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A Holy Bishop Among Holy Kings in the Frescoes of Mălâncrav (I)
In the murals painted before 1404/5 in the sanctuary of the church in Mãlâncrav, there is a group scene composed of five saints: the three holy kings of Hungary (i.e. Stephen, Emeric, and Ladislas), St. Sigismund of Burgundy, and a holy bishop without defining attributes. Rejecting previous identifications (St. Gerard of Cenad or St. Nicholas) for the holy bishop in Mãlâncrav, the article establishes a new identity by focusing on hagiographic, liturgical, and historical texts, and analyzing a series of images of saints. After placing the representation in Mãlâncrav against the background of the cults of saints popular in medieval Hungary, the author identifies the holy bishop in Mãlâncrav as St. Adalbert, the patron saint of the Archbishopric of Esztergom and one of Hungary’s holy protectors.