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03 October 2020

St. Ebontius October 3

 St. Ebontius


Feastday: October 3

Death: 1104



Bishop of Babastro, Spain, after its recapture from the Moors, also listed as Ebon, Pontius, or Ponce. Born in Comminges, Haute Garonne, France, he became a Benedictine and abbot before accepting the see of Babastro.


Ebontius (died 1104), also known as Ebon, Pontius, or Ponce, was Bishop of Barbastro, Spain, after its recapture from the Moors. Born in Comminges, Haute Garonne, France, he became a Benedictine and abbot before accepting the See of Babastro.[1]

Sts. Ewald the Dark and Ewald the Fair October 3

 Sts. Ewald the Dark and Ewald the Fair


Feastday: October 3

Death: 692



Image of Sts. Ewald the Dark and Ewald the FairEwald and his brother of the same name, natives of Northumbria, England, were both priests. They came to be distinguished from one another by the color of their hair as "Ewald the Dark" and "Ewald the Fair." Stirred by a shared love of God and religious zeal, the two brothers journeyed to Germany with the intent of preaching the Gospel there. Upon reaching the German region of Westphalia, the two brothers lodged for several days with a magistrate who served a lord they were hoping to meet. As they waited, the Ewalds spent each day in prayer together, reciting psalms and celebrating Mass at a consecrated altar they had brought with them, along with the requisite sacred vessels. The Ewalds' piety aroused fear among the pagans that the two brothers would succeed in converting their lord to the Christian faith. Determined to sabotage the Christianization of their land, the pagans seized both brothers and slaughtered them. Ewald the Fair was slain with a sword. Ewald the Dark was subjected to a prolonged torture, suffering death by dismemberment.

The Two Ewalds (or Two Hewalds) were Saint Ewald the Black and Saint Ewald the Fair, martyrs in Old Saxony about 692. Both bore the same name, but were distinguished by the difference in the colour of their hair and complexions.[2] They began their mission labours about 690 at the ancient Saxons country, now part of Westphalia, and covered by the dioceses of Münster, Osnabrück, and Paderborn. They are honored as saints in Westphalia.



The two priests were companions, both natives of Northumbria, England. According to the example of many at that time, they spent several years as students in the schools of Ireland. Ewald the Black was the more learned of the two, but both were equally renowned for holiness of life. They were apparently acquainted with St. Willibrord, the Apostle of Friesland, and were animated with his zeal for the conversion of the Germans. Some sources number them among the eleven companions of that saint.[2] More probably, however, they set out from England after St. Willibrord's departure, in an attempt to convert their own cousins in Old Saxony.


They entered upon their mission about 690. The scene of their labours was the country of the ancient Saxons, now part of Westphalia, and covered by the dioceses of Münster, Osnabrück, and Paderborn. At first the Ewalds took up their abode in the house of the steward of a certain Saxon earl or ealdorman (satrapa). Bede remarks that "the old Saxons have no king, but they are governed by several ealdormen [satrapas] who during war cast lots for leadership, but who in time of peace are equal in power" (Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, V, 10). The steward entertained his two guests for several days, and promised to conduct them to the chieftain. They intended to convert him and so affirmed they had a message of considerable importance to deliver to him.[2]


The pagan Saxons, witnessing these activities of the Christian priests and missionaries, began to suspect that the Ewalds planned to convert their over-lord, destroy their temples and supplant their religion. Inflamed with jealousy and anger, they resolved that the Ewalds should die. An uprising followed and both priests were quickly seized. Ewald the Fair was killed quickly by sword; Ewald the Black was tortured and torn limb from limb, after which both their bodies were cast into the Rhine. This is understood to have happened on 3 October at a place called Aplerbeck, today a district of Dortmund, where a chapel still stands. When the ealdorman heard of what had been done, he became angry and fearful of reprisals, and punished the murderers by putting them to death and burning their villages.[2]



Monument of the Ewalds standing in Dortmund-Aplerbeck, Germany

Christian sources describe various miracles after the priests' deaths, including their martyred bodies being miraculously carried against the stream for the space of forty miles to the place in which the companions of the Ewalds were residing. As they floated along, says the Catholic Encyclopedia, "a heavenly light, like a column of fire, was seen to shine above them." Even the murderers are said to have witnessed the miraculous brightness. Moreover, one of the martyrs appeared in vision to the monk Tilmon (a companion of the Ewalds), and told him where the bodies would be found: "that the spot would be there where he should see a pillar of light reaching from earth to heaven". Tilmon arose and found the bodies, and interred them with the honours due to martyrs. From that time onwards, the memory of the Ewalds was annually celebrated in those parts. A spring of water is said to have gushed forth in the place of the martyrdom.[2]


