Do you remember
Herman Joseph’s Beer from Coors?
Brewed by:
Coors Brewing Company
Colorado, United States
Style | ABV
German Pilsener | 4.95% ABV
Availability: Year-round
Notes & Commercial Description:
Beer added by: Haybeerman on 07-09-2008
This beer is retired; no longer brewed.
Coors Brewing Company
Colorado, United States
Style | ABV
German Pilsener | 4.95% ABV
Availability: Year-round
Notes & Commercial Description:
Beer added by: Haybeerman on 07-09-2008
This beer is retired; no longer brewed.
Who
was Herman Joseph?
Saint
Hermann Joseph, O.Praem., (ca. 1150 – 7 April 1241) was a German
Premonstratensian canon regular and mystic.
He was born in
Cologne. According to the biography by Razo Bonvisinus, a contemporary and
prior of Steinfeld Abbey (Acta Sanctorum, 7 April, I, 679), Hermann was the son
of noble but poor parents, his father being Lothair, Count of Meer (now
Meerbusch), and his mother being St. Hildegund. At the age of seven he attended
school and very early he was known for devotion to the Blessed Virgin. At every
available moment he could be found at the church of St. Mary on the Capitol,
where he would kneel wrapt in prayer to Mary. Bonvisinus
claims that the boy once presented an apple, saved from his own lunch, to a
statue of Jesus, who accepted it. According to still another legend, on another
occasion, when on a cold day he made his appearance with bare feet, Mary
procured him the means of getting shoes.
At the age of
twelve he entered the abbey of the Premonstratensian (more commonly known as
Norbertine) Canons Regular at Steinfeld. As he was too young to be accepted
into the Order, he was sent to make his studies in the Netherlands. Upon his
return, he made his vows and was given the habit. As a novice, he was entrusted
initially with the service of the refectory and later of the sacristy.
After his
ordination, Hermann was sometimes sent out to perform pastoral duties and was
also in frequent demand for the making and repairing
of clocks. Late in his life, he had under his charge the spiritual
welfare of the Cistercian nuns at Hoven[disambiguation needed], near Zulpich,
whom he served as chaplain. There he died and was buried in their cloister. His
body was later transferred back to Steinfeld, where his marble tomb and large
picture may be seen to the present day; portions of his relics are at Cologne
and at Antwerp. He is represented in art as kneeling
before a statue of the Virgin and Child and offering an apple.
The process of
his canonization was begun in 1626, at the request of Archbishop Ferdinand of
Cologne and the Emperor Ferdinand II, but was interrupted. His feast, however,
continued to be celebrated on 7 April, by the members of his Order and the name
of Blessed Hermann was listed in the Premonstratensian supplement to the Roman
Martyrology. They also celebrate the translation of his relics on 24 May.
His status as a
saint was confirmed by Pope Pius XII in 1958. (The Salvatorian Fathers, who had
come to occupy the abbey in Steinfeld in modern times, opted to perform this
less costly and involved process—known as Confirmatio Cultus—rather than to
carry out a full canonization process.) His current feast day is 7 April.
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