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10 October 2020

St. Alexander Sauli October 11

 St. Alexander Sauli


Feastday: October 11

Birth: 1535

Death: 1592



The Apostle of Corsica and bishop. He came from a prominent family of Lombard, Italy, born in Milan in 1533. At an early age he entered the Barnabite Congregation, and became a teacher at the University of Pavia and superior general of the congregation. In 1571 he was appointed by Pope Pius V to Aleria on Corsica. Taking three companions, Alexander rebuilt churches, founded seminaries and colleges, and stood off the pirate raids in the area. He became the bishop of Pavia after refusing other sees, serving only a year before his death. Alexander was a noted miracle worker. He was also spiritual advisor to St. Charles Borromeo and to Cardinal Sfondrato, who became Pope Gregory XIV. He was canonized in 1904 by Pope St. Pius X

St. Anastasius V October 11

 St. Anastasius V


Feastday: October 11




Martyr with St. Placi Genesius, and others. Nothing is known about the martyrs except that Anastasius was a priest.

St. Ansillo October 11

St. Ansillo


Feastday: October 11

Death: 7th century



A monk whose life is obscure. His relics are in the Benedictine abbey of Lagny, near Meaux, France.

St. Canice October 11

 St. Canice


Feastday: October 11




All we know about St. Canice is from unreliable legend, according to which he was born at Glengiven, Ireland. He became a monk under St. Cadoc at Llancarfan, Wales, and was ordained there. After a trip to Rome, he studied under St. Finnian at Clonard, Ireland, accompanied by Ss. Kieran, Columba, and Comgall to St. Mobhi at Glasnevin. He preached for a time in Ireland, and then went to Scotland. A close friend of Columba's whom he accompanied on a visit to King Brude of the Picts. He was a most successful missionary, building a monastery at Aghaboe, Ireland, and probably one at Kilkenny. He is known as Kenneth and Cainnech. His feast day is October 11th.


"Canice" and "Saint Canice" redirect here. For other uses, see Canice (disambiguation) and Saint Canice (disambiguation).

Saint Cainnech of Aghaboe (515/16–600), also known as Saint Canice in Ireland, Saint Kenneth in Scotland, Saint Kenny and in Latin Saint Canicus, was an Irish abbot, monastic founder, priest and missionary during the early medieval period. Cainnech is one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland[1] and preached Christianity across Ireland and to the Picts in Scotland.[2] He wrote a commentary on the Gospels, which for centuries was known as the Glas-Choinnigh or Kenneth's Lock or the Chain of Cainnech.[3]


Most of what is written about Cainnech's life is based on tradition, however he was considered a man of virtue, great eloquence and learning. His feast day is commemorated on 11 October in the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church according to their respective calendars (Gregorian or Church Julian) with additional feast days on 1st or 14 August in the Eastern Orthodox Church.



Introduction

A lot of what is known of Cainnech comes from legend. However, he is documented by Saint Adomnán (also known as Eunan), the ninth abbot of Iona who died in 704. Adomnán was a hagiographer and his greatest work Vita Columbae or Life of St. Columba contains references to Cainnech.[4][5]


Cainnech's background


Statue at St. Canice's Catholic Church, Kilkenny

Cainnech was born in 515 or 516, at Glengiven, near Dungiven in Ulster, the northern province in Ireland.[5] His full name was Cainnech moccu Dalánn.[6]


Cainnech's father Lughadh Leithdhearg was descended from the CorcoDalann or Ui Dalainn, a tribe whose ancestor, Dalann, is traced back to Fergus (King of Ulster), son of Ross, son of Rudhraighe. The Corco-Dalann were from an island referred to as "Insula Nuligi", and is usually identified with Inis-Doimhle or Inis-Uladh, which is now the Little Island, in the River Suir, south-east of Waterford.[3]


Lughadh was a distinguished bard, a highly trained, professional itinerant poet. Lughadh settled at Glengiven, in what is now County Londonderry. Lughadh ended up under the favour and protection of the chief of Cianachta, and became the tutor of the chieftain's son, Geal Breagach.[7]


Cainnech's mother was called Maul or Mella.[8] She attained an eminent degree of sanctity. The church of Thompleamoul or Capella Sanctae Maulae seu Mellae, beside Kilkenny city, was dedicated to God under her invocation.


Early life


St. Finnian imparting his blessing to the Twelve Apostles of Ireland

In early Christian Ireland the druid tradition collapsed, with the spread of the new faith. The study of Latin and Christian theology flourished in monasteries.


Cainnech spent his early years watching his chieftain's flocks. In 543 Cainnech became a pupil at Finnian's monastic school at Clonard. During the sixth century, some of the most significant names in the history of Irish Christianity studied at the Clonard monastery.[1] Twelve students who studied under St. Finian became known as the Twelve Apostles of Ireland, Cainnech was one of these. It was at Clonard that Cainnech became a friend and companion of St Colmcille (Columba).


In 544 he studied under St. Mobhi at the school of Glasnevin, with Kieran of Clonmacnoise and St. Comgall of Bangor. When plague scattered that community, he went to Saint Cadoc's monastery of Llancarfan in Glamorganshire in Wales, where he was ordained a priest in 545.[9]


He left for Rome to obtain the blessing of the reigning pontiff. In 550 he had returned to Glengiven, where he converted his foster-brother, Geal-Breagach, who afterwards assisted him in founding Drumachose, in nearby Limavady.