Pepin, Duke of Austrasia, having heard of the wonders that had occurred, caused the bodies to be buried in Cologne, where they were solemnly enshrined in the collegiate church of St. Kunibert. The heads of the martyrs were bestowed on Frederick, Bishop of Münster, by Archbishop Anno of Cologne, at the opening of the shrine in 1074. These relics were probably destroyed by the Anabaptists in 1534. When Saint Norbert visited Cologne, in 1121, he obtained two small vessels containing the relics of several saints, and among them were bones of the sainted Ewalds. These were deposited either at Prémontré or at Floreffe, a Premonstratensian monastery in the province of Namur. The two Ewalds are honoured as patrons in Westphalia, and are mentioned in the Roman Martyrology on 3 October. Their feast is celebrated in the dioceses of Cologne and Münster.[2] The Saxons were eventually converted to Christianity by force in the 8th century by Charlemagne.


Until the martyrdom of Saint Boniface in 754, the Ewalds were the last missionaries to be martyred in this area. Their deaths were undoubtedly due to a lack of support from the worldly rulers: "Ohne den fränkischen Schutz lebte ein Missionär nicht lange genug, um seine Lehre genauer zu erläutern," ("Without the Franconian protection, a missionary did not live long enough to explain his teaching more closely") according to Franz Staab.[1]


Druten, in the east of the Netherlands, has a church dedicated to the Ewalds, with statues for the two made in the studio Atelier Cuypers-Stoltzenberg, owned by Pierre Cuypers and F. Stoltzenberg.[3]

St. Hesychius October 3

 St. Hesychius


Feastday: October 3

Death: 380


Hermit and disciple of St. Hilarion. Hesychius was St. Hilarion's follower at Majuma, near Gaza, Israel. He followed St. Hilarion to Egypt and Sicily. Sent to Gaza by Hilarion, Hesychius heard of the saint's death on Cyprus. He sailed to Cyprus and brought Hilarion's remains to Majuma.


St. Maximian October 3

 St. Maximian


Feastday: October 3

Death: 404




Bishop of Bagae, Numidia, modern North Africa. He was appointed as bishop in the midst of the severe Donatist heresy which troubled Africa. Maximian resigned his see because the local Christians rebelled and won approval of his resignation by the Council of Milevis owing to the determined hostility of the heretics. This was insufficient for the heretics, who hurled him from a tower. Maximian managed to recover from this assault and went to Italy, where Emperor Honorius approved his labors.

St. Menna October 3

 St. Menna


Feastday: October 3

Death: 395



Virgin of Lorraine, France, sometimes called Manna. She was related to Sts. Eucherius and Elaptius. Details of her life are not trustworthy.


St. Widradus October 3

 St. Widradus


Feastday: October 3

Death: 747


Benedictine abbot of Flavigny, France, also called Ware, who was responsible for reviving the monastery and for establishing the community of Saulieu, near Autun.

புனித அடல்கோட் (-1165)அக்டோபர் 03

புனித அடல்கோட் (-1165)

அக்டோபர் 03

இவர் (Adalgott) கிளையர்வாக்ஸ் நகர்ப் புனித பெர்னார்டின் சீடர்.

புனித பெர்னார்டிடம் நல்ல முறையில் பயிற்சி பெற்ற இவர் டிசென்திஸ் நகரில் இருந்த புனித பெனடிக்ட் துறவற மடத்தில் தலைவராக உயர்த்தப்பட்டார். பின்னர் இவர் சூர் நகரின் ஆயராகவும் திருநிலைப்படுத்தப்பட்டார்.

நோயாளர்களிடமும் ஏழைகளிடமும் மிகுந்த அக்கறை கொண்ட இவர் 1150 ஆம் ஆண்டு இந்த மக்கள் நலம்பெற  மருத்துவமனை ஒன்றை இலவசமாகக் கட்டியெழுப்பினார்.

