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13 November 2020

Blessed Jean of Tufara November 14

 Blessed Jean of Tufara

Also known as

• Jean of Tupharia

• Jean of Tufaria

• John of...

Profile

Hermit. Helped found the Benedictine monastery of Santa Maria de Gualdo Mazocca near Campobasso, Italy in the late 1150's.


Died

14 November 1170 of natural causes

Saint Serapion of Alexandria November 14

#புனித_சேராபியன் (மூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டு)


நவம்பர் 14


இவர் எகிப்து நாட்டிலுள்ள அலெக்சாந்திரியாவைச் சார்ந்தவர்.


கிறிஸ்துவின்மீது மிகுந்த பற்றுக்கொண்டு வாழ்ந்த இவர், கிறிஸ்தவ மறையைப் பின்பற்றினால் ஆபத்து வரும் என்று தெரிந்தும்கூட தன்னுடைய நம்பிக்கையில் மிக உறுதியாக இருந்தார்.


இவருடைய காலத்தில் கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கு எதிரான வேத கலாபனை நடைபெற்றது. அப்பொழுது ஒருவர், "இவர் கிறிஸ்தவர்" என்று காட்டிக்கொடுக்க, கலகக்காரர்கள் இவரை இவருடைய வீட்டின் மாடியிலிருந்து தூக்கி வீசிக் கொன்று போட்டார்கள்.


இவ்வாறு இவர் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவுக்காகத் தன் இன்னுயிரைத் துறந்து, அவருக்குச் சான்று பகர்ந்தார்.


 Saint Serapion of Alexandria

Profile

A man very public about his faith, Serapion was abused and killed in anti-Christian riots during the persecutions of Septimius Severus. Martyr.


Died

thrown off the roof of his own home in 252 in Alexandria, Egypt

Saint Pierre of Narbonne November 14

 Saint Pierre of Narbonne

Profile

Franciscan friar. Priest. Missionary to Palestine in 1384. Martyred by the Muslim authorities.

Born

Narbonne, Aude, France


Died

burned alive on 14 November 1391 near the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem


Beatified

12 June 1966 by Pope Paul VI (decree of martyrdom)


Canonized

21 June 1970 by Pope Paul VI

Saint Venerando the Centurian November14

 Saint Venerando the Centurian

Also known as

Venerable the Centurian


Profile

Roman centurian. Convert to Christianity. Martyr.


Died

• interred in the catacombs of San Callisto, Rome, Italy

• relics translated to Grotte Santo Stefano, Italy


Patronage

Grotte Santo Stefano, Italy


Representation

Roman centurian holding a lily

Saint Alberic of Utrecht November14

Saint Alberic of Utrecht

Profile

Nephew of Saint Gregory of Utrecht. Friend of Blessed Alcuin. Benedictine monk in Utrecht, Netherlands. Prior of the cathedral of Utrecht. Noted for his encyclopedic knowledge of the faith, his joy for living in Christ, and his zeal for bringing both to any who would listen. Bishop of Utrecht in 775. Reorganized the school of Utrecht, directed the mission of Ludger in Ostergau, and worked to evangelize the pagan Teutons.

Died

21 August 784 of natural causes

Saint Hypatius of Gangra November 14

Saint Hypatius of Gangra


Also known as

Hipacy, Hypatia, Ipazio

Profile

Bishop of Gangra, Paphlagonia (modern Çankiri, Turkey). Attended the Council of Nicea where he fiercely defended the divinity of Christ. When he returned home, he was martyred by a group of Novatian heretics who opposed his view.


Died

stoned to death c.325 at Gangra, Paphlagonia (modern Çankiri, Turkey)

Saint Antigius of Langres November 14

 Saint Antigius of Langres

Also known as

Anthôt, Antidius, Antège, Autige

Profile

Itinerant missionary bishop who evangelized in the area of Langres, France.


Died

• in Saint-Anthot, France of natural causes

• buried in Saint-Anthot

• relics moved to Chiney, France due to invading Normans

• relics moved to Italy in January 887 due to invading Normans

• relics later moved to the monastery of San Faustino e San Giovita in Brescia, Italy

Saint John Osorinus November 14

 Saint John Osorinus


Also known as

• John of Trau

• John of Trogir

• Johannes von Trogir

• Ivan Trogirski


Profile

Hermit at the Camaldolese monastery at Ossero on the island of Cres. First bishop of Trogir (in modern Croatia) c.1070. Helped defend the city from king Coloman of Hungary.


