Part of the tympanum of the portal of Saint Stephen, this image is of Saul of Tarsus collecting the cloaks of those about to stone the first Christian martyr St Stephen. The portal at Bourges Cathedral was constructed in around 1240 and the imagery tells the story of Stephen.
Themed images for Saint-Paul.
Dated to between 1312-1327 this image of St Paul is in the chancel of St Nicholas church, Stanford-on-Avon, Northamptonshire.
Part of the brass monument to Laurence St Maur, the central figure is of Abraham with angels holding the soul of Laurence St Maur in a napkin. Abraham's right hand is raised in benediction and his left hand holds a globe. St Andrew and St Peter are on his right, on his left are St Paul and St Thomas.
This images of St Paul shows him with his sword. The glass dates from 1350 when the east window was installed in the abbey church of St Peter's as part of the rebuilding by Edward III. The abbey church became a Cathedral in 1541 when Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries.
This painting (1445) of the Madonna and Child is by Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia and can be found in the Uffizi Gallery Florence. The painting also contains images that represent Saint Dominic, Saint Peter, Saint Paul, and Thomas Aquinas.
Medieval stained glass depicting six of the twelve apostles at Great Malvern Priory.
From left to right are St Bartholomew, Simon the Zealot, St Jude, St Paul, St James, and St Matthew.
This French Renaissance stained glass of Saint Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus, is by Nicolas le Prince in the church of Saint-Etienne Beauvais.
In the grotto where St Paul is meant to have stayed when he was shipwrecked on Malta, this marble statue was created between 1666-1669 by Melchiorre Cafà.
This low relief sculputer depicting the "Martyrdom of St Peter" (1683) is by Giovanni Battista Foggini and can be found in the church of San Gaetano, Florence.
This Baroque statue of St Paul was donated in 1748 by Grand Master Pinto, to the church of St Paul in Rabat, Malta.
The church stands above the grotto where St Paul is said to have stayed after having been shipwrecked on Malta.