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FOURTEEN HELPERS IN NEED On the second Sunday in May thousands of pilgrims will be aiming for the Basilica of the ‘Fourteen Saints’ at Bad Staffelstein in a rural part of Southern Germany. They are there to honour and remember the ‘Fourteen Helpers in Need’, whose feast day is that day. These are saints who during the Middle Ages have been called upon for help in all sorts of dangers, and still surprisingly are done so now, even by Protestants. During the Middle Ages people especially feared pestilence, fire, storms, sickness of their animals and bad harvests. For that reason, these saints, usually martyred by dreadful means, have been attributed with certain patronages. The persons of the saints and their tasks varied regionally and in time, but during the fourteenth century the number and patronages became fixed by the ‘Regensburg Group’, so named after the cathedral city of Regensburg in Bavaria, where this group of saints was fixed in number. It was a group which was considered sufficiently balanced: three saintly bishops, three knights, three virgin women saints, a doctor, a monk, a boy, a deacon and – the best known of them all – a giant with the name of Christopher. The number fourteen points to Jesus’ family tree, which, according to Matthew, was divided into three groups of 14 generations. Since the functions of these saints were redefined again and again, they remained important over the centuries. St Ch