Died

• c.1111

• buried in the Saint Lawrence cathedral, Trogir, Croatia


Patronage

Trogir, Croatia

Saint Etienne-Théodore Cuenot November 14

 Saint Etienne-Théodore Cuenot


Also known as

Stephen-Theodore Cuenot


Profile

Priest, ordained in 1825. Member of the Paris Foreign Missions Society. Missionary to Vietnam in 1828. Missionary bishop in 1835. Vicar apostolic of Cochinchina in 1840. Martyred in the persecutions of emperor Tu Duc.


Born

8 February 1802 in Le Bélieu, Doubs, France


Died

14 November 1861 in an elephant stable in Bình Ðinh, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II

Saint Dubricius of Wales November 14

 Saint Dubricius of Wales



Also known as

• Dubricius of Caerleon

• Dubricius of Llandaff

• Devereux, Dubric, Dubrice, Dubricus, Dubritius, Dybrig, Dyffryg, Dyfrig


Profile

Related to Saint Brychan of Brycheiniog. One of the founders of monastic life in Wales. He founded monasteries in Gwent and England with his main centers in Henllan and Moccas. Worked with Saint Teilo of Llandaff and Saint Samson of York who he appointed as abbot on Caldey Island. Bishop of Llandaff, Wales, consecrated in by Saint Germanus of Auxerre. Archbishop of Caerleon, Wales, a seat he turned over to Saint David of Wales. In his later years he retired to the Isle of Bardsey to live as a prayerful hermit.


Born

Wales


Died

c.545 on the Isle of Bardsey, Wales of natural causes


Blessed Maria Louise Merkert November 14

 Blessed Maria Louise Merkert


Also known as

Maria Luiza Merkert


Profile

Second and last daughter born to Anthony Merkert and Maria Barbara Pfitzner, she was raised in a pious, middle-class family. Her father died when Maria was still a baby. She and her sister grew to both be devoted to care for the poor. Co-founder in 1842 of the Sisters of Saint Elizabeth in Nelsse, Prussia, to tend in their own homes, without compensation, helpless sick persons who could not or would not be received into the hospitals; she served as their first superior until her death.


Born

21 September 1817 in Nysa, Opolskie, Poland (formerly in the Breslau region of Germany


Died

14 November 1872 in Nysa, Opolskie, Poland of typhus


Beatified

20 September 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI

Saint Nikola Tavelic November 14

 Saint Nikola Tavelic


இன்றைய புனிதர்: 

(14-11-2020)


புனித நிக்கோலாஸ் டாவெலிக் மற்றும் அவரின் தோழர்கள் .

( St. Nicholas Tavelic and Companions )

மறைசாட்சி :


நினைவுத்திருநாள் : நவம்பர் 14


பிறப்பு : c. 1340 

டால்மியா Dalmatien


இறப்பு : 14 நவம்பர் 1391 

எருசலேம்


புனித நிக்கோலாஸ் டாவெலிக், நவம்பர் 11ம் நாள் 1970ம் ஆண்டு தன் தோழர்களுடன், முகமதியர்களின் திருவிழாவின்போது அவர்களிடையே மறையுரையை ஆற்றினர். அச்சமயத்தில் சில யூதர்களால் இவர்கள் தாக்கப்பட்டார்கள். இவர்களுக்கு எவரும் பாதுகாப்பு கொடுப்பதற்கு முன் வராததால் எதிரிகளால் வதைக்கப்பட்டனர். இதையறிந்த அவர்களின் துறவற சபை சகோதரர்கள், அவர்களை காப்பாற்ற சென்றனர். இருப்பினும் அவர்களால் மறைசாட்சியர்களை காப்பாற்ற இயலவில்லை. எதிரிகள் நிக்கோலசையும் அவரின் தோழர்களையும் கைது செய்தனர். அவர்களின் கைகளில் விலங்குகளை மாட்டி தெருத்தெருவாக இழுத்து சென்று அடித்தனர்.

இவர்கள் 4 பேரையும் எதிரிகள் உணவின்றி பட்டினி போட்டனர். இருப்பினும் நான்கு பேரும், எதற்கும் அஞ்சாமல் கடவுளை போற்றி புகழ்ந்தனர். இடைவிடாமல் இறைவேண்டல் செய்தனர். இதனைக் கண்ட எதிரிகள் 4 பேரையும் கொல்லத் திட்டமிட்டனர். பின்னர் இவர்கள் நால்வரும் ஆழ்ந்த இறைவேண்டலில் ஈடுபட்டு கொண்டிருக்கும் வேளையில் பிடித்துக்கொண்டு போகப்பட்டு, உயிருடன் எரித்துக் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். பின்னர் சுட்டெரித்த உடலின் சாம்பலை எருசலேம் முழுவதிலும் தூவினர்.


---JDH---தெய்வீக குணமளிக்கும் இயேசு /திண்டுக்கல்.

