Happy Feast
of St. Anne – the mother of Mary and grandmother of Jesus.
Did you know?
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The
cult of St. Anne developed in the East and came to the West with the Crusaders
returning from the Holy Land.
o Anne and her husband, Joachim, who
prayed to God for children and were rewarded with a daughter whom they named
Miriam (the Blessed Virgin Mary).
o The popularity of St. Anne grew as she
became the patron of grandmothers, housewives, pregnant women, broom-makers,
lace-makers, and miners (to name just a few).
o She is also invoked by spinsters and
maidens to find them a mate.
o “I beg you, holy mother Anne, Send me a
good and loving man.”
o The vigil of St. Anne’s Day (St. Anne’s
Eve) was a great celebration for matchmaking and debutante balls.
o Both Johann Strausses composed “Anne
Polkas” for these festivals.
o Following an old saying that “All Annes
are beautiful,” these events would be called a “Festival of All Annes” meaning
of all beautiful ladies.
o Fireworks would light the summer sky,
and music and dancing would fill the air.
-
Forchheim,
Germany has an annual 10-day “Annafest” that attracts up to 500,000 visitors,
and the town breweries make a special Annafest Bier.
-
You
can buy Anne beer steins via the Internet for your own Annafest.
-
So,
toast today with a beer and say this toast, “We beg you, holy mother Anne, send
our Christian maidens a good and loving man” while listening to some Anne
Polkas.
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South
Africa has a St. Anna wine.
-
France
has a Domaine Saint-Anne wine, a Boise Sainte-Anne, and a Clos Sainte-Anne wine,
and a Chartogne-Taillet brut champagne Cuvee Sainte-Anne in a magnum size.
-
Spain
has a Monasterio de Santa Ana wine.
-
Argentina
makes a Casa de Campo Torrontes wine.
-
Italy
makes a Villa Sant’ Anna wine, and a fine Chianti named for St. Anne is
produced in Tuscany.
From Drinking With Saints
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