இவர் 1165 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

St. Adalgott

Feastday: October 3
Death: 1165

 
Image of St. Adalgott
Bishop and comforter of the poor. Adalgott was a monk in the Benedictine Monastery of Clairvaux, where St. Bernard trained his successors. He was appointed the abbot of the Benedictines in Dissentis, where he became known  for his care of the sick and poor. When Adalgott was named bishop of Chur, he conducted an apostolate for the suffering of the region, founding a hospital in 1150.

Saint Adalgott II of Disentis (died 1165) was a twelfth-century monk and bishop. He entered Clairvaux Abbey as a monk, and was appointed as abbot of Disentis. Adalgott cared for the sick and poor. He was subsequently named bishop of Chur, and continued to care for the poor. He founded a hospital in 1150.[1] He is venerated as a Roman Catholic saint. His feast day is celebrated on 3 October.

✠ புனிதர் ஜெரார்ட் ✠(St. Gérard of Brogne). October 3

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †
(அக்டோபர் 3)

✠ புனிதர் ஜெரார்ட் ✠
(St. Gérard of Brogne)

மடாதிபதி:
(Abbot)
பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 895

இறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 3, 959

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:
ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை
(Roman Catholic Church)

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:
செயிண்ட்-ஜெரார்ட், நாமூர்
(Saint-Gérard, Namur)

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 3

பாதுகாவல்:
செயிண்ட்-ஜெரார்ட், நாமூர்
(Saint-Gérard, Namur)

புனிதர் ஜெரார்ட், “ப்ரோன் மடாலயத்தின்” (Brogne Abbey) மடாதிபதியாவார். இவர், பெல்ஜியம் (Belgium) நாட்டின் “நாமூர்” (Namur) மாகாணத்தின் “மெட்டேட்” (Mettet) நகராட்சியின் ஒரு கிராம வாசியாவார். இவர், “லோயர் ஆஸ்ராசியாவின்” (Lower Austrasia) பிரபுக்களின் குடும்பத்தில் (Family of Dukes) உறுப்பினருமாவார். ஆரம்பத்தில் ஒரு இராணுவ சிப்பாயான இவர், தமது குடும்ப சிற்றாலயம் ஒன்றினை பெரிய தேவாலயமாக கட்டி எழுப்பினார். பின்னர் “செயிண்ட் டெனிஸ்” (Saint-Denis) எனுமிடத்தில் துறவியாக மாறினார். பின்னர், குருத்துவம் பெற்ற இவர், “ப்ரோன்” நகருக்குச் சென்றார். அங்கே, மதகுருக்களின் விழிப்பற்ற விரக்தியை எதிர்த்துப் போராடி, அவர்களை உண்மையான துறவியர்களாய் மாற்றினார். அவர், மடாலயத்திற்கு அருகேயுள்ள ஒரு சிறு அறையில் தனிமையில் ஓய்வு பெற்றார்.
“காம்பிராயின் பேராயர்” (Archbishop of Cambrai), “ஹெயினால்ட்” (Hainault) நகரில் உள்ள “செயிண்ட்-கிஸ்லெய்ன்” சமூகத்தை (Community of Saint-Ghislain) சீர்திருத்தும்படி அவரிடம் கேட்டுக்கொண்டார். அவர், துறவியரின் நியதிகளை மாற்றியமைத்தார். அவர் இறுதியில் தற்போதைய பெல்ஜியத்தின் பகுதிகளில், 18 பிற மடாலயங்களின் தலைவராக ஆனார். அவர் கி.பி. 944ம் ஆண்டில் “செயிண்ட் பெர்டினின்” மடாலயத்தை மறுசீரமைத்தபோது, கருத்து வேறுபடுகிற துறவிகள், அங்கிருந்து “இங்கிலாந்தின் அரசன் முதலாம் எட்மண்ட்டிடம்” (King Edmund I of England) ஓடிப் போயினர். தமது வாழ்நாளின் முடிவில், அவர் மீண்டும் ப்ரோன் நகரின் மடாலய சிறு அறையில் ஓய்வு பெற்றார்.

