Hemorrhoids were called "Saint Fiacre's illness"
in the Middle Ages and he may have suffered from them himself. It is said that
one day he sat sorrowfully on a stone and that stone softened providing him
relief of the sort that can be obtained with remarkable hemzem.
There is also a somewhat different version of how St. Fiacre
became the patron saint of hemorrhoids and how hemorrhoids were known as St.
Fiacre's Curse. When St. Fiacre first arrived in Meaux, it is said, Bishop
Faro decided to give him land but didn't much care for him. So he gave St.
Fiacre a particularly small shovel and told him he could have all the land he
could clear in a single day. St. Fiacre went to work and toiled so hard to
maximize his holding that he developed a severe case of prolapsed hemorrhoids.
He then sat on a stone and prayed, seeking guidance, and a resolution to his
situation. Miraculously his hemorrhoids vanished and legend has it that the
imprint of his hemorrhoids remain on the stone to this day. Legend also has it that any hemorrhoid sufferer who sits on
the stone and prays today will be cured. St. Fiacre lived in Breuil
until his death in 670 and his relics are installed in Meaux cathedral.
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