Reverse Index
Referencing “Town of Saint-Malo”
Every codex entry that links to Town of Saint-Malo. 15 entries.
Return to Town of Saint-Malo
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 Clemente de los Rios
The abbot who spent a saint's jawbone at the correct hour
Abbot of the Order of Saint Iago garrison at Toledo, Second-Tier Martyr, and keeper of the Relic whose second Psalm denied Reason its prize.
Codex Ref. III.2.01-083

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

France
The country the Synod did not abolish, because it proved too taxable to waste
A.S. 201 survey of France as Zone One heartland: martyr coast, watched cities, taxable memory, useful ports, and one conquered name made indispensable.
Codex Ref. II.1.01-201

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

Porte Saint-Vincent
Where stone learned to answer after the thirty-first toll
The Porte Saint-Vincent is Saint-Malo's principal landward gate: toll aperture, atrocity site, pilgrimage wound, and stone witness to the A.S. 10 massacre.
Codex Ref. II.1.09-010

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 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

Zones 1 through 5
Five lawful pressures between invoice and mud
Zones 1 through 5 are graded permissions for bread, sons, movement, fear, artillery, and the state’s appetite.
Codex Ref. XIII.1.00-201
