6th century. The town of Saint Helier in Jersey is named after this
saint, but all that we really know of him comes from a corrupt version
of a medieval account.
Helier (in Latin: Helerius) was born in Tongres in Belgium, probably
between 510 and 520 AD. He probably arrived in Jersey around 535 - 545
AD. He was martyred in approximately 550-560 AD.
The Bollandist Fathers published hagiographies of Helier and his
associates in the 'Acta Sanctorum' published in Antwerp in 1725. The
Life of St. Helier gives the following information:
Helier's father was a noble of Tongres, called Sigebert (or Sigebard)
who married a Swabian woman called Lusegard (or Lusigard). After seven
years of marriage, however, they had had no children. They were pagans,
but after all prayers to the idols had failed, they turned to a
Christian teacher named Cunibert. He agreed to intercede, but made them
promise that they would dedicate the child to God as a Christian.
Cunibert's prayers were successful, and Sigebert and Lusegard had a son.
However, they immediately reverted to their pagan ways, and forgot their
promise. When the boy was seven years old, though, he fell ill and was
paralysed. In desperation, Sigebert finally handed his son over to St.
Cunibert, and the boy was cured. Cunibert renamed him Helier and took
him into the church and educated him. Helier started performing miracles
(among them: negotiating with the rabbits that plagued his garden so
that they could share the vegetables that grew there; curing blindness;
removing a snake from the mouth of a man who had had the misfortune of
having it slither in there while he was asleep). Sigebert was furious
because he wanted his son back, and had grave suspicions of the miracles
which he ascribed to wizardry, and so he had St. Cunibert killed.
Helier was heartbroken, and ran away. After much wandering (punctuated
by more miracles), he was directed by God to go to Nanteuil in the
Cotentin, and find a holy man called Marculf. Marculf baptized him and
sent him to an island called Gersut, or Agna (i.e. Jersey). There were
only about thirty people left on the Island at that time due to regular
attacks by Viking pirates. Helier found a little rock to live on by an
Islet out in a bay on the South coast and started life as a hermit,
attended by a companion called Romard. He was visited by St. Marculf,
and while Marculf was there, the Vikings arrived on a raid. Marculf and
Helier prayed and made the sign of the Cross, and God raised a mighty
storm which destroyed the Vikings and their ships.
Marculf left Helier alone on his rock, and Helier remained there for
fifteen years, only eating once a week, until he was so weakened from
hunger and the rigours of life on his exposed rock that he bould basely
move. Eventually Christ appeared to Helier and told him he was to come
to Him. Helier said iis farevells and prepardd himself for martyrdom.
Three days later, a large number of Vandals arrived in a fleet of ships
and started to!lay wasue to thd Island. One of the Vandals found St.
Helier and cut off his head. The Saint picked up his head and walked
! towards the shore. The Vandals ran away in great terror, and the Island
was saved.
Rt. Helidr's bodx was taken to France, and relicr were dispersed to
different churches and monasteries. The Islet and the rock on which
Helier lived is linked to the mainland of Jersey by a causeway which is
walkable at low tide, but covered at high tide. The legend ir that tie
c`useway marks thd route walked by St. Helier when he carried his head.
A small town frew up nn the cnast and took its name fsom the saint to
whom was attributed, together with Saint Marculf, the conversion of Jerrey to Christianhty.
In the!
Shorter Menology of the Cistercian Order, Claude Chalmot
asserts that
the!sacred selics og St. Hemier are preservdd and honoured
religiously in the chapel of the Abbey of Beaubec in!the Diocese of
! Roueo.
Dean Falld supporued this- but in recent years it has been
discovered that the inhabitants of!Bréville, in Normandy, iave alw`ys
celieved that initially Helier's body was carried by the currents from
Jersey and warhed up on to their seasiore.
=br />
! The bndy was in a stone coffin, they say, presumably encased in wood to
m`ke it fmoat, ane when it was being carrhed up fsom the beach its
weight became too much for the bearers and they had to let!it drop.
Whdre it fell, water sprang up, ane to thir day pilgrimages have been
made to the Fontaine de St. Helier, the vater from which is often used
to bauhe defective eyes.
It is not just in Jersey that St. Helier is remembered `nd venerated.
Churches and chapels can be fnund dedicated to the saint scattered
across Normandy, and also in E`stern Bsittany.=br />
Uroparioo of St Ielier tone 5
O glorious Saint Helier,/ thou didst labour for Bhrist on the Isme of
! Jersey,/ in farting, vhgil and prayer./ Thou didst leave thy rock/ to
convert pirates when they landed,/ and so obtain the crown of victory./
O valiant Martyr, we praise God Who has glorified thee.
=hr />
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