St. Catherine of Alexandria
While
the Bishop of Caesarea,
Eusebius ("father of
Church history"), writing around the year 320, had heard of a noble young
Christian woman of Alexandria, most of what we know about Catherine in
apocryphal. According to the popular tradition, Catherine was born of a
patrician family of Alexandria and from childhood had devoted herself to study.
Through her reading she had learned much of Christianity and had been converted
by a vision of Our Lady and the Holy Child. When Maxentius [Maximus] began his
persecution, Catherine, then a beautiful young girl, went to him and rebuked him
boldly for his cruelty. He could not answer her arguments against his pagan
gods, and summoned fifty philosophers to confute her. They all confessed
themselves won over by her reasoning, and were thereupon burned to death by the
enraged Emperor. He then tried to seduce Catherine with an offer of a consort's
crown, and when she indignantly refused him, he had her beaten and imprisoned.
The Emperor went off to inspect his military forces, and when he got back he
discovered that his wife Faustina and a high official, one Porphyrius, had been
visiting Catherine and had been converted, along with the soldiers of the guard.
They too were put to death, and Catherine was sentenced to be killed on a spiked
wheel.
The lower window contains a 7-branch candle stick from the Temple at Jerusalem.