This name is used for a group of three women who came to the
sepulchre of
Jesus. In
Eastern Orthodoxy they are among the
Myrrhbearers, a group that traditionally includes a
much larger number of people. All four gospels mention women going to the tomb of Jesus, but only mentions the three that this tradition interprets as bearing the name Mary: • Mary Magdalene • Mary of Clopas • Mary Salome The other gospels give various indications about the number and identity of women visiting the tomb: •
John 20:1 mentions only Mary Magdalene, but has her use the plural, saying: "
We do not know where they have laid him" (). •
Matthew 28:1 says that Mary Magdalene and "the other Mary" went to see the tomb. • speaks of Mary Magdalene and Joanna and Mary of Jacob, and adds "the other women", after stating earlier () that at the burial of Jesus "the women who had come with him from Galilee ... saw the tomb and how his body was laid". The
Roman Martyrology commemorates Mary Magdalene on 22 July. On 24 April it commemorates "Mary of Cleopas and Salome, who, with Mary Magdalene, came very early on Easter morning to the Lord's tomb, to anoint his body, and were the first who heard the announcement of his resurrection.
Women at the tomb in art , The Three Marys at the Tomb (manuscript illumination of a 1396 antiphonary) What may be the earliest known representation of three women visiting the tomb of Jesus is a fairly large fresco in the
Dura-Europos church in the ancient city of
Dura Europos on the
Euphrates. The fresco was painted before the city's conquest and abandonment in AD 256, but it is from the 5th century that representations of either two or three women approaching a tomb guarded by an angel appear with regularity, and become the standard depiction of the Resurrection. They have continued in use even after 1100, when images of the
Resurrection of Jesus in Christian art began to show the risen Christ himself. Examples are the
Melisende Psalter and
Peter von Cornelius's
The Three Marys at the Tomb. Eastern
icons continue to show either the
Myrrhbearers or the
Harrowing of Hell. The fifteenth-century Easter hymn "
O filii et filiae" refers to three women going to the tomb on Easter morning to anoint the body of Jesus. The original Latin version of the hymn identifies the women as Mary Magdalene (
Maria Magdalene) and Mary of Joseph (
et Iacobi).
Legend in France A medieval legendary account had
Mary Magdalene,
Mary of Jacob and
Mary Salome, Mark's Three Marys at the Tomb, or Mary Magdalene, Mary of Cleopas and Mary Salome, with
Saint Sarah, the maid of one of them, as part of a group who landed near
Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer in
Provence after a voyage from the
Holy Land. The group sometimes includes
Lazarus, who became bishop of
Aix-en-Provence,
Mary of Bethany, his sister, and
Joseph of Arimathea. They settled at Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer, where their relics are a focus of the . The feast of the Three Marys was celebrated mainly in France and Italy, and was accepted by the
Carmelite Order into their liturgy in 1342. The
Church of the Saintes Maries de la Mer is said to hold their relics.
Processional statues during Good Friday In various
Catholic countries, particularly in the Kingdom of Spain, the Philippines and Latin American countries, images of the three Marys (in
Spanish Tres Marías) associated with the tomb are carried in
Good Friday processions referred to by the word
Penitencia (Spanish) or
Panatà (Filipino for an act performed in fulfilment of a vow). They carry
attributes or iconic accessories, chiefly enumerated as follows: , Philippines) • Mary Cleopas (sometimes alternated with Mary Jacob) – holding a broom • Mary Salome – holding a thurible or censer • Mary Magdalene – holding an alabaster chalice or jar. The
Blessed Virgin Mary is not part of this group, as her title as
Mater Dolorosa is reserved to a singular privilege in the procession. A common pious practice sometimes alternates Mary Salome with Jacob, due to a popular belief that Salome, an elderly person at this time would not have had the energy to reach the tomb of Christ at the morning of resurrection, though she was present at the Crucifixion. ==The three daughters of Saint Anne==