Saint Casilda of Toledo | |
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St. Casilda, by Francisco de Zurbarán |
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Died | ~1050 AD |
Honored in | Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church |
Feast | April 9 |
Attributes | Roses in her basket or dress |
Saint Casilda of Toledo (Spanish: Santa Casilda de Toledo) (died ca. 1050 AD) is venerated as a saint of the Catholic Church. Her feast day is April 9.
According to her legend, St. Casilda, a daughter of a Muslim king of Toledo (called Almacrin or Almamun), showed special kindness to Christian prisoners by carrying bread hidden in her clothes to feed them.[1][2]
Once, she was stopped by Muslim soldiers and asked to reveal what she was carrying in her skirt. When she began to show them, the bread turned into a bouquet of roses.[1][2]
She was raised a Muslim, but when she became ill as a young woman, she refused help from the local Arab doctors and traveled to northern Iberia to partake of the healing waters of the shrine of San Vicente, near Buezo, close to Briviesca.[1][2] When she was cured, she was baptized at Burgos (where she was later venerated) and lived a life of solitude and penance not far from the miraculous spring. It is said that she lived to be 100 years old.
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Painted between 1638 and 1642, Zurbarán's Santa Casilda used as its model a lady of the Spanish court. She wears the fashions for courtiers of the time.[2]