During
the month of May, the people of Spain create thousands of crosses, decorated
with flowers. These floral works of art are displayed in gardens, churches,
patios and in the streets. These are made to celebrate the Festival
de la Cruz de Mayo (The May Cross Festival).
This
festival takes place all over Spain and each province has its own styles and
characteristics. They are usually richly ornamented and often consist of more
than 300 carnations.
ORIGINS
Religiously, the festival is rooted in the
search by the Byzantine Empress Saint Helena for the cross on which Jesus died,
but the popular traditions connected to the festival certainly originate from
pagan traditions brought to Spain by the Roman Empire.
The legend is that Emperor Constantine I, in the sixth year of his
reign, confronted the barbarians on the banks of the Danube, in a battle where
victory was believed to be impossible because of the great size of the enemy
army. One night, Constantine had a vision of a cross in the sky, and by it the
words "In hoc signo vincis" (With this sign, you shall be
victorious). The emperor had a cross made and put it at the front of his army,
which won an easy victory over the enemy multitude. On returning to the city
and learning the significance of the cross, Constantine was baptized as a
Christian and gave orders to construct Christian churches. He sent his mother,
Saint Helena, to Jerusalem in search of the True Cross, the cross on which
Jesus died. Once there, Helena summoned the wisest priests to aid in her
attempt to find the cross. On Calvary Hill, traditionally considered the site
of Jesus's crucifixion, she found three bloody logs hidden. In order to
discover which was the True Cross, she placed the logs one by one over sick
people, and even dead people, who were cured or resuscitated at the touch of
the True Cross. The veneration of the True Cross, and the use of pieces of the
True Cross as relics, begins at this time. Santa Helena died praying for all
believers in Christ to celebrate the commemoration of the day the Cross was found.
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