Zeno of Verona
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Zeno of Verona (Template:Langx; Template:Langx; about 300 – 371 or 380) was an Afro-Italian Christian figure believed to have either served as Bishop of Verona or died as a martyr. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church.
Life and historicity
A Veronese author named Coronato, who was a notary in the 7th century, claimed that Zeno was a native of Mauretania who taught children of Africa about the Catholic religion and also helped them with their education.Template:Listref Another claim was that Zeno was a follower of Athanasius, patriarch of Alexandria, and accompanied his master when the latter visited Verona in 340.Template:Listref
The literary style of the more than 90 Sermones attributed to Zeno is also considered evidence of his African origins, since Christian African writers of the time frequently used neologisms and wordplay.Template:Listref Many of the Sermones concern Old Testament exegesis and are said to "have a definite anti-Semitic element in them".Template:Listref This interpretation is not shared by Giuseppe Laiti, expert on San Zeno's work.[1]
Staying in Verona, Zeno entered the monastic life, living as a monk until around 362, when he was elected successor to the See of Verona after the death of Bishop Template:Ill.Template:Listref
Zeno had "received a good classical education".Template:Listref As bishop he baptized many people and won converts back from Arianism. He lived a life of poverty. He trained priests to work in the diocese and set up a convent for women. In addition, he reformed how the Agape feast was celebrated and forbade that funeral masses be accompanied by attendees' loud groans and wailing.Template:Listref Zeno's other reforms included instructions concerning adult baptism, which occurred by complete immersion. He instituted the issuing of medals to people newly baptized in the Catholic faith.Template:Listref
Zeno's episcopate lasted for about ten years; the date of his death is sometimes given as 12 April 371.Template:Listref
Zeno is described as a confessor of the faith in early martyrologies.Template:Listref Saint Gregory the Great calls him a martyr in his Dialogues, though Saint Ambrose, a contemporary of Zeno, does not.Template:Listref Ambrose speaks of Zeno's "happy death", although as a confessor, Zeno may have suffered persecution (but not execution) during the reigns of Constantius II and Julian the Apostate.Template:Listref The entry in the modern Roman Martyrology lists his death date as 12 April, but makes no mention of martyrdom.[2]
The first evidence for his existence was found in a letter written by Saint Ambrose to Template:Ill in which Ambrose referred to the holiness of Zeno. Later, Bishop Saint Template:Ill (r. 412–429) wrote of Zeno's virtues and also confirmed the existence of a cult dedicated to Saint Zeno.Template:Listref
A poem written between 781 and 810, called the Versus de Verona, an elegy to the city in verse, states that Zeno was the eighth bishop of Verona.Template:Listref
Veneration
Zeno's liturgical feast day is celebrated on 12 April, but in the diocese of Verona, it is also celebrated on 21 May, in honor of the translation of his relics on 21 May 807.Template:Listref
Tradition states that Zeno built the first basilica in Verona, probably situated in the area occupied by the present-day cathedral.Template:Listref His eponymous church in its present location dates to the early ninth century, when it was endowed by Charlemagne and his son Pepin, King of Italy. It was consecrated on 8 December 806. Two local hermits, Benignus and Carus, were assigned the task of translating Zeno's relics to a new marble crypt.Template:Listref King Pepin was present at the ceremony, as were the Bishops of Cremona and Salzburg, and an immense crowd of townspeople.Template:Listref
The church was damaged at the beginning of the tenth century by Hungarians, though the relics of Zeno remained safe.Template:Listref The basilica was rebuilt, making it larger and stronger. Financial support was provided by Otto I, and it was re-consecrated in 967 at a ceremony presided over by Bishop Ratherius of Verona.Template:Listref
The present church of San Zeno in Verona is for the most part a work of the twelfth, thirteenth, and early fifteenth centuries. It is well known for its bronze doors (c. 1100 – c. 1200) which depict, besides stories from the Bible, images drawn from the stories of the miracles of Saint Zeno including those recorded by the notary Coronato.Template:Listref The church is also known for the facade sculpture signed by Nicholaus and an associate Guglielmus, and the rose window (c. 1200), which is the work of Brioloto.
Legends and iconography
Zeno is the patron saint of fishermen and anglers, the city of Verona, newborn babies, and children learning to speak and walk. Some 30 churches or chapels have been dedicated to him, including Pistoia Cathedral.
According to legend, he was stolen at birth and briefly replaced by a demonic changeling. One story relates that Saint Zeno, fishing on the banks of the Adige, which he did in order to feed himself, saw a peasant crossing the river in a horse and cart. The horses became strangely skittish. Zeno, believing this behavior to be the work of the devil, made the sign of the cross, and the horses calmed down.Template:Listref Zeno was often said to combat the devil, and is sometimes depicted treading on a demon. Another story relates that he exorcised a demon from the body of the daughter of the Emperor Gallienus, although Zeno probably did not live during the reign of Gallienus. The story relates that the grateful Gallienus allowed Zeno and other Christians freedom of worship in the empire.Template:Listref
Saint Gregory the Great, at the end of the 6th century, related a miracle associated with the divine intercession of Zeno.Template:Listref In 588, the Adige flooded its banks, inundating Verona. The floodwater reached the church dedicated to Saint Zeno, but miraculously did not enter it, even though the door was wide open. The church was then donated to Theodelinda, an alleged eyewitness to the miracle and wife of king Authari.Template:ListrefScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
Zeno is most often represented with fishing-related items such as a fish or fishing rod, or as a bishop holding a fishing rod, or with a fish hanging from his crozier. "Local tradition says the bishop was fond of fishing in the nearby river Adige", writes Alban Butler, "but it is more likely that originally it was a symbol of his success in bringing people to baptism."Template:Listref
Gallery
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San Zeno Altarpiece. Zeno is on the far right
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Statue of Zeno at the Template:Ill
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Zenon with a fish on his crozier
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Zeno exorcising the daughter of the Emperor Gallienus
Further reading
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See also
Notes
References
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External links
- Patron Saint index
- The Lives or the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saints as reprinted by Eternal Word Television Network
- Documenta Catholica Omnia Template:In lang
- Zeno of Verona – Following the footsteps of a saint in Europe: article series with photographic documentation and maps Template:In lang