An Austrian museum that has a rare statue of an unusual saint, which is actually a woman with a beard, has been flooded with visitors ever since Austria’s Conchita Wurst won the Eurovision Song Contest
Vienna: An Austrian museum that has a rare statue of an unusual saint, which is actually a woman with a beard, has been flooded with visitors ever since Austria’s Conchita Wurst won the Eurovision Song Contest.
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Representation pic/thinkstock
According to legend, Saint Wilgefortis lived in the 14th century and her name derives from the old German word for ‘holy face’. Although she was almost unknown until Conchita Wurst scored her Eurovision victory, Saint Wilgefortis is listed in the standard Catholic list of saints, she has an official feast day, as well as bewildering array of aliases, among them Liberata, Kummernis, Uncumber, and Livrade.
She became a saint over the story that she was the daughter of a king, who had taken a vow of virginity after secretly converting to Christianity. When her father wanted to marry her off to the King of Sicily, she prayed for deliverance from this evil fate, whereupon she grew a bear. As no self-respecting king would want to marry a bearded princess, the marriage was cancelled and a father was so angry that he had her crucified.
She was venerated by people seeking relief from tribulations, in particular by women who wished to be freed from abusive husbands. The director of the Museum in Horn, a small town in Lower Austria, Toni Kurz, said, “We have had the relics, including the statue and information about the saint for some time but now it’s become a massive attraction.”