Sainthood For Nation's Founder Marks Hungary's Millennium

Published: 22 August 2000 y., Tuesday
Constantinople Patriarch Bartolomaios I will formally announce the decision of the Orthodox bishops to canonize Stephen I -- Hungary's founding monarch -- as an Orthodox saint, Cardinal Istvan Paskai told reporters this week. Stephen I, the ruler of Hungary between 997-1038, was canonized by the Catholic Church in 1081. During his lifetime he campaigned to convert and settle nomadic Hungarian tribes and asked to be crowned by Pope Sylvester III, setting up a Christian state here in the year 1000. Religious fervor is expected to grip Hungary from Sunday, when nationwide celebrations begin to mark the 1,000th anniversary of the foundation of their nation. Precious relics -- fragments of the skull of Saint Stephen I (969-1038 AD) and his right hand -- arrived earlier this week on loan from a monastery in Dubrovnik, Croatia, where they have been kept for at least the past 450 years. And after a break of 62 years, a Papal legate will attend the celebrations. Cardinal Angelo Sodano, representing Pope John Paul II, will read out a message from the pope to the Hungarian people. Some 67 percent of Hungary's population of 10 million are Catholics, with only a minority in the Orthodox church. There was a rejuvenation of all religions when multi-party democracy was restored in Hungary in 1990, following 43 years of persecution under the Soviet satellite regime. St. Stephen's relics will be carried in a procession through the streets of Budapest on Sunday and into the parliament building where the monarch's crown is on display.
Šaltinis: Central Europe Online
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

"A shame for Poland"

Picket against human rights violations in Belarus held in Poland more »

Refugee finds anchor after years adrift

Boat people arriving in Cape Otranto on the eastern coast of Italy more »

The protest

Moldova: Protesters Call For Resignation Of Government more »

Lukashenko Is the `Castro of Europe`

The crowd in a spacious square in Minsk on a crisp autumn day recently was subdued but hardly fearful more »

Serbia faces `tragedy' as elections fail again

Serbians failed for the third time in a year yesterday to elect a president because of low voter turnout, triggering a political crisis in the Balkan republic more »

Schindler plaque unveiled in Poland

Members of the Krakow Jewish community and U.S. college students unveiled a plaque Monday honoring German industrialist Oscar Schindler more »

The Youth Leaders of Baltics are for Free Belarus

The meeting of the leaders of the Baltic youth organizations of the right wing took place on November 1-2 in Piarnu, Estonia more »

Human trafficking finds new ways

Human trafficking finds new ways more »

Favors for direct election of the president

ESTONIANS WANT DIRECT ELECTION OF MORE POWERFUL PRESIDENT more »

Polish, Czech, Slovakian Unemployment May Rise After EU Entry

Unemployment in Eastern European nations that will join the European Union in May, including Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, may rise from their current near-record levels more »