E04204: Gregory of Tours, in his Miracles of Martin (4.21), recounts how a citizen of Tours, placed some wine and bread overnight by the tomb of *Martin (ascetic and bishop of Tours, ob. 397, S00050) in Tours to take with him on a journey; at an inn, a woman with an unclean spirit and a woman with a fever were healed by this wine and bread; AD 590. Written in Latin in Tours (north-west Gaul), 590/594.
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posted on 2017-10-23, 00:00authored bykwojtalik
Gregory of Tours, Miracles of Martin (Libri de virtutibus sancti Martini episcopi) 4.21
The man involved in this miracle is named as Mothar in the title.
Quidam de civibus Turonicis, dum ad regis occursum properaret, vas cum vino unumque panem ad sepulchrum una mansurum nocte deposuit, ut scilicet in itinere positus hoc haberet salutis praesidium. Quae exinde adsumpta, iter carpere coepit. Factum est autem, ut metatum requirens, hominis cuiusdam ingrederetur hospitium, depositisque sarcinis, mulier, quae habebat spiritum inmundum, beati Martini adventum vocibus inmensis adnuntiare coepit ac dicere: 'Quid nos persequeris, sancte? Quid nos crucias, serve Dei?' Tunc hospes ille qui venerat, accepto calice, paululum vini de vase illo auferens, frustram benedicti panis effraetam posuit in eo. Quod ubi mulier illa quae debacchabat accepit, mox cum sanguine eiecto daemonio salvata est. Alia in eo loco mulier, quae diu a frigoris aegrotabat, accepto ab hac benedictione modico, ut sumpsit, sanata est.
'When a citizen of Tours was preparing to meet the king, he placed a container of wine and a loaf of bread before [Martin’s] tomb, intending to leave them for one night so that what had been placed there might offer a guarantee of safety on his journey. After he collected this wine and bread, he began to travel. Then it happened that while seeking lodging he entered a man’s inn. When he set down his bags, the wife, who had an unclean spirit, began to announce with loud cries the arrival of the blessed Martin and said: 'Saint, why are you pursuing me? Servant of God, why are you torturing me?' Then the guest who had arrived took a cup, poured out a bit of the wine from his container, and put in it a piece broken off from the bread that had been blessed. Once the raving woman drank this, soon the demon was expelled in some blood and she was saved. In this place there was another woman who had been ill for a long time with chills. She accepted a piece of this blessing and was healed when she swallowed it.'
Text: Krusch 1969, 205. Translation: Van Dam 1993, 293-294, modified (= de Nie 2015, 809).
History
Evidence ID
E04204
Saint Name
Martin, ascetic and bishop of Tours, ob. 397 : S00050
Literary - Hagiographical - Collections of miracles
Language
Latin
Evidence not before
590
Evidence not after
594
Activity not before
590
Activity not after
590
Place of Evidence - Region
Gaul and Frankish kingdoms
Place of Evidence - City, village, etc
Tours
Place of evidence - City name in other Language(s)
Tours
Tours
Tours
Toronica urbs
Prisciniacensim vicus
Pressigny
Turonorum civitas
Ceratensis vicus
Céré
Major author/Major anonymous work
Gregory of Tours
Cult activities - Places
Burial site of a saint - tomb/grave
Cult Activities - Miracles
Miracle after death
Miraculous protection - of people and their property
Exorcism
Healing diseases and disabilities
Cult Activities - Protagonists in Cult and Narratives
Other lay individuals/ people
Women
Cult Activities - Relics
Contact relic - water and other liquids
Contact relic - other
Making contact relics
Privately owned relics
Eating/drinking/inhaling relics
Source
Gregory, of a prominent Clermont family with extensive ecclesiastical connections, was bishop of Tours from 573 until his death (probably in 594). He was the most prolific hagiographer of all Late Antiquity. He wrote four books on the miracles of Martin of Tours, one on those of Julian of Brioude, and two on the miracles of other saints (the Glory of the Martyrs and Glory of the Confessors), as well as a collection of twenty short Lives of sixth-century Gallic saints (the Life of the Fathers). He also included a mass of material on saints in his long and detailed Histories, and produced two independent short works: a Latin version of the Acts of Andrew and a Latin translation of the story of The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus.
