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St. Winifred of Wales (P 002) Ceramic Ornament

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Ceramic Square Ornament
-$2.20
+$4.40
+$17.60

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Style: Ceramic Square Ornament

Bring a touch of Christmas cheer to your tree with a custom ceramic tree decoration. Add family photos, images and personal messages to both sides of this tree decoration. A strand of gold thread makes it easy to hang this fantastic keepsake.

  • Dimensions: 7 cm l x 7 cm w; Weight: 27 g.
  • Made of white porcelain
  • Full-colour, full-bleed printing
  • Printing on both sides
  • Creator Tip: To ensure the highest quality print, please note that this product’s customisable design area measures 8.8 cm x 8 cm. For best results please add a 3 mm" bleed.

About This Design

St. Winifred of Wales (P 002) Ceramic Ornament

St. Winifred of Wales (P 002) Ceramic Ornament

Also available in Welsh ("Gyda phob dymuniad da am Nadolig Llawen"'). + St. Winifred* is a 7th-century Welsh virgin martyr. Instructed in the Faith by her uncle St. Beuno Gasulsych, St. Winifred made a private vow of virginity at an early age. But, one day while her parents were at church, she was accosted by a disgruntled suitor who ran her down by horse as she fled his advances on foot. He lopped off her head near the stairs of the church at which her uncle was saying Mass. + In art, St. Winifred is classified as a cephalophore [from the Greek: κεφάλι (kefáli) = head + φορέας (foréas) = bearer], that is, she is a saint who was beheaded and carries her own severed head. St. Denis of Paris is the archetype of this group. It is said that, once beheaded, he walked 6 km. from his place of execution at Montmartre (Martyr’s Hill) to the site of his eventual cathedral carrying his head and preaching all the while. + Of the more than one hundred cephalophores, only a handful are female saints. If that does not make her unusual enough, this does: St. Winifred went on to live another 15 years! Her uncle and spiritual advisor St. Beuno Gasulsych put her head back upon her shoulders and she lived again! + At the place she lost her head, a spring gushed from the earth. It became known as St. Winifred’s Well. Over the centuries, it became a famous place of pilgrimage and healing with a great chapel built over it. Today it is known as “the Lourdes of Wales”. + Cephalophores present an artistic challenge. Several options exist depending upon the medium, the number of heads depicted, and whether the heads are haloed or not. A saint may be depicted with a halo-less neck stump holding a halo-less head. This is by far and away the sculptor’s favourite—though not only--choice. More variety exists in two-dimensional art forms. Here, for instance, St. Winifred has a halo where her head used to be and the head which she carries has one too. A few saints are even “demi”-cephalophores: They carry only the crowns of their partially severed heads. That, however, is a story for another day! + As stated above, St. Winifred lived another 15 years after her decapitation and restoration and obtained her heart’s desire. During this second lease on life, she became a nun, founded several monasteries, and served as an abbess. Although she later died of natural causes, she is still accounted a martyr. + St. Winifred’s attributes include the sword with which she was beheaded, the spring which gushed forth where her head landed, her religious garb, and—of course—her severed head. + St. Winifred is patron of (Northern) Wales and is invoked against unwanted advances. + Feast: shifted to November 3 because November 2 is All Souls' Day + Image Credit (P 002): Antique image of St. Winifred from a late 19th-century devotional print in chromoxylography, originally published by Friedrich Pustet, Regensburg, New York, and Cincinnati. From the designer’s private collection of religious ephemera. + *The “i”-s and “e”-s in St. Winifred’s name appear almost interchangeable. Variant spellings include: Winfred, Winefred, Winfride, Wenefrida, etc. In fact, we’ve seen variant spellings used in the same document! In Welsh, her name is Gwenffrewi or more commonly Guinevere. Here, throughout, we have adopted the most commonly used, modern, American English spelling of St. Winifred’s name. + Image Credit (Outline map of Wales): Extracted from a Public Domain map showing the area of Wales in relation to Great Britain and Ireland, Wikimedia Commons.

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars rating11.3K Total Reviews
9279 total 5-star reviews1267 total 4-star reviews341 total 3-star reviews146 total 2-star reviews231 total 1-star reviews
11,264 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By K.3 December 2023Verified Purchase
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The quality is excellent. My mother will love to receive this for Christmas. The printing was great quality
5 out of 5 stars rating
By S.18 December 2019Verified Purchase
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So happy. Good quality ceramic and arrived in time to gift and I selected the slow postage, so very impressed. Printing quality is great and clear. Colours are exact to the artwork and saturation good. Very happy.
4 out of 5 stars rating
By E.6 January 2024Verified Purchase
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Christmas decorations were perfect photos were really clear although the font turned out to be very small I'd recommend it be made bigger. Although for a .com.au website I understood the product would be made in Australia turns out it was made and sent from Ireland. I wouldn't order again for this reason. Very clear photos, colours were perfect, the font was too small it didn't look this small in the preview so this was a little disappointing.

Tags

Ornaments
st winifred of waleswinfred winefred winfride wenefridacephalophorehaloed head under her armswordnuns habitspring at holywellmediaeval welsh saints7th century british saintsp series
All Products
st winifred of waleswinfred winefred winfride wenefridacephalophorehaloed head under her armswordnuns habitspring at holywellmediaeval welsh saints7th century british saintsp series

Other Info

Product ID: 256289127213846891
Added on 17/11/23, 3:31 pm
Rating: G