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St George: A Saint for All

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The image of St George – the mounted, medieval knight slaying a dragon – seems so familiar to us all that it is tempting to assume this figure is easily understood. He is, in fact, one of the most significant and complex mythic figures in Christian culture, and has played an important role in Eastern Orthodox, Coptic and western European traditions over many centuries. Today St George continues to have a lively and diverse following: his various appearances can be found across many world religions, including Islam, Hinduism, Judaism and the African-Brazilian belief system Candomblé. St George’s identification with nature, springtime and healing means that he can also be found throughout pagan beliefs.
St George: A Saint for All includes first-hand accounts of celebrations in Georgia, Greece, Malta and Belgium, and explores the iconic figure’s wide-ranging significance in nations such as Lebanon, Palestine, Ethiopia and Estonia, as well as his totemic role for the Roma people.
With or without the dragon, St George has been repeatedly reinvented over the last 1,700 years. This book is an engaging account of the huge potential that artists, poets and painters have found in his myth, discussing the often controversial political uses to which the saint has been put, including many reworkings and reimaginings, and places his current cultural position in its historical context. This is the first book to offer a full overview of the cult of St George, from its beginnings in the eastern Mediterranean to its established presence around the world today.

187 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 15, 2015

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91 reviews
January 9, 2026
Reading for a book club. Brilliant, lucid writing by Samantha Riches.
Very dense with scholarly research. Many references to previous historians and books. Footnotes. I'm challenged to keep going. LOTS of details, like a fire hose in every chapter. Because St George legends span centuries, there is not much to hold on to as far as a narrative.
Did i say brilliant, lucid writing? I might remember some of it.
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