Werner of Oberwesel
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (August 2012) |
Saint Werner of Oberwesel (cult suppressed) | |
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Born | 1271 Womrath, Hunsrück |
Died | 1287 Womrath, Hunsrück |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church (Diocese of Trier) |
Canonized | 1426-1429 |
Feast | April 19 |
Attributes | sickle, shovel, pan |
Patronage | Winemakers |
Controversy | Blood libel |
Catholic cult suppressed | 1963 |
Werner of Oberwesel (also known as Werner of Bacharach or Werner of Womrath; 1271 – 1287) was a 16-year-old boy whose unexplained death was blamed on Jews, leading to revenge killings of Jews across Europe. He was venerated as a Christian saint, and his memorial day was 19 April.
Saint Werner's Chapel in Oberwesel on the Rhine was established in 1289 and became a popular pilgrimage site. His veneration prompted other allegations against Jews, such as Host desecration and ritual murder.
Background
Born in 1271 in Womrath, Hunsrück, Werner came from a poor background. On Maundy Thursday 1287, his body was found near Bacharach. Certain Christians blamed his murder on the Jews, claiming that they had used his blood for the Jewish ritual of Passover (the blood libel against Jews). Similar anti-Jewish legends were widely circulated in the Middle Ages.
The alleged murder was followed by a wave of pogroms against the Jewish community. Violence spread from the Middle Rhine to the Moselle and the Lower Rhine region. The Jewish community turned to King Rudolf I, who was convinced the accusations were groundless. He fined the murderers of Jews and ordered the burning of the corpse of Werner to prevent any further veneration.
Veneration
The royal instructions to burn Werner's body, to prevent any further veneration, were not followed. Werner was buried on 30 April 1287 and alleged miracles began to be reported as the veneration spread as a martyr cult. The Cunibert Chapel in Bacharach was expanded beginning in 1289 to become the present Saint Werner's Chapel. The planned expansion of the chapel into a large church remained unfinished after 1338. A further construction[when?] also failed owing to the decline of the veneration of martyrs[citation needed] and shrinking revenue to the church from pilgrims.
The 1338 Latin legend alleges the Jews hung Werner by his feet. Then they had him thrown into the Rhine. At the point in Bacharach where the body was supposedly washed ashore, Saint Werner's Chapel was built. A second sanctuary was built in the Chapel of the Holy Spirit Hospital of Oberwesel, 7 kilometers downstream.
Count Palatine Ludwig III aspired to a revival of the cult. Attempts towards Canonisation were made 1426-1429 , the chapel was finally completed.[when?] After 1548 some of the relics were transferred to Besançon, spreading the Werner mythology.
Although the chapel was destroyed in the 17th century, Werner was venerated in the Diocese of Trier until 1963.
In iconography, Werner is depicted with a sickle as well as a shovel and pan. He has been acknowledged as a patron saint of winemakers.
Contemporary attitudes
In 1963, Werner was removed from the calendar of the Diocese of Trier, but "Saint Werner of Oberwesel" still appears in German directories of saints.[citation needed] The chapel dedicated to him alongside the town wall facing the Rhine, which had been in ruins, was later renovated, and a plaque added, with a quotation from Pope John XXIII, recognizing the brotherhood of Christians and Jews, and asking for forgiveness for "the curse that we unrightfully affixed to the Jews’ name."
See also
- Blood Libel
- The Prioress Tale
- Andreas Oxner
- Saint Gabriel of Białystok
- Harold of Gloucester
- Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln
- Robert of Bury
- Simon of Trent
- William of Norwich
References
- Paul Gerhard Aring (1998). "Werner von Oberwesel". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 13. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 837–838. ISBN 3-88309-072-7.
- Jeffrey L. Sammons: Heinrich Heine: A Modern Biography:: (Princeton University Press, 1979), pages 89 to 96 — Heinrich Heine: Der Rabbi von Bacherach [sic](= "The Rabbi of Bacharach", unfinished historical novel, 1840).
- Rheinfriede Gleisner: Nach Juden-Pogromen kam Heiligen-Legende; in: Hunsrücker Zeitung, 18. April 1987, S. 27.
- Gottfried Kentenich (1910), "Werner. Diöcesanheiliger des Bisthums Trier", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 55, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 45–46
- Gerd Hergen Lübben: Der Textfund zu Bacherach; in: Die Brücke – Forum für antirassistische Politik und Kultur, Heft 140, 2/2006 (Saarbrücken), S. 126–128; and in: Gerd Hergen Lübben, VERSIONEN III (»Fund zu Bacherach«), E-Book 2014, ISBN 9783955778354.
- Gerd Mentgen: Die Ritualmordaffäre um den „Guten Werner“ von Oberwesel und ihre Folgen; in: Jahrbuch für Westdeutsche Landesgeschichte 21 (1995), S. 159–198.
- Werner Wendling: Der „gute Werner“ hat ausgedient; in: Rhein-Hunsrück-Zeitung, 4. Juli 2006, S. 17.
- Thomas Wetzstein: Vom „Volksheiligen“ zum „Fürstenheiligen“. Die Wiederbelebung des Wernerkults im 15. Jahrhundert; in: Archiv für mittelrheinische Kirchengeschichte 51 (1999), S. 11–68.
- Daniela Wolf: Ritualmordaffäre und Kultgenese. Der „gute Werner von Oberwesel“; Bacharach: Bauverein Wernerkapelle Bacharach, 2002; ISBN 3-00-009539-X .
- Eintrag im Ökumenischen Heiligenlexikon