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1-sided St. Jerome as Cardinal with Lion (P 004) House Flag

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Size: House Flag 27" X 40"

Create your own house flag to welcome guests, celebrate holidays, show your pride, support causes, and more! Our house flags are completely custom and interchangeable, so you can decorate your home for any season or occasion. Durable and thick, these custom house flags are printed on 100% weatherproof polyester that won't fray or fade. Hang your flag from a pole or drape it over your balcony to make a statement that will last for years to come.

  • Dimensions: 27" x 40"/2.25' x 3.33'; flag opening is approximately 3"
  • Made to last, rain or shine, from 100% all-weather polyester
  • Interchangeable—mix and match for every occasion!
  • Edge-to-edge, full color print displays sharp and vibrant graphics
  • Double-sided printing available, so designs can be viewed from all angles
  • Gently hand wash with mild detergent and water, lay flat to dry
  • Flag pole and bracket sold separately

Pole: None

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Mounting: None

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About This Design

1-sided St. Jerome as Cardinal with Lion (P 004) House Flag

1-sided St. Jerome as Cardinal with Lion (P 004) House 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! + Formally known as Eusebius Sophronius Hieronymus in Latin, St. Jerome (c. 347-420) was born to wealthy pagan parents of Illyrian descent at Stridon, a town now lost to history that was once located near the Adriatic coast in either northeast Italy or the Balkans. As a teenager in Rome, he lived a dissolute lifestyle he would later come to bitterly regret. Baptized in 365, he became a nominal Christian and studied law. Widely traveled and well-educated, he experienced a vision during an illness c. 373/4 that turned him from secular pursuits to the serious study of theology and a life of ascetic repentance. He became a monk, priest, secretary to a pope, theologian, and historian. In 388, he settled at last in Palestine and spent the remainder of his life working in a cave near Bethlehem, the very cave where Jesus was believed to have been born. The result was the work for which he is best known: his translation of most of the Bible into Latin--the translation known as the Vulgate--and his commentaries on the Gospels. One of the most learned men of his day, St. Jerome is a Doctor of the Church and—with SS. Augustine, Ambrose, and Gregory I the Great–one of the Four Latin Church Fathers. He died of old age. + It was during his tenure as secretary to Pope Damasus I (c. 305-384) that St. Jerome earned his red robes and Cardinal’s hat as pictured here… in art and literature, at least. The office of Cardinal as such did not exist in the late fourth-early fifth century; hence, his garb is anachronistic. However, in the Middle Ages, the most widely read and most influential book--after the Bible, of course--was The Golden Legend (or Legenda Aurea Sanctorum) by Bl. Jacobus de Voragine (c. 1226-1298). Accustomed to a Papal Secretariat staffed with Cardinals in his time, Voragine erroneously wrote that St. Jerome “was ordained a Cardinal Priest in the Church of Rome.” Contemporary artists retrofitted St. Jerome accordingly, and a Cardinal’s dress became ever after one of the established features of his iconography. (We particularly like the rakish angle at which St. Jerome wears his galero in this late 19th-century devotional print--even if it is due to the tilt of his head as he reads from one of his books!) + The lion at St. Jerome’s feet is another symbol often associated with him. According to tradition (read: The Golden Legend again), during his sojourn as a monk in the Syrian desert, St. Jerome earned the trust and eternal gratitude of a lion by removing a thorn from its paw. The lion became his devoted companion. + St. Jerome is patron saint of archaeologists, librarians, archivists, translators, students, and Bible scholars. + Feast: September 30 + Image Credit (P 004): Antique image of S. Hieronymus [St. Jerome] from a late 19th-century devotional print in chromoxylography, originally published by Friedrich Pustet, Regensburg, New York, and Cincinnati. From the designer’s private collection of religious ephemera.

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars rating159 Total Reviews
132 total 5-star reviews8 total 4-star reviews6 total 3-star reviews3 total 2-star reviews10 total 1-star reviews
159 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Karl B.February 5, 2022Verified Purchase
House Flag, No Pole, (1)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
It was everything and more! When I unfolded it and set it fully unfurled, the glory of it's significance was immediately recognized. So much care was taken to it's quality. It still delights me even now, four weeks later. I love how this turned out like so many things I have designed at Zazzle.com! You get what you pay for and I got more than enough. So far no fading and crisp as even to boldly reach out and touch it.
5 out of 5 stars rating
By The M.July 10, 2025Verified Purchase
House Flag, No Pole, (1)
AMAZING! I love the quality of this flag and it is right on point with our branding! Also, the pole is beautiful and the holder made of metal, not cheap plastic. I had to add a grommet to the top so I could use the clip to keep flag extended on pole - perhaps this was an oversight? Overall thrilled! .
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Hero E.January 22, 2022Verified Purchase
House Flag, No Pole, (1)
Creator Review
The design(s) on this flag is/are unique and crisp. The material is awesome. Perfect! The printing turned out better than I could imagine. And the design is fabulous.

Tags

Flags
saint jerome or st hieronymusmonk priest theologian historiansecretary of pope damasus icardinals red hat or galerodoctor of the church19th century devotional printp seriesbossed framered cardinals robes and bookrecumbent lion
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saint jerome or st hieronymusmonk priest theologian historiansecretary of pope damasus icardinals red hat or galerodoctor of the church19th century devotional printp seriesbossed framered cardinals robes and bookrecumbent lion

Other Info

Product ID: 256437466305876434
Created on: 7/20/2022, 9:25 AM
Rating: G