ப்ரோன் மடாலயத்தின் (Brogne Abbey) சிறப்புரிமைகளை உறுதிப்படுத்தும் திருத்தந்தையின் அங்கீகாரத்தினை (Papal Bull) பெறுவதற்காக அவர் ஒருமுறை ரோம் பயணித்தார்.
*SAINT OF THE DAY* 

Feast Day: October 3

*Saint Gerard of Brogne*

(895-959)

St. Gerard was born to a noble family in Staves, Belgium, in 895. He descended from a royal line of military men and at first felt a share in this call to arms. He trained for the army and, as a page of the count of Namur, he was sent on a special mission to the French court. There, Gerard realized that he was being called to the monastic life. He stayed in France and joined the Benedictines of St. Denis, abandoning his noble birthright and all his worldly possessions. He spent eleven years in France as a monk before becoming a priest. 

Following his ordination, he left for Belgium in order to found a new abbey on his own estate of Brogne. He was its abbot for twenty-two years and during that period was instrumental in introducing St. Benedict's Rule into numerous houses in Flanders, Lorraine and Champagne.He became known for his engaging sweetness of temper, his strict observance of the Rule of St. Benedict and for the replacement of lukewarm religious practice with true piety. During his life, he was the abbot of nearly twenty communities.

After 40 years of monastic reform, Gerard returned home to the first monastery he built in Brogne to live out his last days. There, in solemn prayer and contemplation he grew in holiness and went Home to God on October 3, 959. He is sometimes called the Patron of Abbots.

புனித மதர் தியோடர் குரீன் (சபைத் தலைவர்)St. Mother Theodore Guerin October 3

இன்றைய புனிதர்: 
(03-10-2020)

புனித மதர் தியோடர் குரீன் (சபைத் தலைவர்)
St. Mother Theodore Guerin 
நினைவுத்திருவிழா : அக்டோபர் 03

பிறப்பு : 1798 பிரான்ஸ்
இறப்பு : 14 மே 1856 அமெரிக்கா

முத்திபேறுபட்டம் : அக்டோபர் 1998
திருத்தந்தை 2 ஆம் அருள் சின்னப்பர்

புனிதர்பட்டம் : 15 அக்டோபர் 2006 
திருத்தந்தை 16 ஆம் பெனடிக்ட் 

புனித மதர் தியோடர் குரீன், "புனித மேரி ஆஃப் வூட்ஸ்" (Saint Mary of Woods) என்ற சபையை நிறுவினார். 
இவர் நல்லொழுக்கத்தால், மற்றவர்களுக்கு சிறந்த எடுத்துக்காட்டாக இருந்தார். நம்பிக்கையின் மறு உருவமாக திகழ்ந்தார். இவர் தனது செப வாழ்வினால் மிகவும் வலிமைப் பெற்று வாழ்ந்தார். தனது எளிமையான வாழ்வால், இவ்வுலக துன்பங்களை எதிர்த்தார். ஏராளமான துன்பங்களை பொறுமையுடன் ஏற்றார். அமைதியின் சிகரமாய் இருந்தார்.

இவர் 1825 ஆம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் 8 ஆம் நாள் துறவியானார். 1840-1856 ஆம் ஆண்டு வரை "புனித வூட்ஸ் மேரி" (Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary of the Woods) என்ற சபையை நிறுவி, அச்சபையின் தலைவியாக பொறுப்பேற்றார். சபையை நிறுவி, பொறுப்பேற்ற நாளிலிருந்து, தன்னை இறைவனிடம் கையளித்து, இறைவன் மட்டுமே சபையை வழிநடத்த வேண்டுமென்று இடைவிடாமல் செபித்தார். இறைவனின் வழிநடத்துதலாலும், பராமரிப்பினாலும் பல வழிகளில், பலமுறை வெற்றியும் கண்டார்.

---JDH---தெய்வீக குணமளிக்கும் இயேசு /திண்டுக்கல்.
Saint of the Day: (03-10-2020)

St. Mother Theodora Guérin

She was born on October 2, 1798 in a village near Brittany in France. Her father was Laurent Guerin, a Navy Officer under Napoleon Bonaparte and her mother was Isabella. She was a model for virtue and revered as an inspiration for many people. She was the founder of the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods. She worked in the diocese of Lafayette in Indiana. - She died on May 14, 1856. Sister Mary Theodosia prayed one night at the tomb of St. Mary Theodora Guerin for the cure from breast cancer and abdominal tumor in the year 1908. In the next morning the sister Theodosia was cured miraculously from the deadly diseases. Another person McCord, who was having very bad eye sight (rate of 20/800 in one eye and 20/1000 in another eye), prayed this saint for regaining good eye sight. He was also miraculously cured on the next day and his eye sight became 20/20. This happened in the year 2001.

