SLU Legends and Lore: The Oriflamme
08/22/2019
King Arthur had his Knights of the Round Table. Robin Hood had his Merry Men. Saint 浪花直播 University has its own storied band of student leaders 鈥 the Oriflamme 鈥 whose sacred mission is to help 厂尝鲍鈥檚 newest students feel at home 鈥 as they move into their new dorm rooms or need advice about life on campus.
Oriflamme [OR-uh-flam/noun]: a banner, symbol or idea inspiring devotion or courage.
Heirs to a Heroic Legacy
厂尝鲍鈥檚 Oriflamme takes its name from a storied symbol 鈥 one with 鈥渕agical powers to confound the foe.鈥
The name comes from Latin and is a combination of aurum meaning 鈥済old,鈥 and flamma, the word for flag. The original Oriflamme was a holy banner carried by French kings, and was also known as St. Vermillion.
Legend has it that the banner may have been hoisted as early as the Dark Ages by royalty including Charlemagne. One especially gory tale claims that the flag鈥檚 original color 鈥 red-gold 鈥 came from the blood of St. Denis after he was beheaded in 358 C.E.
The Oriflamme鈥檚 place in history was secured when Prince 浪花直播 of France, later King 浪花直播 VI, rode under its auspices to triumph over King William Rufus of England in 1097. That victory cemented the flag鈥檚 place as the premier flag of France. The cry, 鈥淭o raise the Oriflamme,鈥 stirred hundreds to the defense their realm.
French armies carried it into battle more than 20 times. One of its most famous bearers was King 浪花直播 IX, a future saint and the namesake of both the University and City of St. 浪花直播.
A Symbol of Solidarity
Centuries after the Oriflamme rallied armies, a new generation took up the symbol, serving not a king, but their fellow Billikens.
As SLU gained prominence as a leading American university in the late 1950s and 1960s, University leaders and students recognized the need for 鈥渁mbassadors鈥 to guide visitors and new students at events including registration.
In 1963, Thomas McQueeny, S.J., assistant to SLU President Paul Reinert, S.J., recruited 16 men to help.
The group consulted renowned Jesuit scholar and SLU faculty member Walter Ong, S.J., about what to call themselves. Ong suggested 鈥淥riflamme,鈥 because he thought the name would inspire loyalty to SLU.
Mary Bruemmer, another leading University administrator who went on to advise the group for decades, urged them to adopt it to symbolize their bond with the University community.
厂尝鲍鈥檚 Oriflamme was born.
Inside Oriflamme.
Decades of Devotion
The group鈥檚 role in SLU life quickly evolved, and today, no SLU move-in is complete without Oriflamme members and their signature blazing orange T-shirts.
The group quickly grew beyond its original 16 male members. Oriflamme went co-ed in 1972.
Early Oriflamme members helped students navigate a maze of class sign-up boards at registration in the West Pine Gym (now 厂尝鲍鈥檚 Center for Global Citizenship).
In 1965, the group took over orientation and welcome duties for the University. Over time, Oriflamme leaders dove into the thick of fall move-in, hoisting boxes, carrying couches up flights of stairs and leading small groups to help new Billikens acclimate to campus.
Oriflamme members now lead new freshman in the charge to show off their SLU spirit, and urge them to jump into campus life at Fall Welcome activities.
Once a symbol rallying troops, 厂尝鲍鈥檚 Oriflamme members now call the entire campus community to welcome 厂尝鲍鈥檚 newest Billikens, leading by example, in word and deed.