A cephalophoric legend of
Nicasius of Rheims tells that at the moment of his execution, Nicasius was reading
Psalm 119 (Psalm 118 in the
Vulgate). When he reached the verse ("My soul is attached unto dust") (verse 25), he was decapitated. After his head had fallen to the ground, Nicasius continued the psalm, adding, ("Revive me, Lord, with your words"). The theme of the speaking head is extended in the 8th-century
Passio of Saint
Justus of Beauvais. After the child had been beheaded by Roman soldiers, his father and brother found the corpse sitting with his head in his lap. Giving the head to his father, Justus asked him to carry it to Auxerre, so that his mother, Felicia, might kiss it. The legend of
Aphrodisius of
Alexandria was transferred to
Béziers, where his name was inserted at the head of the list of bishops. In the
hagiographic accounts, Aphrodisius was accompanied by his camel. As he was preaching, a group of pagans pressed through the crowd and beheaded him on the spot. Aphrodisius picked up his head and carried it to the chapel he had recently consecrated at the site. It is identified today as
Place Saint-Aphrodise, Béziers.
Himerius of Bosto is said to have survived his
decapitation and, after collecting his head, climbed on horseback. He rode to meet his uncle, a bishop, on a small mountain before he finally died. A legend associated with
Ginés de la Jara states that after he was
decapitated in southern
France, he picked up his head and threw it into the
Rhône. The head was carried by sea to the coast of
Cartagena, Spain, where it was venerated as a
relic (Cartagena was the centre of this saint's cult). In the
Golden Legend,
Paul the Apostle at his martyrdom "stretched forth his neck, and so was beheaded. And as soon as the head was from the body, it said: Jesus Christus! which had been to Jesus or Christus, or both, fifty times." When the head was recovered and was to be rejoined to the body as a relic, in response to a prayer for confirmation that this was indeed the right head, the body of Paul turned to rejoin the head that had been set at its feet. In legend, the female saint
Osgyth stood up after her execution, picking up her head like Denis of Paris and other cephalophoric martyrs and walking with it in her hands to the door of a local convent before collapsing there. Similarly,
Valerie of Limoges carried her severed head away to her confessor,
Saint Martial.
Cuthbert is often depicted with his head on his neck/shoulders and carrying a second head in his hands. However, he is not a cephalophore. The second head is that of Saint
Oswald of Northumbria, who was buried with him at
Durham Cathedral. == In literature ==