புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

18 February 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 18

St. Flavian of Constantinople


Feastday: February 18

Death: 449




Patriarch of Constantinople from 446 or 447, succeeding St. Proclus. Refusing to give Em­peror Theodosius II a bribe upon becoming patriarch and making the emperor's sister Pulcherius a deaconess, Flavian received hostile treat­ment from the imperial court. Flavian also started the condemnation of Eutyches, who began the heresy of Monophysitism. This led to his being deposed and exiled at the so-called "Robber Synod" at Ephesus in 449, whereupon the famous "Tome" of dogmatic letters of Pope Leo I the Great was ignored. Appealing to the Pope, Flavian was beaten so mercilessly that he was mortally wounded and died three days later in exile. He was proclaimed a saint and martyr by the Council of Chalcedon in 451


St. Lucius


Feastday: February 18

Death: unknown


Deacon Keith FournierToday, we humbly ask you to defend Catholic Online's independence. 98% of our readers don't give; they simply look the other way. If you donate just $5.00, or whatever you can, Catholic Online could keep thriving for years. Most people donate because Catholic Online is useful. If Catholic Online has given you $5.00 worth of knowledge this year, take a minute to donate. Show the volunteers who bring you reliable, Catholic information that their work matters. If you are one of our rare donors, you have our gratitude and we warmly thank you. Help us do more >

African martyr with Classicus, Fructulus, Maximus, Rutulus, Secundinus, and Silvanus.



Bl. Martin


Feastday: February 18



Martyr of China, a native Chinese who sheltered Blessed John Peter Neel. Martin was beheaded and beatified in 1909.


St. Maximus


Martyr with Alexander, Claudius, Cutias, and Praepedigna. Nothing can be documented about their sufferings under Emperor Diocletian.



St. Theotonius


Feastday: February 18

Patron: of Viseu, Portugal

Birth: 1088

Death: 1166



Augustinian canon and royal advisor. Born in Gonfeo, Spain, in 1088, he studied at Coimbra, Portugal, and served for a time as archpriest of Viseu. After undertaking a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and the Holy Land, he returned home and entered the Augustinian Canons at Coimbra. He held a trusted position as advisor to King Alfonso I Henriquez of Portugal (r. 1128-1181) and was a dedicated opponent of all forms of royal corruption. Theotonius rebuked the queen for an adulterous affair and refused a bishopric from her.




St. Angilbert

புனித ஆன்கெல்பெர்ட் Angelbert


பிறப்பு 

750

இறப்பு 

18 பிப்ரவரி 814, 

ரிக்குயர் Riquier, பிரான்சு


இவர் பிரெஞ்சு நாட்டை பாதுகாக்கும் போர்படையில் பணிபுரிந்தவர். அப்போது டெனிஸ் Danes என்பவன் பிரெஞ்சு நாட்டின் ஆற்றங்கரை ஒன்றில் தங்கி, அந்நாட்டிற்கு எதிராகப் போர் புரிந்தான். அவனை எதிர்த்து ஆன்கெல்பெர்ட் போரிட வேண்டியிருந்தது. அச்சமயத்தில் அவர் புனித ரிக்குயர் என்ற புனிதரின் கல்லறைக்குச் சென்று இப்போரில்தான் டெனிஸ்சிற்கு எதிராக வெற்றிபெற்றால் தான் ஓர் துறவியாகிறேன் என்று செபித்தார். பிறகு இடி, மின்னல் புயல் என்று பாராமல் திடீரென்று டெனிஸ் படையெடுத்தான். ஆன்கெல்பெர்ட் அவனை எதிர்த்து போரிட்டு தன் படையுடன் வெற்றி பெற்றார். 


