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Happy St. George's Day but, who was St. George and why is he England's patron saint?

England - and several other countries - celebrate the saint's day on 23 April

Today, April 23 marks the saint’s day of England’s patron saint St George.

English schoolchildren are always taught that he was a knight who slayed dragons but is there more to the historical figure?

It is honoured by various Christian churches and by the several nations, kingdoms, countries, and cities of which St George is the patron saint.

St George’s Day was named as early as 1222 – but only one in five people in England actually know what day it’s on.

In 1415 St George's Day became a national feast day and holiday in England. But after the union with Scotland in the 18th century it ceased to become a national holiday.

Now most people only mark the day with a flag.

Historically people would wear a rose on their chests. Roses became a symbol of the patron saint because a beautiful bloom is thought to have grown on his grave. This also came from a tradition in Catalonia in Spain - of which St George is also a patron saint - where women would give men a book and receive a rose in return on the feast day.

Who was he?

According to legend, St George was a Roman soldier born in what is now modern-day Turkey in around 280 AD and died around 303.

Very little is known about his early life but it is believed he was born to a wealthy Christian noble family.

When he grew up he became a soldier and joined the retinue of Emperor Diocletian.

In 303 Diocletian, as part of a crackdown on the growing influence of the Christian community, ordered that all Christian soldiers in the army should be expelled and all Roman soldiers be forced to make the traditional pagan sacrifice.

St George refused and denounced the edict in front of his fellow soldiers, declaring he was a Christian.

Diocletian initially tried to convert him with offers of wealth and land but when he refused he was beheaded on 23 April 303.

So what does he have to do with dragons?

The myth of St George slaying a dragon originally appeared in stories told by the medieval Eastern Orthodox Church which were brought back to Europe by the Crusaders in the 10th and 11th centuries.

According to one story, a town in Libya had a small lake with a plague-infected dragon living in it. The townspeople were gradually being killed by the dragon and started feeding it two sheep a day to appease it.

When they ran out of sheep the king devised a lottery system to feed it local children. One day his own daughter was chosen and as she was being led out to the lake St George happened to ride past.

He reported offered to slay the dragon if the people converted to Christianity. They all did, and the king later built a church where the dragon died.

If he was from Turkey how did he become the patron saint of England?

King Edward III made St George the country’s official saint just after he came to the throne in 1327.

According to historian Ian Mortimer, a patron saint did not have to be from the country they were born in - they just needed to embody the characteristics the kingdom wanted to project to the outside world.

After all, as well as England, St George is also the patron saint of Portugal, Venice, Beirut, Malta, Ethiopia, Georgia, the Palestinian terrorities, Serbia and Lithuania.

Edward III wanted to rebuild the strength of the English monarchy after the disastrous reign of his father - St George was part of his strategy to make England one of the most powerful and warlike nations in Europe

Things you don't know about St George

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Scientists have haggled over the exact details of the birth of St George for hundreds of years but it is generally put at around 280AD

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He was an immigrant. George moved all over the world looking for work, immigrating from Syria to modern day Turkey to look for work

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Saint George’s background was about as multicultural as you can get, he was born in Syria to a Greek family

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He spread new religious ideas from abroad. For centuries the Roman Empire had worshiped its native pagan gods. George came to fame because he spread his foreign, Middle Eastern, religion to western civilization

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Saint George isn’t just the patron saint of England: He’s the patron saint of Bulgaria, Palestine, Ethiopia, Greece and Lithuania

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He joined the Roman army and went on to become one of their finest soldiers

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As an immigrant with a foreign religion, Saint George was at the receiving end of discrimination and persecution from the Roman authorities

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All the other countries in the UK get days off on their saint’s day but not England

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King Edward III was a big fan of George and decided to make him the patron saint of England

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The earliest known depictions of the dragon slaying story comes from 10th or 11th Century Cappadocia and Georgia in which George dispatched a giant monster living in lake in Libya

Happy St. George's Day everyone

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