Hermenegild's reputation as a Catholic martyr is not present in contemporary Spanish accounts, such as
John of Biclaro's
Chronicon continuans Victorem Tunnunensem and
Isidore of Seville's
Historia de regibus Gothorum, Vandalorum et Suevorum, which mention only his revolt and not his conversion. The French chronicler
Gregory of Tours, in his
Decem Libri Historiarum, recounts Hermenegild's conversion and credits it as the cause of his rebellion; however, he judges Hermenegild harshly as a traitor. Of Hermenegild, Gregory wrote: "Poor prince, he did not realize that the judgment of God hangs over anyone who makes such plans against his own father, even if that father be a heretic." It is the Italian
Pope Gregory I who first identifies Hermenegild as a martyr. Writing in his
Dialogues, Pope Gregory states that Hermenegild was killed after refusing communion from an Arian bishop. Pope Gregory credited Hermenegild's death as inspiring his brother Reccared's conversion, and thus the conversion of the Visigoth kingdom, saying that Reccared "could never have effected all this, if king Hermigildus had not died for the testimony of true religion; for, as it is written: Unless the grain of wheat falling into the earth doth die, itself remaineth alone; but if it die it bringeth forth much fruit." In 1585, at the urging of
Philip II of Spain,
Pope Sixtus V authorized the cult of Hermenegild in Spain; recognition was later extended to the whole church by
Pope Urban VIII. Saint Hermenegild became celebrated through artistic representation such as poetry, painting, and plays.
Francisco de Herrera the Younger's 1654 painting
The Triumph of St. Hermenegild, originally for the Church of the
Discalced Carmelites in
Madrid, is now in the collection of the
Museo del Prado. In art and Catholic
Iconography, Saint Hermenegild is depicted with an ax as well as a crown, sword, and cross. Hermenegild's entry in the
Roman Martyrology, translated to English, reads: "In Seville, Spain, St. Hermenegild, Martyr. He was the son of Liuvigild, the Arian king of the Visigoths. He was imprisoned when he confessed the Catholic faith. When he refused to take communion from the Arian bishop during the Easter service, his perfidious father ordered that he be brought down with an axe. Thus he left this earthly realm and entered Heaven as a king and martyr." The
Royal and Military Order of Saint Hermenegild, established by
Ferdinand VII of Spain in 1814, is also named in his honor. ==Parentage==