Scotland

In 565 Cainnech joined Columba in Scotland, where he is known as St. Kenneth. Adamnan tells of the arrival of Cainnech, on Iona. St. Columba had a prophecy of a "certain holy and excellent man, who will arrive here among us before evening." According to Adamnan, God provided Cainnech with a safe and calm crossing, even though the sea was perilous and stormy that day. St. Columba received him that evening with all honour and hospitality.[4]


Cainnech built a church in the place now known as Saint Andrews.[10] He built monastic cells on the island of Ibdon, possibly South Uist,[11] and Eninis, an oratory called Lagan-Kenny on the shores of Loch Laggan (the remains of which are marked on the OS map), and a monastery in Fife on the banks of the Eden. The saint may have been an important saint in converting South Uist to Christianity.[12] Cainnech's name is still recalled in the ruins of an ancient church, Kil-Chainnech on Tiree, in a burial ground, Kil-Chainnech, in Iona and Inch Kenneth off Mull.[13]


Return to Ireland

Cainnech spent a good deal of his time in County Meath and Ossory in what is now County Laois. In Ossory he had a good repute with the king, Colmann son of Feradach. Colman gave him grants of land including Aghaboe ("the field of the Ox") which became his principal monastery.[5] Aghaboe grew in importance, and in the 7th century sent St. Feargal as a missionary to the church of Salzburg, Austria. Aghaboe was for a time the site of the bishop's see until under Norman influence in the twelfth century the see transferred from Aghaboe to Kilkenny.[9] In 1346 Diarmaid Mac Giollaphádraig burned the town of Aghaboe, and completely destroyed Cainnech's shrine along with his relics.[3]



St. Canice's Cathedral in Kilkenny.

Kilkenny (Irish: Cill Chainnigh "The Church of Cainnech") was originally the name of a church erected by or dedicated to Cainnech, but was afterwards extended to the townland and parish.[14] Kilkenny was one of the last parts of Ireland to be converted to Christianity. Tradition asserts that in 597, Cainnech led a Christian force to Kilkenny to eliminate the last bastion of Druidic rule in Ireland. The last Archdruid of Ireland had retired with his Council to a mound in Kilkenny for safety. Cainnech led an army there and overcame them. He founded a monastery near what is now the Church of Ireland's St. Canice's Cathedral.[9] He died and was interred at Abbey of Aghaboe in 599/600.


Chain of Cainnech

In his old age Cainnech retired to an island in what was once Loch Cree, and wrote a commentary on all four Gospels. This became known as Glass Kinnich (Glas-Chainnigh) or the Chain of Cainnech.[5] This was long preserved in his church and became a continuous commentary in the Middle Ages.


Patronage

Cainnech is the patron of Aghaboe and together with St. Ciarán of Saigir, is one of the patrons of Kilkenny and the historic kingdom of Osraige.[8] St. Cainnech is also the patron saint of the shipwrecked.[13]

St. Ethelburga of Barking October 11

 St. Ethelburga of Barking


Feastday: October 11

Death: 688


Benedictine abbess, daughter of the king of the East Angles and sister of Sts. Eronwald, Etheldreda, Sexburga, and Withburga. St. Erconwald founded a convent for her at Barking, in Essex, England. She was trained as an abbess by St. Hildelid, who came from France to assist her.


Saint Æthelburh (died after 686) or Ethelburga, founder and first Abbess of the double monastery of Barking, was the sister of Earconwald, Bishop of London.


Life

The main source for Æthelburh is Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum which recounts the foundation of Barking, early miracles there, and Æthelburh's death (Book IV, Chapters 6 to 10). Bede describes Æthelburg as "upright in life and constantly planning for the needs of her community".


Some time before he became bishop of London in 675, Earconwold founded a double monastery at Barking for his sister, and a monastery at Chertsey for himself. Barking appears to have already been established by the time of the plague in 664.[1]


A charter (Sawyer 1171), believed genuine and drafted by Bishop Eorcenwald in the reign of King Sebbi of Essex (reigned c. 664–c. 694), records a grant of lands in Essex by a certain Æthelred to Æthelburh and Barking. This is dated to between 686 and 688.


The 9th century Old English Martyrology records a vision, recounted by a nun of Barking, who saw Æthelburh being drawn up into heaven by golden chains. She was buried at Barking. The Old English Martyrology records her feast day as 11 October. She is commemorated by Orthodox Church on 11 October.[2] Her successor as abbess was Hildelith.


Ethelburga founded the church of All Hallows Berkyngechirche (now known as All Hallows Barking or All Hallows by the Tower in the City of London on land given to her by her brother Eorconwald c. 675.


The church of St Ethelburga the Virgin in the City of London is dedicated to her. It survived the Great Fire and the Blitz but was extensively damaged in an IRA attack in 1993; however, it has been restored and is now a centre for international reconciliation.[3]


Other churches dedicated to Æthelburh include the Grade II listed St Ethelburga's at Great Givendale, near Pocklington in the East Riding of Yorkshire.[4]

St. Eufridus October 11

 St. Eufridus


Feastday: October 11

Death: 7th century




Benedictine monk revered in the cathedral of Alba in Piedmont, Italy.

St. Firminus of Uzes October 11

 St. Firminus of Uzes


Feastday: October 11

Death: 553


Bishop of Uzes, France. He was born in Narbonne, France, and educated by an uncle whom he succeeded in Uzes. Firminus became bishop at twenty-two and died fifteen years later.

