Cantilupe died at
Ferento, near
Orvieto, in Italy, on 25 August 1282, His feast day was fixed on 2 October.
Cult and shrine His
shrine became a popular place of
pilgrimage, but only its base survived the
Reformation until a new upper section (a
feretory) was recreated in 2008 under the guidance of Nicholas Quayle. The new section is in vivid colours with a painted scene of the Virgin and Child holding the
Mappa Mundi. A reliquary containing his skull has been held at
Downside Abbey in
Somerset since 1881. It is generally believed that the
Hereford Mappa Mundi was created to be used as part of his cult. A number of references on the map itself, such as a hunting scene, may refer to him directly. The belief system on the map includes a number of derogatory or anti-Semitic images that identify the Exodus and devil worship with contemporaneous Jewry, which may echo the beliefs of Cantilupe himself. Architectural features of the Cathedral, which are also thought to relate to the cult, echo similar anti-Jewish themes, in particular
Synagoga, a blindfolded Jew with a broken staff, dropping twin tablets of God's law. Records of his cult and financial receipts for it still exist and have formed the basis of several studies. These provide one of the few extensive records of a pre-Reformation cult in England. Objects venerating Cantilupe have been found across a wide area, suggesting that his cult may have been more extensive than has previously been assumed.
Current Catholic veneration In the current Latin edition of the
Roman Martyrology (2004 edition), Cantilupe is listed under 25 August as follows: "At Montefiascone in Tuscia, the passing of Saint Thomas Cantelupe, Bishop of Hereford in England, who, resplendent with learning, severe toward himself, to the poor however showed himself a generous benefactor". ==Legacy==