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Saint Joachim. In medieval art, he often wears a conical Jewish hat. He is often treated as a saint, with a halo, but in the Latin Church, there was some awareness that he had quite likely died too soon to be counted as a Christian. Joachim and Anne Meeting at the Golden Gate was a popular subject in artistic renditions of the life of the Virgin.
Patristic tradition, on the contrary, consistently identifies Mary's father as Joachim. It has been suggested that Eli is short for Eliakim, [46] which in the Old Testament is an alternate name of Jehoiakim, [55] for whom Joachim is named. The theory is consistent with early traditions ascribing a Davidic ancestry to Mary.
According to apocryphal Christian and Islamic tradition, Joachim and Saint Anne were the parents of Mary and grandparents of Jesus. They are not named in the canonical gospels . In writing, Anne's name and that of her husband, Joachim come only from New Testament apocrypha , of which the Gospel of James (written perhaps around 150) seems to be ...
The Holy Family with Saint Joachim and Saint Anne Before the Eternal Glory or The Three Generations is an oil painting on canvas executed in 1769 by the Spanish artist Francisco Goya. It is an early work by the artist, depicting the Holy Family, with the Virgin Mary's parents saint Anne and saint Joachim and God the Father and the Holy Spirit.
Saint Joachim of Ithaca (Greek: Άγιος Ιωακείμ εξ Ιθάκης) also known as Saint Joachim of Vatopaedi or Saint Papoulakis was born in 1786 as Ioannis Patrikios near Polyktoria, a region in the island of Ithaca, Greece, where his father, Angelos Patrikios, was based as a Captain. Agne, his mother, was a devout Orthodox Christian ...
The "Equestrian, Secular and Chapterial Order of Saint Joachim" was established in 1755 by a group of German nobles. Prince Christian Franz von Sachsen-Coburg Saalfeld [] was installed as its first Grand Master on June 20, 1756, a position he held until 1773.
On the top of the tree is Joseph, under an image of the Virgin and the Child. The niches flanking this tree contain statues of St. Anne and St. Joachim (father and mother of Maria) and four Franciscan doctors who wrote about the Immaculate Conception. Another notable example of gilt wood decoration in Porto is the interior of the Santa Clara ...
Joachim was a Trinitarian, Joachim used to doubt the doctrine of the Trinity, however later he had a vision of a psaltery with 10 strings, in a triangular form, which clarified the Trinity to him. Joachim also attacked the views of Peter Lombard concerning the Trinity, in his book "Psaltery of Ten Strings". [4]