St. Gummarus October 11

 St. Gummarus


Feastday: October 11

Patron: of childless people, courtiers, cowherds, difficult marriages, glove makers, hernia sufferers, separated spouses, woodcutters

Birth: 717

Death: 774



Gummarus was a son of the lord of Emblem, near Lierre in Brabant. He grew up without learning to read or write, but served at the court of Pepin, where from a spirit of religion he was faithful in every duty and liberal in owrks of mercy. Pepin raised hinm to a high post, and proposed a match between him and a lady of good birth named Guinimaria, and the marriage was solemnized with their mutual consent. This marriage, which seemed unhappy in the eyes of the world, was directed by God to perfect the virtue of His servant and exalt him to the glory of saints: for Guinimaria was extravagant and perverse in her ways, cruel, capricious and altogether unteachable. Life became from that time a train of continual trials for Gummarus. St. Gummarus for several years endeavoured by all means which prudence and charity could suggest to encourage his wife to ways more agreeable to reason and religion. Then he was called upon by King Pepin to attend him in his wars, and he was absent eight years. Returning home, he found his wife had thrown all things into disorder, and that few among his servants, vassals or tenants had escaped her oppression. She was so mean that she even refused beer to the reapers at harvest. Gummarus made to every one of them full restitution and satisfaction; and Guinimaria was so far overcome by his patience and kindness as to be ashamed of her past conduct, and to seem penitent. This change, however, was only exterior, and her wilfulness broke out again worse than ever. Gummarus tried to reclaim her: but at length he gave up the attempt and lived a retired life. With St. Romuold he is said to have founded the abbey at Lierre which afterwards bore his name. His feast day is October 11th.



Reliquary in Lier

Saint Gummarus of Lier (also known as Gommaire, Gommer or Gummery) is a Belgian saint. He was the son of the Lord of Emblem (near Lier, Belgium). An official in the court of his relative Pepin the Younger or Pepin of Herstal according to some other sources[2], after a number of years in military service he retired to live the life of a hermit.[3] The town of Lier grew up around his hermitage.



Life

Gummarus was a native of Emblehem, referring to an area including Lier and not just the town of Emblem,[4] in Brabant, and a relative of Pippin the Younger, who called him to his court and entrusted him with important offices. The king arranged a marriage between Gummarus and a wealthy noblewoman named Guinmarie, extravagant and haughty.[5] His wife appears to have been shrewish as well as abusive to their household servants in his absence. They had no children.


Gummarus accompanied Pepin on a number of military campaigns,[6] and spent eight years in the field, in Cardekho, Saxony, and the Aquitaine. Upon his return from the military, Gummarus tried to reconcile with his wife and remedy the injustices she had laid upon the people in their service. That he might have a place of quiet and retirement, and in order to attend his private devotions, he built a chapel called Nivesdunc.


Gummarus and his wife eventually separated. He became a hermit at Nivesdunc and the town of Lier, Belgium grew up around the site of the hermitage where he died in 774.[6]. Other sources place his time of death around 714[2]. The latter is more likely the true time of death as Gummarus was said to have met saint Rumbold of Mechelen[7][8][9] who has been determined to have died between 580 and 655.[10][11][12] In 754[13] or 815 he was recognized as a saint[14]


Veneration


Saint Rumbold meets Saint Gummarus, Cathedral of Mechelen

St. Gummarus is the patron saint of Lier. A number of miracles were attributed to his intercession. He is commemorated by the Roman Catholic Church,[5] and the Western Rite Orthodox on 11 October.[3]


The site of his hermitage is now St. Peter's chapel. The collegiate Church of St. Gummarus was built in Brabantine Gothic in 1378. Every year on the first Sunday after October 10th, the city holds the Sint-Gummarus Fair, which includes a procession in which the saint's relics are carried through the streets of Lier.[15]


Brouwerij Cornelissen of Limburg, Belgium brews an award-winning Sint Gummarus Tripel.[16]


Iconography

Gummarus was assumed to have been a close companion of the Christian missionary Rumbold of Mechelen, who worked in Brabant, and is sometimes credited with helping Rumbold found an abbey at Lier. For this reason they are often depicted together in paintings and stained glass windows. However a 2004 examination of relics believed to be those of Rumbold suggests that he likely died over fifty years before Gummarus was born, so they would not have been contemporaries.[11]


இன்றைய புனிதர்

2020-10-11

புனித குமரூஸ் St.Gummarus


பிறப்பு

717

இறப்பு

774

பாதுகாவல்: குழந்தை இல்லாதவர்கள், மரம் வெட்டும் தொழிலாளிகள், பிரிந்து வாழும் தம்பதியினர்.


பரபாண்ட் (Brabant) என்ற நகரை சார்ந்த மக்களால், குமரூஸ் கடவுளின் மகன் என்றழைக்கப்பட்டார். இவர் பள்ளி செல்லாமலே எழுதவும், படிக்கவும் தெரிந்திருந்தார். பெப்பின் (Pepin) என்றழைக்கப்பட்ட நீதிமன்றத்தில் இவர் பணிபுரிந்தார். பின்னர் இவர் உயர்பதவி பெற்றார். அதன்பிறகு குனிமரியா (Guinimaria) என்ற பெண்ணை மணந்தார். ஆனால் இத்திருமணத்தால் இவர் தனது மகிழ்ச்சியை இழந்தார். அப்பெண்ணுடன் சேர்ந்து வாழ மறுத்தார். இருப்பினும் மனைவியை மகிழ்ச்சியான வேறொரு வாழ்வை தேர்ந்தெடுக்க வழிகாட்டினார். குமரூஸ் தான் செய்த பணியில் நேர்மையையும், எளிமையையும் கடைபிடித்தார். இவர் துறவு வாழ்வை தேர்ந்தெடுக்க விளைந்தார். இதனால் தனது குடும்பத்தையும், பணியையும் விட்டு விட்டு எட்டு ஆண்டுகள் தனிமையில் வாழ்ந்தார். பிறகு பெப்பின் நாட்டு அரசர், இவரை மீண்டும் தன் நாட்டிற்கு வருமாறு அழைப்புவிடுத்தார். அப்போது நாடு திரும்பிய குமரூஸ், தன் மனைவி வாழ்ந்த தாறுமாறான வாழ்வை கண்டு அதிர்ச்சியடைந்தார். அவரின் வாழ்வை பொறுமையோடும், சகிப்புத்தன்மையோடும், அனைத்தையும் ஏற்றுக்கொண்டு, அப்பெண்ணை புதிய வாழ்விற்கு மாற்றினார். பின்னர் மீண்டும் குமரூஸ் இறைவனில் இன்பம் கண்டு, தனது மீதி வாழ்வை வாழ்ந்தார்.