Mother Theodora Guerin was beatified in October 1998 by Pope John Paul-II and canonized by Pope Benedict-XVI on October-15, 2006.

---JDH---Jesus the Divine Healer---

02 October 2020

St. Leger October 2

 St. Leger


Feastday: October 2

Birth: 615

Death: 679



Image of St. Leger

Leger was raised at the court of King Clotaire II and by his uncle, Bishop Didon of Poitiers. Leger was made archdeacon by Didon, was ordained, and in about 651, became abbot of Maxentius Abbey, where he introduced the Rule of St. Benedict. He served Queen Regent St. Bathildis and helped her govern when Clovis II died in 656, and was named bishop of Autun in 663. He reconciled the differing factions that had torn the See apart, introduced reforms, fortified the town, and was known for his concern for the poor. On the death of Clotaire III, he supported young Childeric II for King against his brother Thierry, who had been backed by Ebroin, mayor of the palace. Ebroin was exiled to Luxeuil and became a bitter enemy of Leger, who became Childeric's adviser. When Leger denounced the marriage of Childeric to his uncle's daughter, he also incurred the enmity of Childeric, and in 675 Leger was arrested at Autun and banished to Luxeuil. When Childeric was murdered in 675, his successor, Theodoric III, restored Leger to his See. Ebroin was also restored as mayor of the palace after he had had the incumbent Leudesius murdered and pursuaded the Duke of Champagne and the bishops of Chalons and Valence to attack Autun. To save the town, Leger surrendered. Ebroin had him blinded, his lips cut off, and his tongue pulled out. Not satisfied, several years, he convinced the King that Childeric had been murdered by Leger and his brother Gerinus. Gerinus was stoned to death, and Leger was tortured and imprisoned at Fecamp Monastery in Normandy. After two years Leger was summoned to a court at Marly by Ebroin, deposed, and executed at Sarcing, Artois, protesting his innocence to the end. Though the Roman Martyrology calls him Blessed and a martyr, there is doubt among many scholars that he is entitled to those honors. His feast day is October 2.


Leodegar of Poitiers (Latin: Leodegarius; French: Léger; c. 615 – October 2, 679 AD) was a martyred Burgundian Bishop of Autun. He was the son of Saint Sigrada and the brother of Saint Warinus.


Leodegar was an opponent of Ebroin, the Frankish Mayor of the Palace of Neustria and the leader of the faction of Austrasian nobles in the struggle for hegemony over the waning Merovingian dynasty. His torture and death made him a martyr and saint.[1]



Early life

Leodegar was the son of a high-ranking Burgundian nobleman, Bodilon, Count of Poitiers and Paris and Sigrada of Alsace, who later became a nun at Sainte-Marie de Soissons. His brother was Warinus.[1]


He spent his childhood in Paris at the court of Clotaire II, King of the Franks and was educated at the palace school. When he was older he was sent to Poitiers, where there was a long-established cathedral school, to study under his maternal uncle, Desiderius (Dido), Bishop of Poitiers. At the age of 20 his uncle made him an archdeacon.[1]


Shortly afterwards he became a priest, and in 650, with the bishop's permission, became a monk at the monastery of St Maxentius in Poitou.[2] He was soon elected abbot, and initiated reforms including the introduction of the Benedictine rule.[1]


Career

Around 656, about the time of the usurpation of Grimoald in Austrasia and the banishment of the boy-heir Dagobert II, Leodegar was called to the Neustrian court by the widowed Queen Bathilde to assist in the government of the united kingdoms and in the education of her children. Then in 659 he was named to the see of Autun, in Burgundy. He again undertook the work of reform and held a council at Autun in 661. The council denounced Manichaeism and was the first to adopt the Trinitarian Athanasian Creed. He made reforms among the secular clergy and in the religious communities, and had three baptisteries erected in the city. The church of Saint-Nazaire was enlarged and embellished, and a refuge established for the indigent. Leodegar also caused the public buildings to be repaired and the old Roman walls of Autun to be restored.[3] His authority at Autun placed him as a leader among the Franco-Burgundian nobles.


