Reverse Index
Referencing “Saint Margaux of the First Blood”
Every codex entry that links to Saint Margaux of the First Blood. 16 entries.
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Age of Reason
The mind may hold the lamp, but Doctrine owns the flame
The Age of Reason licensed unbelief, polished desecration into civic virtue, and ended when Hell answered the lecture hall without raising its hand.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.00-001
Antiphon of Safe Passage
The road is holy; the queue remains under authority
A Breton road-song entered the Ledger through Saint-Malo blood, survived as licensed memory, and now frightens gate clerks by teaching crowds one rhythm.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.87-010

Brittany
The province that taught martyrdom to travel by road
Brittany is the Synod's western salt-wound: a loyal province that turned Saint-Malo's blood, Dinan's road, and local stubbornness into taxable Doctrine.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-010

Chapel of the Tide
The shrine built from a journey denied
The Chapel of the Tide is Saint Clement's wet little shrine beyond Saint-Malo, made holy by forty-three pilgrims who were denied arrival and made profitable by everyone after.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-014

Corentin Madec
The fisherman who kept the book before Strasbourg learned to want it
Corentin Madec, wounded witness of Saint-Malo, preserved Margaux's psalter long enough for the Bureau to call acquisition devotion.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-017

Dinan
The town that kept the departure
Dinan is the Breton departure town that sent forty-three pilgrims toward Saint-Malo and kept the bread, banners, names, quarrels, and profitable grief.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-010

Father Gaël of Dinan
Four words, one reliquary, and the useful poverty of a man not yet sainted
Father Gaël of Dinan, first named dead of Saint-Malo, survives as four words of custody: brief enough for children, sharp enough for states.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-016

Martyrology of Saint-Malo
Thirty-one names, forty-three seconds, and a civilization built from first blood
The Martyrology of Saint-Malo counts thirty-one dead, five absences, and every obedience the Synod has purchased with their blood.
Codex Ref. VII.8.02-001

Miraculum Diffusum
The miracle was everywhere, which is to say the presses worked
The one-use doctrinal category that crowned Margaux when no ordinary miracle arrived: effect, print, grief, and Latin with teeth.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.09-014

Reliquary of Saint Matthias
A box of bones that taught law to bleed
The Reliquary of Saint Matthias is the Saint-Malo martyr-object: seized as Item 7, recovered from Rationalist custody, and made into portable proof that holy custody is not inventory.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.73-010

Saint Clement of Brittany
The chapel that received no pilgrims and therefore received a continent
Saint Clement of Brittany became doctrine's perfect destination: a chapel the martyrs never reached, and therefore a wound the Synod could license forever.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-005

Saint Hermas
The boy who held the banner until the banner held him
Saint Hermas of Dinan was the boy beneath the banner at Saint-Malo: two wounds, one strip of cloth, and a cult made tidy by force.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-006

Sainte-Claire-des-Landes
Six miles from Saint-Malo, where laundry became evidence and damp became a route economy
The Breton convent of Margaux's ordinary years: damp stone, linen ledgers, a wax saint, nine thousand pilgrims, and twelve sisters still doing the work.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-092

The Order of the Blessed Thorn
Linen, old women, and the machinery that discovered humility after it became profitable
A Breton mendicant sisterhood made Venerable after Margaux: twelve sisters, a house of linen, and enough humility to embarrass the Bureaus.
Codex Ref. XI.7.01-001

The Sisters of the Martyrdom
The bridge burned, the column halted, and the Ledger asked whether she volunteered
The Sisters of the Martyrdom burned bridges with their own bodies during the Atheist Wars; the Bureau sings them, taxes them, and refuses to ratify them.
Codex Ref. VIII.6.01-001

Town of Saint-Malo
The Breton gate where law discovered it could bleed
Saint-Malo is the Breton port where a narrow gate, a lawful writ, and forty-three pilgrims gave the Synod its most profitable wound.
Codex Ref. II.4.09-013
