Saint Guinefort

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Saint Guinefort attacking a snake

Saint Guinefort was a 13th-century French greyhound that received local veneration as a folk saint.

Legend

Guinefort's story is a variation on the well-travelled "faithful hound" motif, similar to the Welsh story of the dog Gelert, or the Indian story of the Brahmin and the Mongoose.

In one of the earliest versions of the story, described by Dominican monk Stephen of Bourbon in 1250, Guinefort the greyhound belonged to a knight who lived in a castle near Lyon, France. One day, the knight went hunting, leaving his infant son in the care of Guinefort. When he returned, he found the nursery in chaos – the cradle overturned, the child nowhere to be seen and Guinefort greeted his master with bloody jaws. Believing Guinefort to have devoured his son, the knight slew the dog. He then heard a child crying; he turned over the cradle and found his son lying there, safe and sound, along with the body of a viper bloody from dog bites. Guinefort had killed the snake and saved the child.

On realizing the mistake the family dropped the dog down a well, covered it with stones and planted trees around it, setting up a shrine for Guinefort. Upon learning of the dog’s martyrdom, the locals venerated the dog as a saint and visited his shrine of trees when they were in need, especially mothers with sick children.

Legacy

In part because of the rigorous persecution and demonization of the belief, it persisted and was given wider circulation and support — an unintended consequence. As Protestant churches emerged in the Sixteenth century, they "criticized the cult of Guinefort seeing in it an example of the abuses and errors of the Catholic Church."

The Catholic Hierarchy adopted the critique, and sought to suppress Guinefort belief and practices, and ostracize practitioners. A fine for the practice was implemented. The cult of this dog saint persisted for several centuries, despite the repeated prohibitions of the Catholic Church. Community memory of the practices was still present in the 1970s, with the last known visit by someone to Saint Guinefort Wood to effect a cure for a sick child occurring around the 1940s.