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The Story and Significance of Saint Foy

Saint Foy was a young girl executed for her religion, Christianity, and became a saint. Her story helps historians understand how Christianity worked in the medieval world.

Saints and relics

Saints and relics

  • Saints, and their relics, were revered (admired).
  • People believed that saints could talk directly to God on behalf of other Christians and could perform miracles.
  • Cults developed around particular saints and their relics.
  • Pilgrims would travel long distances to offer Saints gifts in return for their help or protection.
St Foy

St Foy

  • Saint Foy (Faith) was a girl who likely lived during the 3rd or 4th century in Agen, a small Roman city in Southwest France.
  • Her family were pagans who worshipped Roman gods but Foy became a Christian.
  • Christians were persecuted at this time. When Saint Foy was 12, she was caught but she refused to give up her Christian beliefs.
  • She was tortured and beheaded.
Legacy of St Foy

Legacy of St Foy

  • Saint Foy was canonised as a saint for refusing to deny her faith. She was seen as a true hero and Christian who died for her religion.
  • Dado the Hermit founded a monastery at Conques, France in 801. A monk named Arinisdus stole Saint Foy's body from Agen to take to the monastery in the 9th century.
  • It is believed that a servant named Guibert had his eyes miraculously restored by Saint Foy in 983.
Significance of St Foy

Significance of St Foy

  • Stories related to Saint Foy and Christian saints, in general, helped unify Christians in their religious beliefs. It shows the importance of such stories in Christianity at the time.
  • Historians can use Saint Foy's story to learn about the Christian world of 500-1000.
    • This helps them tackle the lack of surviving sources and learn much about the history of Christianity.
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Empires East & West: 1000 AD

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The Rise & Fall of Ancient China’s Empire

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The Medieval Greatness of the Byzantine Empire

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The Golden Age of the Islamic Empire

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The Politics & Power of the Holy Roman Empire

1.5

Medieval Religion

1.6

The Influence of the Church in Medieval Times

1.7

How Religion Tested the Power of Kings

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Dynastic Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

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Medieval England & Her Neighbours

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European Renaissance

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Norman Conquest & Control

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The Medieval World: 450-1450 AD

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Anglo-Saxon England

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