St. Helena: The Most Significant Woman in Human History
From Tavern Maid to Saint: the Woman Who Found the True Cross and Changed the Faith of Civilization
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Narrated by:
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Alice Castle
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By:
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Steve Castlen
About this listen
In St. Helena: The Most Influential Woman in Human History, former judge, prosecutor, and investigator Steve Castlen presents a riveting blend of historical fact and imaginative storytelling to make the case for one astonishing truth: that the mother of Constantine the Great was the single most transformative woman in the history of the Western world.
Born a humble tavern servant in a forgotten corner of the Roman Empire, Helena rose through courage, intellect, and faith to the heights of imperial power-only to find her true calling not in palaces, but in pilgrimage. In her seventies, she journeyed to the Holy Land, unearthed what was believed to be the True Cross, and inspired the building of the first great churches of Christianity, including the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
Castlen approaches Helena's life as both historian and trial lawyer, presenting the evidence with wit, warmth, and relentless curiosity. Through meticulous research and vivid scenes, he invites listeners to serve as jurors in "The People's Court of History vs. The Legend of St. Helena." Was her discovery miracle or myth? Did she invent pilgrimage-or simply embody it? And would Western civilization even exist in its current form without her?
Part historical investigation, part cinematic epic, St. Helena brings to life a world of emperors, soldiers, saints, and skeptics. It traces how one woman's endurance and faith reshaped an empire still struggling between pagan gods and a rising new faith.
This is more than a biography-it's a courtroom drama across centuries, where the verdict belongs to the listener. By the final page, one question lingers:
Would Christianity-and the modern world-look anything like it does today without a woman once dismissed as a tavern maid?