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The Story of St. Brigid’s Cross
IrishShopShare
St. Brigid’s Day is February 1st. While the day isn’t recognized globally like St. Patrick’s Day, Brigid is Ireland’s other patron saint. In Ireland, her feast day isn’t a public holiday, but it is recognized. School children across Ireland love Brigid’s Day. They get a break from their usual lessons to hear stories about the miracles Brigid performed, color pictures of her and spend much of the day learning to make the distinctive, woven reed cross she designed. St. Brigid’s crosses are hung in many homes in Ireland, and feature in Irish gifts such as pendants. It’s also the first day of spring, so although the weather is usually cold and wet, anticipation of sunnier days hangs in the air.
This cross is to Brigid what the shamrock is to Patrick. It’s a meaningful symbol of Ireland that is used on a range of Irish gifts. And people hang the reed crosses in their homes. Traditionally, people believed that St. Brigid’s crosses would protect a home from harm, particularly from fire, which was a serious concern for people with thatched roofs. In some areas people put the crosses in their kitchens to protect the family from hunger.
Brigid created her unusual square cross while sitting at the bedside of a dying pagan chieftain. History doesn’t clarify, but it might even have been her father. The man was raving and delirious, and his Christian relatives hoped he would convert to Christianity before he died. As she sat vigil by him, she began weaving some of the loose rushes from his floor into a cross. He grew calm watching her, and she began to explain her faith. Legend tells us the man died peacefully having converted to Christianity.