
Fourteen Holy Helpers
The 'Fourteen Holy Helpers' are a group of
saints
venerated together in
Roman Catholicism because
prayer to them was thought to be particularly effective, especially against various
diseases. This group of ''Nothelfer'' ("helpers in need") originated in the
14th century at first in the
Rhineland, largely as a result of the
epidemic (probably of
bubonic plague) that became known as the
Black Death.
At the heart of the Fourteen were three virgin martyrs:
:Sankt Margaretha mit dem Wurm,
:Sankt Barbara mit dem Turm,
:Sankt Katharina mit dem Radl,
:das sind die heiligen drei Madl.
("Saint Margaret with the
dragon; Saint Barbara with the tower; Saint Katharine with the wheel; those are the three holy maids.")
The Fourteen saints are:
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Achatius (or Acacius) (May 8), martyr, invoked against
headache
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Barbara (December 4), virgin and martyr, invoked against
fever and sudden
death
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Blaise (also Blase and Blasius) (February 3), bishop and martyr, invoked against illness of the
throat
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Catherine of Alexandria (November 25), virgin and martyr, invoked against sudden death
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Christopher (Christophorus) (July 25), martyr, invoked against
bubonic plague
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Cyriacus (Cyriac) (August 8), deacon and martyr, invoked against
temptation on the death-bed
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Denis (Dionysius) (October 9), bishop and martyr, invoked against headache
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Erasmus (
Saint Elmo) (June 2), bishop and martyr, invoked against
intestinal ailments
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Eustachius (Eustace, Eustathius) (September 20), martyr, invoked against family discord
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George (April 23), soldier-martyr, for the health of
domestic animals
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Giles (Aegidius) (September 1), hermit and abbot, invoked against plague, for a good
confession
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Margaret of Antioch (July 20), virgin and martyr, invoked in
childbirth
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Pantaleon (July 27), bishop and martyr, for
physicians
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Vitus (also known as
Saint Guy) (June 15), martyr, invoked against
epilepsy
For one or another of the saints in the original set,
Anthony the Anchorite,
Leonard of Noblac,
Nicholas,
Sebastian,
Oswald the
King,
Pope Sixtus II,
Apollonia,
Wolfgang of Regensburg or
Roch were sometimes substituted.
While each has a separate feast day, the Fourteen Holy Helpers are honored together on
August 8. Barbara, Catherine of Alexandria, Christopher, and Margaret of Antioch were dropped from the list of saints for universal veneration in the reform of the Roman Catholic
liturgy in
1969 by Pope Paul VI. In 2004, Pope John Paul II reinstated the Feast of St Catherine of Alexandria, the voice to St. Joan of Arc, as an optional memorial on November 25.
The ''Vierzehnheiligen''

Basilica Vierzehnheiligen
The fourteen holy helpers are honored in the
Franconia section of
Bavaria as the ''vierzehn Heiligen'', to whom the
Rococo pilgrimage church in the hamlet of
Bad Staffelstein near
Bamberg, designed by
Balthasar Neumann (built –1774) is dedicated. On September 24, 1445 the Franciscan monastery’s young shepherd, Hermann Leicht, saw a crying child in a field—one that happened to belong to the nearby
Cistercian monastery of Langheim. As he bent down to pick it up, it suddenly disappeared. A short time later, the child reappeared in the same spot and this time, two candles were burning next to it. In June 1446 the shepherd saw the child a third time, this time carrying a red cross on its chest and accompanied by thirteen children. The child said to the shepherd: ‘We are the 14 helpers and wish to erect a chapel here, where we can rest. If you will be our servant, we will be yours!’ Shortly after, the shepherd saw two burning candles descending to this spot. Soon, miraculous healings began, through the intervention of the fourteen helper saints.

Detail of Grünewald alterpiece
The
Cistercian brothers in the monastery erected a chapel, which immediately attracted pilgrims. An altar was consecrated as early as 1448. Pilgrimages to Vierzehnheiligen continue to take place each year between May and October.
The most famous group portrait of the "Fourteen Saints" is the altarpiece of
1503 painted by
Matthias Grünewald for the monastery at Bindlach, near
Bayreuth in
Upper Franconia, the heartland of the Holy Helpers. As the ''
cultus'' spread,
Pope Nicholas V attached indulgences to devotion of the Fourteen Holy Helpers in the 16th century, though these no longer apply.
The "Fourteen angels" of the lost children's prayer in
Engelbert Humperdinck's "fairy opera" ''
Hansel und Gretel'' are the Fourteen Helpers. The English words are quite familiar:
:"When at night I go to sleep,
:Fourteen angels watch do keep,
:Two my head are guarding,
:Two my feet are guiding;
:Two upon my right hand,
:Two upon my left hand.
:Two who warmly cover
:Two who o'er me hover,
:Two to whom 'tis given
:To guide my steps to heaven."
See also
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Kadaň, Czech Republic: Franciscan monastery with its pilgrimage church of Fourteen Holy Helpers.
External links
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Fourteen Holy helpers: invocation and litany
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Heilige Nothelfer (in German)
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Virtual Tour of The Vierzehnheiligen
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SLIDESHOW