Meanwhile, in 660 the Austrasian nobles demanded a king, and young prince Childeric II was sent to them through the influence of Ebroin, the mayor of the palace in Neustria. The queen withdrew, from a court that was Ebroin's in all but name, to an abbey she had founded at Chelles, near Paris. On the death of King Clotaire III in 673, a dynastic struggle ensued, with rival claimants as pawns; Ebroin raised Theoderic to the throne, but Leodegar and the other bishops supported the claims of his elder brother Childeric II, who, by the help of the Austrasians and Burgundians, was eventually made king. Ebroin was interned at Luxeuil and Theoderic sent to St. Denis.[3]


Leodegar remained at court, guiding the young king. In 673 or 675, however, Leodegar was also sent to Luxeuil. The cause, a protest against the marriage of Childeric and his first cousin, is a hagiographic convention;[4] as a leader of the Austrasian and Burgundian nobles, Leodegar was easily represented as a danger by his enemies. When Childeric II was murdered at Bondi in 675, by a disaffected Frank, Theoderic III was installed as king in Neustria, making Leudesius his mayor. Ebroin took advantage of the chaos to make his escape from Luxeuil and hasten to the court. In a short time Ebroin caused Leudesius to be murdered and became mayor once again, still Leodegar's implacable enemy.[3]



The martyrdom of St. Leger

About 675 the Duke of Champagne, the Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne and the Bishop of Valence, stirred up by Ebroin, attacked Autun, and Leodegar fell into their hands. At Ebroin's instigation, Leodegar's eyes were gouged out and the sockets cauterized, and his tongue was cut out. Some years later Ebroin persuaded the king that Childeric had been assassinated at the instigation of Leodegar. The bishop was seized again, and, after a mock trial, was degraded and condemned to further exile, at Fécamp, in Normandy. Near Sarcing he was led out into a forest on Ebroin's order and beheaded.[5]


A dubious[4] testament drawn up at the time of the council of Autun has been preserved as well as the Acts of the council. A letter which he caused to be sent to his mother after his mutilation is likewise extant.


In 782, his relics were translated from the site of his death, Sarcing in Artois, to the site of his earliest hagiography – the Abbey of St Maxentius (Saint-Maixent) near Poitiers. Later they were removed to Rennes and thence to Ebreuil, which place took the name of Saint-Léger in his honour. Some relics are still kept in the cathedral of Autun and the Grand Séminaire of Soissons. In 1458 Cardinal Rolin caused his feast day to be observed as a holy day of obligation.


For sources to his biography, there are two early (though not contemporaneous) Lives,[6] drawn from the same lost source (Krusch 1891), and also two later ones (one of them in verse).


Cultural significance

Historically there was a custom among wealthy British merchants to sell in May, spend the summer outside of London, then to return on St Leger's Day. This gave rise to the saying used in regards to financial trading markets, "Sell in May and go away, and come on back on St. Leger's Day".[7]

St. Beregisius October 2

 St. Beregisius


Feastday: October 2

Death: 725

Confessor of Pepin of Heristal and founder of the abbey of Saint-Hubert in the Ardennes region of France. There is some doubt as to whether he was a monk.


St. Eleutherius of Nicomedia October 2

St. Eleutherius of Nicomedia


Feastday: October 2

Death: 303

A


A soldier in the army of co­Emperor Diocletian in Nicomedia. He was accused of setting fire to the emperor's palace and was burned to death after being tortured with companions.


St. Eleutherius of Nicomedia (died 303) was a soldier who was martyred under Diocletian. He was accused of trying to burn the palace of Diocletian. His feast day is October 2.[1] 

Bl. Francis Chakichi October 2

 Bl. Francis Chakichi


Feastday: October 2

Death: 1622


Four-year-old martyr of Japan. He was beheaded in Nagasaki, Japan, with his mother, Blessed Lucy, and his brother Blessed Andrew. His father, Blessed Louis, was burned at the stake. He was beatified in 1867.

St. Gerinus October 2

 St. Gerinus


Feastday: October 2

Death: 676


Martyred brother of St. Leger or Leogarius. Ebroin, mayor of the palace, martyred the brothers. Gerinus was stoned to death near Arras, France.

St. Leudomer October 2

 St. Leudomer


Feastday: October 2

Death: 585




Bishop of Chartres, France. He is often listed as a Frenchman, and is sometimes called Lomer. No other details are extant.