செபம்:

இரக்கத்தின் இறைவா! மற்றவரின் வாழ்வை மாற்றி, உமக்காக தனது வாழ்வில் தியாகங்களை புரிந்த புனித குமரூஸ், இன்றும் தவறான வாழ்வை வாழ்பவர்களுக்காக, உம்மிடம் பரிந்து பேசி, எம்மை காத்தருள இறைவா உம்மை வேண்டுகின்றோம்.





இந்நாளில் நினைவுகூறப்படும் பிற புனிதர்கள்


• ஆயர் அலெக்சாண்டர் சவுலி Alesander Sauli

பிறப்பு: 15 பிப்ரவரி 1534, மிலான் Milan, இத்தாலி

இறப்பு: 11 அக்டோபர் 1593, இத்தாலி

பாதுகாவல்: கோர்சிகா தீவு



• கொலோன் நகர் பேராயர் முதலாம் புரூனோ Bruno I von Köln

பிறப்பு: 925, ஜெர்மனி

இறப்பு: 11 அக்டோபர் 965, ரைம்ஸ் Rheims, பிரான்ஸ்



• பார்கிங் நகர் எத்தல்பூர்கா Ethelburga von Barking

பிறப்பு: 600, இங்கிலாந்து

இறப்பு: 670, பார்கிங் Barking, இங்கிலாந்து



• மரியா சோலேடாட் Maria Soledad

பிறப்பு: 2 டிசம்பர் 1826, மாட்ரிட் Madrid, ஸ்பெயின்

இறப்பு: 11 அக்டோபர் 1887, மாட்ரிட்

St. Juliana of Pavilly October 11

 St. Juliana of Pavilly


Feastday: October 11

Death: 750





Benedictine abbess, also called "the Little Sister of Jesus." A servant girl, she entered the Benedictines at Pavilly, France, under St. Benedicta.

St. Kenneth OCTOBER 11

St. Kenneth



Feastday: October 11


Kenneth is a derivative of Canice. All we know about Canice is from unreliable legend, according to which he was born at Glengiven, Ireland. He became a monk under St. Cadoc at Llancarfan, Wales, and was ordained there. After a trip to Rome, he studied under St. Finnian at Clonard, Ireland, accompanied Ss. Kieran, Columba, and Comgall to St. Mobhi at Glasnevin. He preached for a time in Ireland, and then went to Scotland. A close friend of Columba's whom he accompanied on a visit to King Brude of the Picts, he was a most successful missionary. He built a monastery at Aghaboe, Ireland, and probably one at Kilkenny. He is also known as Kenneth and Cainnech. His feast day is October 11th.


"Canice" and "Saint Canice" redirect here. For other uses, see Canice (disambiguation) and Saint Canice (disambiguation).

Saint Cainnech of Aghaboe (515/16–600), also known as Saint Canice in Ireland, Saint Kenneth in Scotland, Saint Kenny and in Latin Saint Canicus, was an Irish abbot, monastic founder, priest and missionary during the early medieval period. Cainnech is one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland[1] and preached Christianity across Ireland and to the Picts in Scotland.[2] He wrote a commentary on the Gospels, which for centuries was known as the Glas-Choinnigh or Kenneth's Lock or the Chain of Cainnech.[3]


Most of what is written about Cainnech's life is based on tradition, however he was considered a man of virtue, great eloquence and learning. His feast day is commemorated on 11 October in the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church according to their respective calendars (Gregorian or Church Julian) with additional feast days on 1st or 14 August in the Eastern Orthodox Church.



Introduction

A lot of what is known of Cainnech comes from legend. However, he is documented by Saint Adomnán (also known as Eunan), the ninth abbot of Iona who died in 704. Adomnán was a hagiographer and his greatest work Vita Columbae or Life of St. Columba contains references to Cainnech.[4][5]


Cainnech's background


Statue at St. Canice's Catholic Church, Kilkenny

Cainnech was born in 515 or 516, at Glengiven, near Dungiven in Ulster, the northern province in Ireland.[5] His full name was Cainnech moccu Dalánn.[6]


Cainnech's father Lughadh Leithdhearg was descended from the CorcoDalann or Ui Dalainn, a tribe whose ancestor, Dalann, is traced back to Fergus (King of Ulster), son of Ross, son of Rudhraighe. The Corco-Dalann were from an island referred to as "Insula Nuligi", and is usually identified with Inis-Doimhle or Inis-Uladh, which is now the Little Island, in the River Suir, south-east of Waterford.[3]


Lughadh was a distinguished bard, a highly trained, professional itinerant poet. Lughadh settled at Glengiven, in what is now County Londonderry. Lughadh ended up under the favour and protection of the chief of Cianachta, and became the tutor of the chieftain's son, Geal Breagach.[7]


Cainnech's mother was called Maul or Mella.[8] She attained an eminent degree of sanctity. The church of Thompleamoul or Capella Sanctae Maulae seu Mellae, beside Kilkenny city, was dedicated to God under her invocation.


