(Redirected from Saint Fermin)
'Saint Fermin of Amiens' (also 'Firmin', from
Latin, 'Firminus'; in
Spanish, 'Fermín') is one of many locally venerated Catholic saints. Fermin is the co-patron of
Pamplona, where his feast, the '
San Fermín', is forever associated with the ''Encierro'' or '
Running of the Bulls' made famous by
Ernest Hemingway. Fermin was long venerated also at
Amiens, where he met martyrdom.
Life
Fermin is said to have been the son of a Roman of senatorial rank in Pamplona in the
3rd century, who was converted to Christianity. According to tradition, he was baptised by Saint
Saturnin at the spot now known as the ''Pocico de San Cernin,'' the "Small Well of San Cernin," across from the facade of the church dedicated to St Cernin, which is built on the foundations of a pagan temple.
Saint Saturninus was the first
bishop of Toulouse, where he was sent during the "consulate of Decius and Gratus" (AD
250). He was
martyred (traditionally in
257 AD), significantly, by being tied to a
bull by his feet and dragged to his death, a martyrdom that is sometimes transferred to Fermin and relocated at Pamplona. In Toulouse, the earliest church dedicated to ''Notre-Dame du Taur'' ("Our Lady of the Bull") still exists, though rebuilt; though the 11th century
Basilica of Saint Sernin, the largest surviving
Romanesque structure in France, has superseded it, the church is said to be built where the bull stopped, but more credibly must in fact be on a site previously dedicated to a pre-Christian
sacred bull, perhaps the bull of
Mithras. The street, which runs straight from the Capitole, is named, not the ''Rue de Notre-Dame,'' but the ''Rue du Taur''.
Fermin was ordained a priest in Toulouse, according to the local legend, and returned to Pamplona as its first bishop. On a later voyage preaching the
gospel, Fermin was
beheaded in Amiens, France, on
September 25, AD
303.
Veneration
Besides Pamplona, San Fermín is venerated in other places in
Navarre, such as Lesaka, in the fiesta called the ''Regata del Bidasoa''. In the village of San Fermín de Aldapa, the martyrdom of Saint Fermin is still commemorated on September 25. On the preceding Thursday to Sunday there are numerous festivities there, in the Navarrería and near the Cathedral. Celebrations begin with a firework rocket set off by a youngster from the Navarrería, who has been given the title of the little mayor. As at Pamplona, the celebrations have a special closing ceremony called ''Pobre de Mí''.
When certain
relics of the saint were brought back to Pamplona in
1196, the city decided to mark the occasion with an annual event. Over the centuries, the saint's festival, the ancient annual fair and the running of the bulls and subsequent bullfights have all melded together.
Saint Firmin in Anglo-Saxon England
There is a mysterious well of an otherwise unknown "Saint Farmin" at
Bowes,
Yorkshire,
England. The existence of a monastery named after a Saint Firmin in
North Crawley was recorded in the
Domesday Book (i.149a); there was a holy well in the churchyard,
[1] and unauthorized pilgrimages there were suppressed in 1298.
[2] The church at
Thurlby, Lincs is dedicated to St Firmin. The only other St. Firmin in England rested at
Thorney, Cambridgeshire. These occurrences point towards possible veneration of Firmin in Anglo-Saxon
England.
Notes
1. The parish church is still dedicated to Firmin today.
2. Alan Thacker and Richard Sharpe, ''Local Saints and Local Churches in the Early Medieval West'', "A Handlist of Anglo-Saxon Saints" p. 535.
External links
★
St. Farmin's Well