Holy Sponge


The Holy Sponge is one of the Instruments of the Passion of Jesus Christ. It was dipped in vinegar, most likely posca, a favorite beverage of Roman soldiers, and offered to Christ to drink from during the Crucifixion, according to,, and.

History

Jerusalem

An object thought to be the Holy Sponge was venerated in Israel, in the Upper Room of the Constantinian basilica, where Sophronius of Jerusalem spoke of it c. 600 AD:

Rome

In the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano in Rome, a brown sponge is venerated. Other pieces of sponge are present at the following:
23 Christians were discovered and martyred in the home of Saint Praxedis. She collected their blood with a sponge and placed it in a well, where she herself was later buried, marked by the disk in the Basilica's floor. This sponge is unrelated.

Gerusalemme

The Chapel of the Relics at Santa Croce in Gerusalemme houses another sponge:

Constantinople and France

In the 7th century, Nicetas took part in the conquest of Egypt from Phocas. He was famed for bringing items he claimed were the Holy Sponge and the Holy Lance to Constantinople from Palestine in 612. From 619 to 628/9 he may anecdotally have been exarch of Africa.
This sponge remained in Constantinople until it was bought from the Latin emperor Baldwin II by Louis IX of France among the relics he needed for the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris. Participants in the French Revolution dispersed these relics. Some went briefly to the Bibliothèque Nationale. Later however they were restored to Notre-Dame de Paris.

Other claimants

Other parties also claiming access to the Holy Sponge include: