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1-sided St. Ambrose with Flowers, Bees, and Hive Garden Flag
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1-sided St. Ambrose with Flowers, Bees, and Hive Garden Flag
Also available as a two-sided variant for an additional cost. NOTE WELL: This flag has printing only on the front. The back is totally blank. Adding ANYTHING to the backside—a word, an icon, a picture, even a white or solid background color—will trigger a surcharge/an upcharge! + Of late, pollinator gardens—whether for butterflies or for bees—have become increasingly popular as a partial remedy to the dwindling populations of these important insects. Butterflies and bees are responsible for pollination which is crucial to the food supply chain. It is estimated, for instance, that bee pollination is responsible for a third of global food production. + Add a spiritual dimension to your bee-friendly garden with a St. Ambrose of Milan Garden Flag from Saints_Aplenty on Zazzle! + Born Aurelius Ambrosius (c. 340–397), one day so his patronage origin story goes, the infant St. Ambrose was asleep in his cradle when suddenly a swarm of bees descended upon his face. The bees did not harm him, but rather they left behind a drop of honey on the baby’s lips. His astounded Christian parents took the event as a sign from heaven that their offspring would grow up to be an eloquent, honey-tongued speaker. They weren’t wrong: The child grew to manhood, studied literature, law, and rhetoric, that is, advanced public speaking, entered public life, served as a Roman governor, and eventually became a priest and Bishop of Milan. + Later in life, in Chapter VIII of a letter ‘On Virgins’ to his sister Marcellina, a nun, St. Ambrose would compare consecrated virgins to bees, the hardest working and most industrious of all God’s creatures. Nuns, he opined, were like bees working industriously in community and striving for a common goal of bringing about the Kingdom of Heaven on earth by prayer and good works. Small wonder, St. Ambrose is patron saint of bees, beehives, beekeepers, and candle makers! + Incidentally, in Greek mythology, ‘ambrosia’ was the food or drink of the gods that conferred their immortality. Bee bread, the food made from nectar, pollen, and bee saliva that worker bees feed to larvae in the honeycomb cells of hives is sometimes called ‘ambrosia’. Some beekeepers believe this synonym perpetuates the name of the Saint. + Here, we have combined two antique images: a portrait of St. Ambrose from a late 19th- century devotional print and a print from a book on insects from the mid-17th century. +
A seated St. Ambrose is clad in bishop’s garb: miter, white alb, and cope that is dark violet in color with a rose-pink lining. His crosier (not visible here) leans against a column on his right (our left). He is writing. He holds a quill pen in his right hand and balances a book on his knee. On the windowsill behind him sits a beehive, his principal attribute. + Feast: December 7 +
We have surrounded the portrait with a frame of bee-friendly flowers populated with insects by Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717). Merian was a gifted scientific illustrator and amateur naturalist who discovered the metamorphosis of butterflies at the age of thirteen. Although famous in her own lifetime, Merian was largely ignored by the professional scientific community after her death because of her amateur standing and gender. After languishing for some 300 years in relative obscurity, Merian’s contributions to entomology and her artistry have received renewed interest and much-deserved appreciation in the last fifty years. + Image Credit (BEN 001): Antique image extracted from an oleograph of St. Ambrose of Milan, originally published by Benziger, Einsiedeln, Switzerland, late 19th century, from the designer’s private collection of religious ephemera. An oleograph is a special kind of chromolithograph with a shiny or polished coating to make its image more closely resemble an oil painting. +
Image Credit (Wreath): Antique hand-colored copper engraving of a Wreath with Insects, from Der Raupen wunderbare Verwandelung und sonderbare Blumennahrung [The Caterpillar's Wonderful Transformation and Strange Flower Food](Vol. 2; Nuremberg, 1683), frontispiece. From WikiMedia Commons, Public Domain. The image file has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights.
Customer Reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars rating237 Total Reviews
237 Reviews
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By Donna F.October 9, 2021 • Verified Purchase
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Zazzle is so easy to use for all of my advertising needs and personal needs from yard signs, to coffee mugs to personalized tee shirts! And, the shipping is always fast. No long periods of waiting. And, I signed up for $9+ yearly shipping and now I don't have to pay anymore for shipping for the entire year! The printing was beautiful on this sign and all of the items I have ordered from Zazzle in the past! Nothing could be easier and no one could be faster!
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By Gravityx9 D.October 25, 2021 • Verified Purchase
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Flag bracket is super easy to assemble. There is a prong fork that goes into the ground. I dug a shallow hole to bury the prongs and still had enough height. Reinforced stitching on for the flag opening. Colors are true to the website. Mona Lisa's sign with the text is easy to read, the text is clear and not blurry.
I am very happy with this yard sign.
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By Linda K.May 29, 2025 • Verified Purchase
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My neighbor was in tears when she saw this beautiful flag in the garden she started in memory of her beloved Boxer/Mastiff. I loved being able to easily personalize it with 2 different looks. No matter which side is facing forward, Blue is looking toward her home of the past 12 years.
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Product ID: 256133497836047997
Created on: 5/14/2022, 8:09 AM
Rating: G
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