அவர் பெற்ற வெற்றியானது, அந்நாட்டை எவ்விதத்திலும் பாதிக்காமல் காப்பாற்றப்பட்டது. இதன் விளைவாக கடவுள் இவரின் மன்றாட்டை ஏற்று வெற்றிப் பெறச் செய்ததால் செயிண்ட் ரிக்குயிர் அவர்களின் துறவற இல்லத்திற்குச் சென்று துறவியானார். பின்னர் அச்சபையின் மடாதிபதி பொறுப்பையும் ஏற்று மிகச் சிறப்பாக அச்சபையை வழிநடத்தினார். இவர் தன் வாழ்நாள் முழுவதும் இடைவிடாது இரவும் பகலும் செபம் செய்து திருப்பாடல்களைப்பாடி இறைவனை போற்றி புகழ்ந்து இறைவழியில் தன் சபையை வழிநடத்தினார். 


அதன்பிறகு இவர் 24 மணிநேரமும் துறவிகள் கட்டாயமாக செபம் செய்ய வேண்டுமென்பதை வலியுறுத்தினார். கடுமையான விதிமுறை கடைப்பிடிக்கச் செய்தார். புனித கன்னிமரியாள், சூசையப்பர் இவர்களின் செப வாழ்வை வாழ தன் சபைத் துறவிகளிடத்தில் வலியுறுத்தினார். இவர் இறந்தபி



Benedictine abbot and advisor to Charlemagne. He was raised in the court of Emperor Charlemagne, and studied under the great English scholar, Alcuin. Receiving minor orders, Angilbert accompanied King Pepin to Italy in 782. Returning to the court, he became known as "Homer" because of his literary and language skills. He also served as an envoy of the court to the pope. In 790, Angilbert was named the abbot of Saint-Riquier in Picardy, France. Angilbert either rebuilt or restored the abbey and endowed it with two hundred books. In the year 800, Charlemagne came to visit him. Angilbert also fathered two children, having had an affair with Bertha, Charlemagne's daughter. Angilbert did penance for this relationship, and Bertha entered a convent. Nithard, a noted historian of the era and Angilbert's son, wrote of the penance's and austerities undertaken. Angilbert died on February 18, 814. Some years after his burial, his body was found to be incorrupt.


For the author of "Verses on the Battle that was Fought at Fontenoy", see Angelbert.

Angilbert (c. 760 – 18 February 814),[1] sometimes known as Saint Angilbert or Angilberk or Engelbert, was a noble Frankish poet who was educated under Alcuin and served Charlemagne as a secretary, diplomat, and son-in-law. He was venerated as a pre-Congregation saint and is still honored on the day of his death, 18 February.



Life

Angilbert seems to have been brought up at the court of Charlemagne at the palace school in Aquae Grani (Aachen). He was educated there as the pupil and then friend of the great English scholar Alcuin. When Charlemagne sent his young son Pepin to Italy as King of the Lombards Angilbert went along as primicerius palatii, a high administrator of the satellite court.[1] As the friend and adviser of Pepin, he assisted for a while in the government of Italy. Angilbert delivered the document on Iconoclasm from the Frankish Synod of Frankfurt to Pope Adrian I, and was later sent on three important embassies to the pope, in 792, 794, and 796.[2] At one time, he served an officer of the maritime provinces.[3] He accompanied Charlemagne to Rome in 800[4] and was one of the witnesses to his will in 811.[2]


There are various traditions concerning Angilbert's relationship with Bertha, daughter of Charlemagne. One holds that they were married,[4] another that they were not.[3] They had, however, at least two sons and one daughter, one of whom, Nithard, became a notable figure in the mid-9th century,[2] and the daughter Bertha, went on to marry Helgaud II, count of Ponthieu. Control of marriage and the meanings of legitimacy were hotly contested in the Middle Ages. Bertha and Angilbert are an example of how resistance to the idea of a sacramental marriage could coincide with holding church offices. On the other hand, some historians have speculated that Charlemagne opposed formal marriages for his daughters out of concern for political rivalries from their potential husbands; none of Charlemagne's daughters were married, despite political offers of arranged marriages.