Also known as

• Nikola Tavigli

• Nicholas, Nicola


Profile

Franciscan friar. Priest. Missionary to Bosnia for 12 years; reports of the day say that the friars brought 50,000 to Christianity. Missionary to Palestine in 1384. Martyred by the Muslim authorities.


Born

c.1340 in Sibenik, Sibensko-Kninska, Croatia


Died

burned alive on 14 November 1391 near the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem


Beatified

• 6 June 1889 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)

• 12 June 1966 by Pope Paul VI (decree of martyrdom)


Canonized

• 21 June 1970 by Pope Paul VI

• the first Croatian saint canonized in the modern process

Saint Siard November 14

 Saint Siard

Profile

Born to the nobility of Friesland (an area of modern Netherlands). Studied at the abbey school of Mariëngaarde, Friesland. Spiritual student of Frederick of Hallum. Joined the Premonstratensians in the early 1170's. Abbot at the house in Mariëngaarde in 1194 where he served for 36 years. Noted for his adherence to the Norbertine rule, his love of the contemplative life, for his generosity to the poor, and as a peacemaker. Had a devotion of the Saint Mary and Saint Martha of Bethany, and gave them as examples to his brothers.


Died

• 1230 at the abbey of Mariëngaarde, Friesland of natural causes

• relics moved to Hildesheim, Germany in 1578 when the abbey was destroyed by Calvinists

• relics placed in new reliquaries in 1608

• some relics taken to Tongerlo abbey at Westerlo, Belgium in 1617

• some relics taken to the abbey of Saint-Feuillin, Roeulz, France in 1617

• the abbey of Saint-Feuillin was suppressed in the French Revolution and the relics were taken to the church of Strépy

• some relics transferred to the abbey of Windberg, Germany in 2000


Beatified

8 March 1728 by Pope Benedict XIII (cultus confirmation)


Saint Serapion of Algiers November 14

 Saint Serapion of Algiers



Also known as

• Serapion of England

• Serapio of...


Profile

As a boy he accompanied his father in the Third Crusade, and was at the battle of Acre in 1191. Member of the Order of Our Lady of Ransom, received into the Order by Saint Peter Nolasco at Barcelona, Spain in 1222. Worked with Saint Raymond Nonnatus to free 150 Christian slaves in 1229. Assigned to recruit for the Order in England, his ship was captured by pirates, and Serapion was left for dead. He survived, however, and wandered the area of London, England preaching against the theft and abuse of Church property which was happening in that area; he was ordered to leave London, and spent some time as a wandering evangelist in the British Isles. In 1240 he took a ransom to release 87 Christians held in Algiers by Muslims, and when the captors demanded more money, he volunteered to stay as a hostage until it arrived. He then worked as a missionary, converting many to Christianity. Authorities then tortured, scourged, abused and executed him. Martyr.


Born

c.1179 in London, England


Died

crucified, stabbed and dismembered alive in Algeria in 1240


Canonized

14 April 1728 by Pope Benedict XIII


Patronage

• against arthritis

• Azul, Argentina, diocese of


Representation

young Mercedarian tied to a cross

Blessed Maria Teresa of Jesus November 14

 Blessed Maria Teresa of Jesus



Also known as

Maria Scrilli


Profile

An unknown illness kept the young Maria bedridden for two years; she was cured following a vision of Saint Fiorenzo, and soon after she felt a call to the religious life. On 28 May 1846 she entered the monastery of Saint Mary Magdalene de' Pazzi, Florence, Italy, and though she loved the cloistered life, she realized it was not her calling, and left after two months. Carmelite tertiary, taking the name Maria Teresa of Jesus. Back home she began teaching secular and religious topics to local girls, and effectively started a small school for them. While looking for a place to start a formal school, she was asked by a town council to take over a local school; she did and it formed the base for a religious institute. On 15 October 1854 she founded as the Sisters of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, but on 30 November 1859, during a period of anti-clerical sentiment in Italy, her institute was ordered to be dissolved and the school secularized. It took years of work and waiting, but on 18 March 1878 Mother Maria was able to resurrect her community, this time in Florence, Italy where they ran a school, boarding house, and Marian association, and lived a vocation of teaching, parish work, and visiting the sick. Today the Institute has about 250 sisters spread through Italy, Brazil, India, Indonesia, Israel, Poland, Canada, the Philippines, the United States, and the Czech Republic, teaching, catechising, caring for the sick and aged.


Born

15 May 1825 in Montevarchi, Arezzo, Italy as Maria Scrilli


Died

14 November 1889 in Florence, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 8 October 2006 by Pope Benedict XVI

• recognition celebrated by Cardinal José Saraiva Martins at the Roman Amphitheater, Fiesole, Italy