUR HERO, LORD NELSON, ON THE BICENTENNIAL OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR (1805 - 2005)

[+] HONOURING OUR SONS, THE QUEEN'S COMMONWEALTH SOLDIERS KILLED IN THE 'WAR ON TERROR'

[+] HONOURING OUR VETS ON THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE VICTORIA CROSS (1856 - 2006)

Saturday, April 23, 2005
England and Saint George

On the Roman Catholic calendar, April 23rd is St George's Day. St. George is, of course, the Patron Saint of England, and is celebrated as one of "The Seven Defenders of Christendom", along with:

Scotland - St. Andrew
Ireland - St. Patrick
Wales - St. David
France - St. Denis
Spain - St. James
Italy - St. Anthony

What is not so widely recognized is St. George's other areas of patronage, they being too many to list here, but including other countries such as Germany and Canada, not to mention popular outfits like the Boy Scouts and the prestigious Order of the Garter which, incidentally, is actually the Knights of the Order of Saint George.

About the man himself, we know little. What we do know is that he was a soldier and a martyr, that he was tortured and beheaded in 304 AD, that he didn't become popular in Europe until the 10th century, that his feast day was as popular as Christmas by the 15th century and that he was not officially recognized as Patron Saint of England by the Roman Catholics until the 18th century pontificate of Pope Benedict XIV.

For a celebration of St. George's day, don't look to me, look to Throne and Altar, who makes a more appropriate blogging tribute in all the right font. You should also visit the many Society's of St. George which are prominently featured in the large Anglosphere cities of New York, Toronto, Vancouver and, most especially, London, which brings me to this final thought:

That great writer and orator, Sir Winston Churchill, who was made a Knight of the Garter, boasted that of all the words in the English dictionary, England was far and away his favourite. By George, you don't say.

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