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Saint Hyacinth of Pierogi

10 bytes added, 00:32, 11 February 2021
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{{Cytat|There is a grain of truth to every legend. This one is based on the stories from the ''Life of Saint Hyacinth'' by Lector Stanislaus. The work was created in the 1350s–70s and is so far the basic source of knowledge about Saint Hyacinth's life. The book mentions an event of July 13, 1238. Hyacinth was then invited to the village of Kościelec, 27 km away from Cracow. On that day a violent hailstorm completely destroyed the crops in the local fields. The villagers were grief-stricken, threatened with poverty and famine. Saint Hyacinth asked them to pray. On the next day, the ears of grain rose up and the crops were saved. So much for what Lector Stanislaus says. The rest is a legend, which says that the grateful villagers milled the grain into flour, which they used to make pierogi that were then served to Saint Hyacinth.
There is another legend, related to the Tatar raid of Cracow in 1241. It says that Saint Hyacinth fed pierogi to the Cracovians during that time. Which is plausible, as the Dominicans had well-stocked granaries and certainly aided the inhabitants of a plundered city. We're now gradually discovering the traces of these buildings thanks to the archeological work of performed by Dr. Dariusz Niemiec.
|źródło = {{Cyt
| tytuł = Gazeta Krakowska

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