Thursday, September 17, 2020

Marianne -- Martin

Marianne de Charpillon.
la Charpillon:

the Ever-Virginal Choruses of Princesses" . . . Pulcheria had, as a young girl, dedicated her virginity and that of her sisters to God. She would, for decades, maintain her imperial authority (basileia) against the encroachment of the real empress, that rival newcomer, Aelia Eudocia Augusta, her brother's wife. With consummate skill, Pulcheria threw her considerable weight behind the cult of the Virgin Mary as Theotokos ('Mother of God'), which was just becoming a major enthusiasm in Constantinople. Her devotion to Mary, shared by her two sisters--and members of her 'saintly' court--earned them the contemporary epithet 'the ever virginal chorulses of princesses' and the 'pure and holy brides of Christ'. . . ." (Holy Rulers and Blessed Princesses: Dynastic Cults in Medieval Central Europe: 60)

Marie de Lon
Marion de l'Orme
Demoiselle de Lorme
Mademoiselle de l'Orme
Marion de Lorme

Kraljevic:

Marthe Dalbane.
the Death Flower.
[Ref2:Syracuse Journal]

ibn al-Jilliqi (Son of a Galician)

the Younger.

Martin della Torre. Signore della Torre (1110–1147)
the Great.

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