Vitus
Vitus (1) (Guy), St., a youthful martyr in
Diocletian's persecution; the son of a pagan
gentleman in Sicily, but secretly trained in
Christianity by his nurse Crescentia and her
husband Modestus. After the boy had encountered
much cruel suffering, they succeeded
in carrying him over to Italy, where all
three fell victims, either in Lucania or at Rome
(Boll. Acta SS. 15 Jun. iii. 491, ed. 1867).
He is invoked against sudden death and hydrophobia
(ib. App. p. 21 *), and against
prolonged sleep and the complaint known as
the chorea or dance of St. Vitus (Guérin, Les
Pet. Boll. vii. 30). He is also, says Guérin,
the patron of comedians and dancers. Two
German medical writers, Gregory Horst and
John Juncker, of the 17th and 18th cents.
respectively, relate how the malady came to
take his name (see Rees's Encyclopedia, s.v.
"Chorea"). There sprang up, they say, in
Germany in the 17th cent., a superstitious
belief that by presenting gifts to the image
of St. Vitus, and dancing before it day and
night on his festival, people ensured themselves
good health through the year. The saint's
two chapels at Ulm and Ravensberg became
more especially noted for the annual resort
of these dancing fanatics.
[C.H.]