[Sidenote: 2. of the lance.]
2. The lance also with which our divine Saviour's side was pierced,
was found by S. Helen, as the Bollandists shew: and it was preserved
in Jerusalem, as S. Gregory of Tours and our venerable Bede observe:
but towards the end of the 6th cent., the iron part of it was
transfered to Costantinople; of this the point was placed in the
imperial palace; the other part in the church of S. Sophia, and
afterwards in that of S. John. William of Tyre and Anna Comnena
mention it as existing there in the 11th and 12th centuries. Towards
the close of the 13th century the point of the lance with other
relics passed into the possession of S. Louis of France: the other
part of the lance still remained at S. John's in Constantinople,
as Buondelmount, who saw it, bears witness. When Mahomet subdued
Costantinople, he preserved all the relics, as Theodore cited by
Benedict XIV relates in his history of the Turks, and his son Bajazet
sent an ambassador with the relics of the lance to Pope Innocent VIII,
in order to induce his Holiness not to protect Zizimus, who disputed
with him the succession to the Turkish throne. The Pope received it
with great reverence, and placed it in the Vatican. As some suspicion
was entertained about the veracity of the Turkish ambassador, Benedict
XIV, as he mentions in his very learned work on the Canonisation
of the Saints, from which I have extracted this account, sent for
an exact cast of the point preserved at Paris, which perfectly
corresponded with the piece preserved in the Vatican; and thus were
confirmed the assertion of the Turk[107].
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