Early life


St. Finnian imparting his blessing to the Twelve Apostles of Ireland

In early Christian Ireland the druid tradition collapsed, with the spread of the new faith. The study of Latin and Christian theology flourished in monasteries.


Cainnech spent his early years watching his chieftain's flocks. In 543 Cainnech became a pupil at Finnian's monastic school at Clonard. During the sixth century, some of the most significant names in the history of Irish Christianity studied at the Clonard monastery.[1] Twelve students who studied under St. Finian became known as the Twelve Apostles of Ireland, Cainnech was one of these. It was at Clonard that Cainnech became a friend and companion of St Colmcille (Columba).


In 544 he studied under St. Mobhi at the school of Glasnevin, with Kieran of Clonmacnoise and St. Comgall of Bangor. When plague scattered that community, he went to Saint Cadoc's monastery of Llancarfan in Glamorganshire in Wales, where he was ordained a priest in 545.[9]


He left for Rome to obtain the blessing of the reigning pontiff. In 550 he had returned to Glengiven, where he converted his foster-brother, Geal-Breagach, who afterwards assisted him in founding Drumachose, in nearby Limavady.


Scotland

In 565 Cainnech joined Columba in Scotland, where he is known as St. Kenneth. Adamnan tells of the arrival of Cainnech, on Iona. St. Columba had a prophecy of a "certain holy and excellent man, who will arrive here among us before evening." According to Adamnan, God provided Cainnech with a safe and calm crossing, even though the sea was perilous and stormy that day. St. Columba received him that evening with all honour and hospitality.[4]


Cainnech built a church in the place now known as Saint Andrews.[10] He built monastic cells on the island of Ibdon, possibly South Uist,[11] and Eninis, an oratory called Lagan-Kenny on the shores of Loch Laggan (the remains of which are marked on the OS map), and a monastery in Fife on the banks of the Eden. The saint may have been an important saint in converting South Uist to Christianity.[12] Cainnech's name is still recalled in the ruins of an ancient church, Kil-Chainnech on Tiree, in a burial ground, Kil-Chainnech, in Iona and Inch Kenneth off Mull.[13]


Return to Ireland

Cainnech spent a good deal of his time in County Meath and Ossory in what is now County Laois. In Ossory he had a good repute with the king, Colmann son of Feradach. Colman gave him grants of land including Aghaboe ("the field of the Ox") which became his principal monastery.[5] Aghaboe grew in importance, and in the 7th century sent St. Feargal as a missionary to the church of Salzburg, Austria. Aghaboe was for a time the site of the bishop's see until under Norman influence in the twelfth century the see transferred from Aghaboe to Kilkenny.[9] In 1346 Diarmaid Mac Giollaphádraig burned the town of Aghaboe, and completely destroyed Cainnech's shrine along with his relics.[3]



St. Canice's Cathedral in Kilkenny.

Kilkenny (Irish: Cill Chainnigh "The Church of Cainnech") was originally the name of a church erected by or dedicated to Cainnech, but was afterwards extended to the townland and parish.[14] Kilkenny was one of the last parts of Ireland to be converted to Christianity. Tradition asserts that in 597, Cainnech led a Christian force to Kilkenny to eliminate the last bastion of Druidic rule in Ireland. The last Archdruid of Ireland had retired with his Council to a mound in Kilkenny for safety. Cainnech led an army there and overcame them. He founded a monastery near what is now the Church of Ireland's St. Canice's Cathedral.[9] He died and was interred at Abbey of Aghaboe in 599/600.


Chain of Cainnech

In his old age Cainnech retired to an island in what was once Loch Cree, and wrote a commentary on all four Gospels. This became known as Glass Kinnich (Glas-Chainnigh) or the Chain of Cainnech.[5] This was long preserved in his church and became a continuous commentary in the Middle Ages.


Patronage

Cainnech is the patron of Aghaboe and together with St. Ciarán of Saigir, is one of the patrons of Kilkenny and the historic kingdom of Osraige.[8] St. Cainnech is also the patron saint of the shipwrecked.[13]

St. Maria Soledad October 11

 St. Maria Soledad


Feastday: October 11

Birth: 1826

Death: 1887



Father Michael, pastor of one of the poorer suburbs of Madrid, was aware of the problem of the poor and abandoned sick who often could not afford hospitalization. So he began an order which would provide nurses to go to the homes of the sick whether or not they could pay. Because of his special devotion to Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows, he wanted to begin with seven "servants" of Mary. The seventh applicant was little Vibiana Torres. Vibiana was born December 2, 1826, the second of five children of a dairyman. She loved to gather children of the neighborhood and have childish processions in honor of Our Lady. Later she began to visit the sick of the neighborhood and perform small penances for the souls of others. In spite of her kindness and outgoing nature, Vibiana secretly longed for the contemplative life. She applied for admittance to the Dominicans as a lay sister, but she would have to wait for a vacancy. As she realized that chances for an opening with the Dominicans were slim, she requested an interview with Father Michael. On August 15, 1851, the twenty-four year old Vibiana and six others took the three religious vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, received the habit of the new congregation, and changed their names. Vibiana became Sister Maria Soledad. Many problems beset the young Congregation. The first superior left the Congregation and tried to undo all its works. The sisters were very poor and hardly had enough to eat. In 1856, Father Michael appointed Sister Soledad superior general of the community. Through many hardships, she persevered in charity, humility, and in her wise guidance. She spent many hours praying for more sisters. Mother Soledad had the joy of living to see her congregation given full papal approval in 1876. Mother Soledad contracted pneumonia in 1887. She died quietly at the motherhouse after receiving the Last Sacraments at the age of sixty. She was originally buried in the sisters' plot at the cemetery, but on January 18, 1893, her remains were exhumed and transferred to the motherhouse. Her body was intact and it exuded a bloody liquid, and a sweet odor was noticed by all present. A few years later, only the bones remained. Mother Soledad was beatified in 1950 by Pope Pius XII, and canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1970. Her feastday is October 11.


† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(அக்டோபர் 11)


✠ புனிதர் மரிய சொல்டேட் டொர்ரெஸ் ஒய் அகொஸ்டா ✠

(St. Maria Soledad Torres y Acosta)


கன்னியர், சபை நிறுவனர்:

(Virgin and foundress)


பிறப்பு: டிசம்பர் 2, 1826

மேட்ரிட், ஸ்பெயின் அரசு

(Madrid, Kingdom of Spain)


இறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 11, 1887 (வயது 60)

மேட்ரிட், ஸ்பெயின் அரசு

(Madrid, Kingdom of Spain)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 5, 1950

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜனவரி 25, 1970

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பால்

(Pope Paul VI)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 11


பாதுகாவல்:

மரியாளின் பணியாளர்கள் சபை

(Servants of Mary)


புனிதர் மரிய சொல்டேட் டொர்ரெஸ் ஒய் அகொஸ்டா, ஒரு ஸ்பேனிஷ் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் அருட்சகோதரியும், "மரியாளின் பணியாளர்கள்” (Servants of Mary) எனும் துறவற சபையின் நிறுவனருமாவார். இச்சபையானது, நோயாளிகளுக்கும் ஏழைகளுக்கும் சேவை செய்வதற்காக அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட அருட்சகோதரியருக்கான துறவற சபையாகும். இவர், கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையினால் புனிதராக கௌரவிக்கப்படுகிறார்.


வாழ்க்கை :

“அன்டோனியா பிபியானா மனுவெல்லா டொர்ரெஸ் ஒய் அகொஸ்டா”

(Antonia Bibiana Manuela Torres y Acosta) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட இவரது

தந்தை "ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கோ டொர்ரெஸ்" (Francisco Torres) ஆவார். இவரது தாயார், “அன்டோனியோ அகோஸ்டா” (Antonia Acosta) ஆவார். அன்டோனியா பிபியானா, தமது பெற்றோருக்கு பிறந்த ஐந்து குழந்தைகளில் இரண்டாமவர் ஆவார். இவரது பெற்றோர் உள்ளூரிலேயே ஒரு சிறு வியாபாரம் செய்துவந்தனர். இவர், “வின்செஸ்டியன்” (Vincentian Sisters) அருட்சகோதரியாரால் கல்வி கற்பிக்கப்பட்டார். அடிக்கடி அருகாமையிலுள்ள நோயாளிகளுக்கு சேவை செய்வதை வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டிருந்தார். ஏழைகளுக்கு உதவுவதையும், பிறரின் நன்மைகளுக்காக சிறு சிறு நோன்பிருப்பதையும் கூட வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.


சுமார் 1850ம் ஆண்டின் வாக்கில், தேவ அழைப்பினை செவி மடுத்த இவர், தமது அருகாமையிலுள்ள “டோமினிக்கன்” (Dominican convent) துறவு சபையில் பயிற்சி அருட்சகோதரியாக இணைவதற்கு விண்ணப்பித்தார். ஆனால், அப்போது அங்கே இடமின்மையால் இவர் காத்திருக்க வேண்டியிருந்தது. இதற்கிடையே, 1851ம் ஆண்டு, “ச்சம்பேரி” (Chamberí) பங்குத் தந்தை, "மிகுவேல் மார்ட்டினேஸ்" (Miguel Martínez) என்ற அருட்பணியாளரின் சேவைகள் பற்றி கேள்விப்பட்டார். அருட்தந்தை மார்ட்டினேஸ், தமது பங்கிலுள்ள ஏழைகள் மற்றும் நோயுற்றோருக்கு சேவை செய்வதற்காக ஏழு பெண்களைக் கொண்ட ஒரு குழு ஒன்றினை அமைப்பதாக ஒரு காட்சியின் தரிசனம் கண்டார். பிபியானா டொர்ரெஸ், இச்சேவையில் தம்மை அர்ப்பணிக்க முன்வந்தார். மார்ட்டினேஸ் தாம் உருவாக்க விரும்பிய குழுவின் ஏழாவது மற்றும் கடைசி பெண்ணாக பிபியானா டொர்ரெசை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்.


1851ம் வருடம் ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் பதினைந்தாம் நாள், இறைவனின் அதிதூய அன்னை மரியாளின் விண்ணேற்பு தினத்தன்று, பிபியானாவும் அவரது ஆறு சகோதர அங்கத்தினர்களும் தமது வாழ்வை ஏழை நோயாளிகளுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்தனர். "சகோதரி மரிய சொல்டேட்" (Sister Maria Soledad) என்ற பெயரை தமது ஆன்மீக பெயராக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். அனைவரும் துறவற சீருடைகளை பெற்றுக்கொண்டனர்.


தமது துறவற சபையின் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பேற்ற நாளிலிருந்து அநேக சோதனைகளைத் தாங்கிய இவர், அவதூறுகளால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டார். பலமுறை துறவு சபையின் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பினின்றும் விடுவிக்கப்பட்டார்.


வலேன்சியாவில் (Valencia) இருந்த ஒரு சுதந்திர அரசின் கீழ் இருந்த ஒரு அமைப்பினை (Liberalizing Government) உருவாக்கினார்.


