HOT✌🏼 Wholesale Art, Inspired by Faith

Blessed Gerard

16,00  83,00  exc. VAT
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Our company offers wholesale sales for Monasteries, Exhibitions, Ecclesiastical Stores, Gift Shops, and Merchants. We provide competitive pricing based on the quantities you order, ensuring the best possible offer to meet your needs.

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Gérard de Martigues – Gerardus Frater – Fray Gerardo Sasso – Frère Gérard – Beato Gerardo Tum – Gerard de Tunc – Gerhard Sasso

Dimensions: 11 x 8 cm – 4.33”x3.14”in , 15 x 11 cm – 5.9”x4.33”in , 21 x 15 cm – 8.3”x5.9”in , 27 x 21 cm – 10.6” X8.3”in – 42 x 32 cm – 16.5“x12.60”in

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TitleRangeSale price
Total items5 - 10 15,20 
Total items11 - 30 13,60 
Total items31 - 60 12,00 
Total items61 - 150 10,40 
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Estimated Delivery:
09 - 16 Jul, 2025
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Description

Blessed Gerard Sasso (c. 1040 – 3 September 1120), known also as Gérard de Martigues, was a lay brother in the Benedictine Order who was appointed as rector of the hospice in Jerusalem at Muristan in 1080. In the wake of the success of the First Crusade in 1099, he became the founder of the Order of St John of Jerusalem, also known as the Knights Hospitaller, an organization that received papal recognition in 1113. As such, he was the first Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller.

Gerard Sasso became known as Pierre-Gérard de Martigues due to a mistaken tradition of his place of birth being Martigues, in Provence. However, William of Tyre, writing in the late 12th century, cites Amalfi as Gerard’s birthplace. This is not implausible, as merchants from Amalfi were involved in the reconstruction of the hospice in Jerusalem in the 1020s after its destruction in 1005 under caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah.

An alleged surname Tum, variously also Thom, Tune or Tenque, is due to an error by Pierre-Joseph de Haitze (1730), who mistook the word tunc, “then”, as a name of Gerard. De Haitze’s mistake was identified in 1885 by Ferdinand de Hellwald.[6] Before the erroneous nature of the surname Tunc became clear, Italian historian Francesco Galeani Napione (d. 1830) Italianized Gerardus Tunc as Gerardo da Tonco, suggesting that he was a native of (or held possessions in) Tonco in Piedmont.

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