Veronica
Veronica (Haemorrhoissa,
ἡ αἱμοῤῥοοῦσα),
the woman cured of a bloody issue
(Matt. ix. 20).
Eusebius (H. E. vii. 18) relates that she
was a native of Caesarea Philippi, and adds
that "at the gates of her house, on an
elevated stone, stands a brazen image of a
woman on a bended knee, with her hands
stretched out before her, like one entreating.
Opposite to this there is another image of a
man erect, of the same materials, decently
clad in a mantle, and stretching out his hand
to the woman. Before her feet, and on the
same pedestal, there is a strange plant growing
which, rising as high as the hem of the brazen
garment, is a kind of antidote to all kinds of
diseases. This statue, they say, is a statue
of Jesus Christ, and it has remained even until
our times, so that we ourselves saw it whilst
tarrying in that city. Nor is it to be wondered
at that those of the Gentiles who were
anciently benefited by our Saviour should
have done these things. Since we have also
seen representations of the apostles Peter and
Paul and of Christ Himself still preserved in
paintings, it is probable that, according to
a practice among the Gentiles, the ancients
were accustomed to pay this kind of honour
indiscriminately to those who were as saviours
or deliverers to them. Legendary tradition
about Veronica flourished during and after
4th cent. Macarius Magnesius says she was
princess of Edessa, and that her name was
Veronica or Berenice (Macarii Magnet. ed.
Blondel, Paris, 1876; Tillem. Mém. i. 20;
Hist. des emp. iv. 308), following whom
Baronius (Annal. xxxi. 75) makes her rich
and noble. A late tradition represents her
as a niece of king Herod and as offering her
veil, or a napkin, as a sudarium to the suffering
Christ on the Way of the Cross, Whose pictured
features were thus impressed upon the linen.
This tradition has found no acceptance since
the 11th cent.; the "veronicas" often shewn,
and accredited with miraculous powers of
healing, are face-cloths from the catacombs
on which Christian reverence and affection
have painted the features of the Saviour (see
Wyke Bayliss, Rex Regum, 1905), and the
legend has arisen from the finding of these;
the name of the saint being clearly formed
from the description of such a face-cloth as a
vera icon. The Gospel of Nicodemus introduces
her as one of the witnesses on behalf of
Christ at His trial by Pilate; (Thilo, Cod.
Apocryph. N. T. p. 560; Acta SS. Bol. Jul. iii. 273–279).
[G.T.S. AND ED.]