St Helena of Constantine, c250-330AD

2 Conversations

Saint Helena was the mother of Constantine the Great, and is probably most famous as the legendary discoverer, at Golgotha in 326AD, of the 'True Cross' on which Christ had been crucified.

Helen, the name

Nowadays, the name Helen is very popular. It is derived from the Greek Helios, meaning 'sun ray' or 'shining light'. There are getting on for eighty variant forms of the name Helen which include names such as Helena, Eileen, Ellen and Elaine. Probably the most famous bearer of the name Helen was Helen of Troy who, in Greek legend, was the most beautiful of all women.

There are various places named after Saint Helena including the small island of St Helena, situated midway between Africa and South America; and St Helens in Lancashire. Furthermore, Saint Helena is the Patron Saint of Colchester in Essex, and so Colchester Town Hall has a statue of St Helena1, carrying a huge cross in one hand, whilst the other arm is outstretched.

St Helena

Although there is a mediaeval tradition that Helena was born in England, she was probably born in Bithynia, a region of Turkey. She was the daughter of an innkeeper and, somewhere around 270 or 280, she either had an affair with or married the Roman senator Constantius I Chlorus. Shortly afterwards their son Constantine, later to become Constantine the Great, was born. In 293, Constantius was made Caesar, or junior emperor. He separated from Helena in order to marry co-Emperor Maximian’s stepdaughter.

At some stage in her life, Helena converted to Christianity and became an influential protectress of the Christian church, for instance converting her son Constantine to Christianity, building churches in Rome and founding basilicas in the Holy Land.

On October 28, 312 Constantine fought and defeated Maximian's troops at the Milvian (Mulvian) Bridge. It is said that, at some time prior to the battle, Constantine had experienced a vision of the Christian Cross superimposed upon the sun; together with the words 'In hoc signo vince' (By This Sign, You Shall Conquer). Constantine therefore ordered images of the Holy Cross to be added to all the standards of his army, thus explaining his victory in one of the most decisive battles of world history.

When Constantine himself became emperor in 312, Helena was named Augusta, or empress.

The True Cross



As a Christian, Helena had always been obsessed with a desire to find the cross on which Christ had been crucified and, in this quest, she had allegedly identified and excavated almost every significant site pertaining to the Gospel stories.


According to legend, Helena discovered the True Cross whilst on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 326.

During her mission to construct churches, Helena frequently took stonemasons and other construction workers away from their main task in order to excavate for the cross under her direction.

On one such occasion, her workmen were preparing to build the the 'Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre' on the hill called Calvary or Golgotha; the site of Christ's death. During the excavation they had to remove three centuries worth of rubble that had accumulated on the hill, due to the construction of the temple to Venus and Jupiter in 135 AD by Emperor Hadrian.

Whilst this debris was being removed, the workmen found the remains of three crosses in a cave, together with the nails used to crucify the victims. Also found was the placard or titulus2 from the cross of Jesus, proclaiming him 'King of the Jews'.

In order to determine which of the pieces of wood was from the cross of Jesus, Helena hit upon the idea of using them, on successive days, to touch a prominent local woman who was dying of leprosy. The third piece of wood caused the woman's lesions to be instantly cleared, and so Helena knew that this was a fragment from the True Cross. The largest piece is/was about 10cm long and black in colour; that is, it had been burned, but not consumed. It is said that her son, Constantine, used one of the nails to make his horse's bridle, another to make his helmet, whilst two were thrown into the Adriatic Sea.

It is said that Eusebius, Bishop of Caearea, was in Jerusalem at the time of Helena's discovery, and yet he has made no mention of it in any of his writings. This omission creates perhaps the biggest of the challenges to the authenticity of Helena's discovery. Some say that the story was invented by Bishops of Jerusalem some four centuries later.

In the last 20 years scholars have begun to give rather more credence to the authenticity of Helena's discovery.

The Festival of the Exaltation of the Cross is a re-enactment of Helena's discovery of the True Cross.

The story of the finding of the True Cross has been recounted by some of the most famous luminaries from Greek and Latin literature, including Socrates. The deeds of St Helena were also the subject of Cynewulf's most celebrated 9th Century poem, 'Elene'.

To commemorate the finding of the True Cross, in 330 Helena built a church over the site in Jerusalem, which includes the rocky outcrop which, according to tradition, is where the cross was erected; and also the cave which formed Christ's tomb. This is the Church of Holy Sepulchre. which nowadays is used by some six different religious denominations and is the most sacred site in Christendom, being recognised as the site of both Christ's death and his resurrection.

Relics of the Three Magi

St Helena is also credited with the discovery of the bones of the Three Wise Men (Magi) whilst on a pilgrimage to Palestine, allegedly during her 80th year. She is said to have taken the remains to the church of Hagia Sophia (The Church of the Holy Wisdom) in Constantinople. They were later moved to Milan in the fifth century before being sent to their current resting place in Cologne Cathedral in 1163.

Helena's Last Days

Helena is known to have been still alive in 326, the year Constantine ordered the execution of his son Crispus. According to Eusebius in his 'Vite Const', Constantine was with her when she died in Nicomedia, at the advanced age of over eighty years. This must have been about the year 330, as this is when the last coins to be stamped with her name were minted. Her body was brought to Constantinople and was laid to rest in the imperial vault of the Church of the Apostles. It is thought that her remains were then transferred to the Abbey of Hautvillers, in the French Archdiocese of Reims, in 849, as was recorded by the monk Altmann in his 'Translatio'. She was revered as a saint; and the veneration spread even to Western countries, early in the ninth century.

The Link with Colchester

It was the Welsh chronicler, Geoffrey of Monmouth (c1100-c1155), who started the legend that Helena was an English princess, the daughter of Coel, king of Essex and Hertfordshire. King Coel was said to have had a daughter called Helena (or Elaine), who married Constantius Chlorus and had a son called Constantine.

There was a King Coel who was king of part of England during Celtic times, and the name Colchester means Cole's Castle in Latin. It is not implausible that Colchester was named after King Coel. King Coel may be synonymous with 'Old King Cole', of nursery rhyme familiarity

Colchester's Coat of Arms features the True Cross, green and sprouting into new life, with three of the nails which St Helena also discovered.

St Helena is one of the patron saints of archaeologists. As the discoverer of the True Cross, she lays claim to the title of being the World's first archaeologist.

St Helena's Feast Days

St Helena has two Feast Days. In the west it is celebrated on 18 August, whilst in the east it is celebrated, together with that of Constantine, on 21 May.

1Although some sources say that this is really a statue of the Virgin Mary.2The exact wording on the titulus varies according which version of the Bible one is using. Furthermore, the Four Evangelists do not agree on the exact wording. Thus, according to the Authorised Version, St Matthew (27:37) gives, 'This is Jesus the King of the Jews; St Mark (15:26) 'The King of the Jews'; St Luke (23:38), 'This is the King of the Jews'; St John, an eyewitness (19:19-22), 'Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews'. According to John, this inscription was written in Hebrew, Latin and Greek.

Bookmark on your Personal Space


Entry

A10929567

Infinite Improbability Drive

Infinite Improbability Drive

Read a random Edited Entry


Disclaimer

h2g2 is created by h2g2's users, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the Not Panicking Ltd. Unlike Edited Entries, Entries have not been checked by an Editor. If you consider any Entry to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please register a complaint. For any other comments, please visit the Feedback page.

Write an Entry

"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."

Write an entry
Read more