owlfish: (Default)
S. Worthen ([personal profile] owlfish) wrote2008-11-11 09:29 pm
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La festa di S. Martino

S. Martino Cookie


Today is Saint Martin's Day, a day of a soldier's sacrifice, although a rather different one than those commemorated by Armistice Day. Martin was a Roman soldier from Hungary, who, pitying a roadside beggar near Amiens, cut his cloak into two pieces with his sword and gave the beggar one of them. Later, he realized in a vision that he had given his (half) cloak to Christ, and converted to Christianity.

Traditionally, in many parts of Europe, this is the beginning of winter. It's a feast day in preparation of a pre-Christmas fasting period, a day for celebrating the harvest, eating goose, and drinking wine.

The Venetian tradition is to buy and eat cookies in the shape of Saint Martin - San Martino. This is one. My parents brought it to me this past week as a seasonal gift. Can you make out the Roman soldier with helmet on horseback underneath all that frosting and candy?

[identity profile] a-d-medievalist.livejournal.com 2008-11-11 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I forgot it was also Martinmas -- a sad thing for a member of the Societas Sancti Martini to admit.