Unlike Al Gore and George W Bush, St Chad's conduct during a disputed election helped him on his way to sainthood.
Published:
6 December 2000 y., Wednesday
Now, the website of his parish church in England is being inundated by Americans interested in a less holy chad, the bits of paper punched out of American ballots.
The Washington Times joked that with the current obsession with dimpled and pregnant chads in Florida's recounting process, St Chad would made an excellent patron saint of disputed elections.
The 7th century saint's life was an example to those involved in the US presidential election. The Northumbrian cleric stepped down as bishop of the region in 669 after his ordination was challenged by a new Archbishop of Canterbury. Chad had been chosen by the king of Northumbria after the previous candidate failed to return from his ordination in France.
But with no courts to resort to, Chad's humility was recognised by the archbishop and he was eventually installed as the first bishop of Lichfield, now in Staffordshire.
Since the story was printed in American papers, US internet users have been following links on politics and news websites and arriving at the website for the Lichfield church. Numbers visiting the site have increased from four a day to more than 300.
Šaltinis:
BBC News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Japan's biggest wireless operator, NTT DoCoMo, Monday said it has formally asked the Japanese government for permission to begin the world's first commercial third-generation (3G) service on Oct. 1.
more »
Chalk one up for the bad guys.
more »
The battle over e-book sales heated up as Internet portal Yahoo! Inc. signed an e-book sales deal with four major publishing houses.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
Public Interest Groups Clash With ICANN Over Governance
more »
IBM threw its hat in the sub-$1,000 server ring with its release of the eServer x200VL, an entry-level server priced at $699.
more »
Despite increased pressure from the European Commission over antitrust concerns, Microsoft confirmed that the Commission will not seek to block the launch of Windows XP.
more »
Hong Kong police have arrested a 29-year-old Webmaster suspected of operating a pornographic Web site
more »
Officials at the European Commission have made a spectacular turnabout on a proposed law governing cross-border Internet commerce in Europe
more »
Wireless customers in Germany will soon have the option of paying for wireless data as a premium service.
more »