1876ல், இந்த புதிய சபையானது, திருத்தந்தை “ஒன்பதாம் பயசின்” (Pope Pius IX) அங்கீகாரம் பெற்றது. சுமார் முப்பத்தைந்து வருடங்கள் இவ்வமைப்பினை தலைமையேற்று நடத்திய இவர், நிமோனியா காய்ச்சலின் காரணமாக அக்டோபர் 1887ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 11ம் நாள், மரணமடைந்தார். இவரது மரணத்தின்போது, இவரது துறவு சபையின் 46 கிளைகள் ஐரோப்பா மற்றும் லத்தீன் அமெரிக்க நாடுகளில் பரவியிருந்தன.


St. Nectarius October 11

 St. Nectarius


Feastday: October 11




Bishop of Constantinople, modern Istanbul, from 381. He was born in Tarsus, in Cilicia, the son of a senator of Constantinople. Nectarius succeeded St. Gregory Nazianzus upon the latter's resignation. His elevation came about after his name found its way onto a list submitted to the emperor, who picked Nectarius, despite the fact that Nectarius was married and had not yet even been baptized. Nevertheless, once installed properly, he proved a most able prelate, struggling against the Arians and prohibiting public penance. He was bishop for sixteen years.


 

St. Peter Tuy October 11

 St. Peter Tuy


Feastday: October 11

Death: 1833


Vietnamese martyr. A native priest, he was beheaded by Vietnamese authorities. Peter was canonized in 1988 by Pope John Paul II. 


The Vietnamese Martyrs (Vietnamese: Các Thánh Tử đạo Việt Nam), also known as the Martyrs of Annam, Martyrs of Tonkin and Cochinchina, Martyrs of Indochina, or Andrew Dung-Lac and Companions (Anrê Dũng-Lạc và các bạn tử đạo), are saints on the General Roman Calendar who were canonized by Pope John Paul II. On June 19, 1988, thousands of overseas Vietnamese worldwide gathered at the Vatican for the Celebration of the Canonization of 117 Vietnamese Martyrs, an event chaired by Monsignor Tran Van Hoai. Their memorial is on November 24 (although several of these saints have another memorial, as they were beatified and on the calendar prior to the canonization of the group).




History

The Vatican estimates the number of Vietnamese martyrs at between 130,000 and 300,000. John Paul II decided to canonize those whose names are known and unknown, giving them a single feast day.


The Vietnamese Martyrs fall into several groupings, those of the Dominican and Jesuit missionary era of the 18th century and those killed in the politically inspired persecutions of the 19th century. A representative sample of only 117 martyrs—including 96 Vietnamese, 11 Spanish Dominicans, and 10 French members of the Paris Foreign Missions Society (Missions Etrangères de Paris (MEP))—were beatified on four separate occasions: 64 by Pope Leo XIII on May 27, 1900; eight by Pope Pius X on May 20, 1906; 20 by Pope Pius X on May 2, 1909; and 25 by Pope Pius XII on April 29, 1951.[citation needed] All these 117 Vietnamese Martyrs were canonized on June 19, 1988. A young Vietnamese Martyr, Andrew Phú Yên, was beatified in March, 2000 by Pope John Paul II.



Vietnamese martyrs Paul Mi, Pierre Duong, Pierre Truat, martyred on 18 December 1838.

The tortures these individuals underwent are considered by the Vatican to be among the worst in the history of Christian martyrdom. The torturers hacked off limbs joint by joint, tore flesh with red hot tongs, and used drugs to enslave the minds of the victims. Christians at the time were branded on the face with the words "tà đạo" (邪道, lit. "Left (Sinister) religion")[1] and families and villages which subscribed to Christianity were obliterated.[2]


The letters and example of Théophane Vénard inspired the young Saint Thérèse of Lisieux to volunteer for the Carmelite nunnery at Hanoi, though she ultimately contracted tuberculosis and could not go. In 1865 Vénard's body was transferred to his Congregation's church in Paris, but his head remains in Vietnam.[3]


There are several Catholic parishes in the United States, Canada, and elsewhere dedicated to the Martyrs of Vietnam (Holy Martyrs of Vietnam Parishes), one of which is located in Arlington, Texas in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.[4] Others can be found in Houston, Austin, Texas,[5] Denver, Seattle, San Antonio,[6] Arlington, Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, and Norcross, Georgia. There are also churches named after individual saints, such as St. Philippe Minh Church in Saint Boniface, Manitoba.[7]


The Nguyen Campaign against Catholicism in the 19th century

The Catholic Church in Vietnam was devastated during the Tây Sơn rebellion in the late 18th century. During the turmoil, the missions revived, however, as a result of cooperation between the French Vicar Apostolic Pigneaux de Behaine and Nguyen Anh. After Nguyen's victory in 1802, in gratitude to assistance received, he ensured protection to missionary activities. However, only a few years into the new emperor's reign, there was growing antipathy among officials against Catholicism and missionaries reported that it was purely for political reasons that their presence was tolerated.[8] Tolerance continued until the death of the emperor and the new emperor Minh Mang succeeding to the throne in 1820.