Gregory's Miracles of Martin (full title Libri de virtutibus sancti Martini episcopi, 'Books of the Miracles of Saint Martin the Bishop'), consists of four books of miracles, 207 chapters in all, effected by Martin, primarily at his grave and shrine in Tours. Most of them occurred at the time of the saint's festivals, on 4 July and 11 November. Gregory tried to record the miracles in chronological order, so historians have been able to calculate quite precisely the dates of the events and miracles mentioned in the work. This fairly precise chronology has enabled scholars to determine the dates of completion of each book. There have been three main dating schemes proposed for the composition of the four books. The oldest was suggested by Monod in 1872, another by Krusch in 1885, and then one by Van Dam in 1993 (for fuller discussion, see Shaw 2015, 103-105). Their datings of the individual books do not vary substantially, and in our entries we have given only those of Van Dam. Shaw 2015 convincingly demolishes an earlier theory, that Gregory wrote the Miracles in two distinct stages: a first stage that was written during a particular period, and a second stage in the early 590s, in which Gregory revised the whole work.
Book 1, with 40 chapters, was written between 573 and 576. In the prologue, Gregory mentions that he started writing after he became bishop of Tours in August 573. Book 1 must have been completed by 576, since Venantius Fortunatus in a letter to Gregory of that year referred to it (Epistula ad Gregorium 2, prefatory letter to Fortunatus' Life of Martin, MGH Auct. ant. 4.1, p. 293).
Book 2 consists of 60 chapters. It must have been finished before November 581, because the last miracles it mentions occurred in November 580, while the first ones recorded in Book 3 happened in November 581. Using the same methodology, the completion of Book 3, which also covers 60 chapters, can be dated between 587 and July 588.
Book 4, which consists of 47 chapters, seems never to have been completed, presumably because of Gregory’s death. There are two main arguments in support of the idea that it is unfinished. Firstly, Book 4 has no conclusion and no tidy number of chapters, while each of Books 1 to 3 has these elements. Secondly, the last story recorded in Book 4 is not about Gregory himself, unlike the final stories of Books 2 and 3.
Book 1 covers miracles that occurred before Gregory’s episcopate in Tours. The next three books are a running chronicle of Martin’s miracles under Gregory’s episcopate. Some of the miracles are recorded in very summary form, while others are much more elaborately presented: because of this, it has been argued that Gregory first jotted down notes, and only subsequently gave the stories full literary treatment (which in some cases, he was never able to do).
The three completed books of the Miracles of Martin were probably released as they were completed, rather that published together. In this sense they are the exception amongst Gregory's writings, since the rest of his work was not finally completed and seems to have been unpublished at the time of his death.
For discussion of the work, see:
Krusch, B. (ed.), Gregorii episcopi Turonensis miracula et opera minora (Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Scriptores rerum Merovingicarum 1,2; 2nd ed.; Hannover, 1969), 2–4.
Monod, G., Études critiques sur les sources de l’histoire mérovingienne, 1e partie (Paris, 1872), 42–45.
Shaw, R., "Chronology, Composition and Authorial Conception in the Miracula," in: A.C. Murray (ed.), A Companion to Gregory of Tours (Leiden-Boston, 2015), 102–140.
Van Dam, R., Saints and Their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul (Princeton, 1993), 142–146, 199.
Bibliography
Editions and translations:
Krusch, B. (ed.), Gregorii episcopi Turonensis miracula et opera minora (Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Scriptores rerum Merovingicarum 1,2; 2nd ed.; Hannover, 1969), 134–211.
Van Dam, R. (trans.), Saints and Their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul (Princeton, 1993), 200–303.
de Nie, G. (ed. and trans.), Lives and Miracles: Gregory of Tours (Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 39; Cambridge MA, 2015), 421–855.
Further reading:
Murray, A.C. (ed.), A Companion to Gregory of Tours (Leiden-Boston, 2015).
Shanzer, D., "So Many Saints – So Little Time ... the Libri Miraculorum of Gregory of Tours," Journal of Medieval Latin 13 (2003), 19–63.