- A
myroblyte (/ˈmɪrəblaɪt/; 'whose
relics produce myron'; from
Byzantine Gr**** μυροβλύτης, muroblútēs, Latin: myroblyta;
Church Slavonic: мѵрото́чецъ;...
- tēs Thessaloníkēs), also
known as the Holy Great-Martyr
Demetrius the
Myroblyte (meaning 'the Myrrh-Gusher' or 'Myrrh-Streamer'; 3rd
century – 306), was...
-
Orthodox Church canonized Stefan Nemanja,
under the name
Saint Simeon the
Myroblyte (Serbian: Свети Симеон Мироточиви).
Nemanja was born
around the year 1113...
-
relics or
burial places" of
certain Christian saints, who are
known as
myroblytes while the
exudation itself is
referred to as
myroblysia or myroblytism...
-
otherwise known as "cicely" or "sweet cicely".
Bdellium Chrism Frankincense Myroblyte saint Naturalis Historia Pliny the
Elder Rice,
Patty C., Amber: Golden...
-
Saint Nicholas of Myra (traditionally 15
March 270 – 6
December 343), also
known as
Nicholas of Bari, was an
early Christian bishop of Gr****
descent from...
-
known as Nilos/Nilus the Myrrh-gusher,
Nilus of Kynouria, or
Nilus the
Myroblyte (Gr****: Άγιος Νείλος ο Μυροβλήτης; born c. 1601, died 1651), was an Orthodox...
- saints,
especially from the
wounds of stigmata.
These saints are
called myroblytes while the
exudation itself is
referred to as
myroblysia or myroblytism...
- century,
later sanctified by the
Eastern Orthodox Church as
Saint Simon the
Myroblyte. His
feast day is 28 December. Simon's date of
birth is uncertain, but...
-
first witnesses of the
Resurrection of
Jesus (e.g. St. Mary Magdalene)
Myroblyte, Myrrh-gusher or Myrrh-streaming: the
relics of the
saint exude holy and...