Converts began to be harassed without official edicts in the late 1820s, by local governments. In 1831 the emperor passed new laws on regulations for religious groupings in Viet Nam, and Catholicism was then officially prohibited. In 1832, the first act occurred in a largely Catholic village near Hue, with the entire community being incarcerated and sent into exile in Cambodia. In January 1833 a new kingdom-wide edict was passed calling on Vietnamese subjects to reject the religion of Jesus and required suspected Catholics to demonstrate their renunciation by walking on a wooden cross. Actual violence against Catholics, however, did not occur until the Lê Văn Khôi revolt.[8]


During the rebellion, a young French missionary priest named Joseph Marchand was living in sickness in the rebel Gia Dinh citadel. In October 1833, an officer of the emperor reported to the court that a foreign Christian religious leader was present in the citadel. This news was used to justify the edicts against Catholicism, and led to the first executions of missionaries in over 40 years. The first executed was named Francois Gagelin. Marchand was captured and executed as a "rebel leader" in 1835; he was put to death by "slicing".[8] Further repressive measures were introduced in the wake of this episode in 1836. Prior to 1836, village heads had only to simply report to local mandarins about how their subjects had recanted Catholicism; after 1836, officials could visit villages and force all the villagers to line up one by one to trample on a cross and if a community was suspected of harbouring a missionary, militia could block off the village gates and perform a rigorous search; if a missionary was found, collective punishment could be meted out to the entire community.[8]


Missionaries and Catholic communities were able to sometimes escape this through bribery of officials; they were also sometimes victims of extortion attempts by people who demanded money under the threat that they would report the villages and missionaries to the authorities.[8] The missionary Father Pierre Duclos said:


with gold bars murder and theft blossom among honest people.[8]


The court became more aware of the problem of the failure to enforce the laws and applied greater pressure on its officials to act; officials that failed to act or those tho who were seen to be acting too slowly were demoted or removed from office (and sometimes were given severe corporal punishment), while those who attacked and killed the Christians could receive promotion or other rewards. Lower officials or younger family members of officials were sometimes tasked with secretly going through villages to report on hidden missionaries or Catholics that had not apostasized.[8]


The first missionary arrested during this (and later executed) was the priest Jean-Charles Cornay in 1837. A military campaign was conducted in Nam Dinh after letters were discovered in a shipwrecked vessel bound for Macao. Quang Tri and Quang Binh officials captured several priests along with the French missionary Bishop Pierre Dumoulin-Borie in 1838 (who was executed). The court translator, Francois Jaccard, a Catholic who had been kept as a prisoner for years and was extremely valuable to the court, was executed in late 1838; the official who was tasked with this execution, however, was almost immediately dismissed.[8]


A priest, Father Ignatius Delgado, was captured in the village of Can Lao (Nam Định Province), put in a cage on public display for ridicule and abuse, and died of hunger and exposure while waiting for execution; [1] the officer and soldiers that captured him were greatly rewarded (about 3 kg of silver was distributed out to all of them), as were the villagers that had helped to turn him over to the authorities.[8] The bishop Dominic Henares was found in Giao Thuy district of Nam Dinh (later executed); the villagers and soldiers that participated in his arrest were also greatly rewarded (about 3 kg of silver distributed). The priest, Father Joseph Fernandez, and a local priest, Nguyen Ba Tuan, were captured in Kim Song, Nam Dinh; the provincial officials were promoted, the peasants who turned them over were given about 3 kg of silver and other rewards were distributed. In July 1838, a demoted governor attempting to win back his place did so successfully by capturing the priest Father Dang Dinh Vien in Yen Dung, Bac Ninh province. (Vien was executed). In 1839, the same official captured two more priests: Father Dinh Viet Du and Father Nguyen Van Xuyen (also both executed).[8]


In Nhu Ly near Hue, an elderly catholic doctor named Simon Hoa was captured and executed. He had been sheltering a missionary named Charles Delamotte, whom the villagers had pleaded with him to send away. The village was also supposed to erect a shrine for the state-cult, which the doctor also opposed. His status and age protected him from being arrested until 1840, when he was put on trial and the judge pleaded (due to his status in Vietnamese society as both an elder and a doctor) with him to publicly recant; when he refused he was publicly executed.[8]


A peculiar episode occurred in late 1839, when a village in Quang Ngai province called Phuoc Lam was victimized by four men who extorted cash from the villagers under threat of reporting the Christian presence to the authorities. The governor of the province had a Catholic nephew who told him about what happened, and the governor then found the four men (caught smoking opium) and had two executed as well as two exiled. When a Catholic lay leader then came to the governor to offer their gratitude (thus perhaps exposing what the governor had done), the governor told him that those who had come to die for their religion should now prepare themselves and leave something for their wives and children; when news of the whole episode came out, the governor was removed from office for incompetence.[8]


Many officials preferred to avoid execution because of the threat to social order and harmony it represented, and resorted to use of threats or torture in order to force Catholics to recant. Many villagers were executed alongside priests according to mission reports. The emperor died in 1841, and this offered respite for Catholics. However, some persecution still continued after the new emperor took office. Catholic villages were forced to build shrines to the state cult. The missionary Father Pierre Duclos (quoted above) died in prison in after being captured on the Saigon river in June 1846. The boat he was traveling in, unfortunately contained the money that was set for the annual bribes of various officials (up to 1/3 of the annual donated French mission budget for Cochinchina was officially allocated to 'special needs') in order to prevent more arrests and persecutions of the converts; therefore, after his arrest, the officials then began wide searches and cracked down on the catholic communities in their jurisdictions. The amount of money that the French mission societies were able to raise, made the missionaries a lucrative target for officials that wanted cash, which could even surpass what the imperial court was offering in rewards. This created a cycle of extortion and bribery which lasted for years.[8]

St. Placidia October 11

 St. Placidia


Feastday: October 11

Death: 460


Virgin. Placidia lived in Verona and was renowned for her sanctity and her vow of perpetual virginity. She should not be confused with the contemporary Placidia, the daughter of Roman Emperor Valentinian III.

St. Sarmata October 11

 St. Sarmata


Feastday: October 11

Death: 357



Martyr of Egypt. He was a disciple of St. Anthony in the deserts of Egypt, murdered by a band of Bedouins. A monastic pioneer, h e was follower of the Desert Fathers.