In 790, Angilbert retired to the abbey of Centulum, the "Monastery of St Richarius" (Sancti Richarii monasterium) at present-day Saint-Riquier in Picardy.[4] Elected abbot in 794,[4] he rebuilt the monastery and endowed it with a library of 200 volumes.[1] It was not uncommon for the Merovingian, Carolingian, or later kings to make laymen abbots of monasteries; the layman would often use the income of the monastery as his own and leave the monks a bare minimum for the necessary expenses of the foundation. Angilbert, in contrast, spent a great deal rebuilding Saint-Riquier; when he completed it, Charlemagne spent Easter of the year 800 there. In keeping with Carolingian policies, Angilbert established a school at Saint-Riquier to educate the local boys.[5]


Angilbert's Latin poems reveal the culture and tastes of a man of the world, enjoying the closest intimacy with the imperial family.[2] Charlemagne and the other men at court were known by affectionate and jesting nicknames. Charlemagne was referred to as "David", a reference to the Biblical king David.[6] Angilbert was nicknamed "Homer" because he wrote poetry,[3] and was the probable author of an epic, of which the fragment which has been preserved describes the life at the palace and the meeting between Charlemagne and Leo III. It is a mosaic from Virgil, Ovid, Lucan and Venantius Fortunatus, composed in the manner of Einhard's use of Suetonius.[2] Of the shorter poems, besides the greeting to Pippin on his return from the campaign against the Avars (796), an epistle to David (i.e., Charlemagne) incidentally reveals a delightful picture of the poet living with his children in a house surrounded by pleasant gardens near the emperor's palace. The reference to Bertha, however, is distant and respectful, her name occurring merely on the list of princesses to whom he sends his salutation.



 St. Agatha Lin

#புனித_ஆகத்தா_லின் (1817-1858)


பிப்ரவரி 18


இவர்‌ (#StAgatha_Lin) சீனாவைச் சார்ந்தவர். இறைவன்மீது ஆழமான நம்பிக்கை கொண்டிருந்த ஒரு கத்தோலிக்க குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்த இவர், தனது பெற்றோரைப் போன்றே இறை நம்பிக்கையில் வளர்ந்து வந்தார். 


இவர் சிறுவயது முதலே தன்னை ஆண்டவருக்கு அர்ப்பணித்து வாழ்ந்து வந்தார். சிசிலி நகர்ப் புனித ஆகத்தாவைத் தன் முன்மாதிரியாகக் கொண்ட இவர் வாழ்ந்த காலத்தில், சீனாவில் கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கு எதிரான அடக்குமுறைகள் மிகுதியாக இருந்தன. அந்நிலையிலும் இவரும் இவரது பெற்றோரும் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவில் உறுதியாக இருந்தார்கள்.


ஒருமுறை எதிரிகள் இவரது தந்தையைப் பிடித்துக்கொண்டு போய், சிறையில் அடைத்து வைத்துப் பலவாறாகச் சித்திரவதை செய்து அனுப்பி வைத்தனர். அப்போதும் இவர் இயேசுவில் நம்பிக்கையோடு இருந்தார்.


இவர் வளர்ந்து பெரியவரான போது ஆசிரியராகி மாணவர்களுக்கு அடிப்படைக் கல்வியையும் மறைக்கல்வியையும் கற்றுக் கொடுத்தார். இதனால் பலரும் இயேசுவின் மீது நம்பிக்கை கொண்டார்கள். இச்செய்தியை அறிந்த எதிரிகள் இவரைக் கைது செய்து துன்புறுத்தினார்கள்.‌ மேலும் இவரை 1858 ஆம் ஆண்டு தலைவெட்டிக் கொன்று போட்டார்கள்.


இவருக்கு 1909 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை பத்தாம் பயஸ் அவர்களால் அருளாளர் பட்டமும், 2000 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான்பால் அவர்களால் புனிதர் பட்டமும் அளிக்கப்பட்டன.

Feastday: February 18

Birth: 1817

Death: 1858

Canonized: Pope John Paul II





Chinese martyr. She was born in 1817 at Ma-Tchang, China. A teacher at a Christian school, Agatha was beheaded for the faith in Mao-kin on January 28, 1858. She was beatified on May 2, 1909.


This article is about the Catholic martyrs of the Boxer Rebellion. For the Protestant martyrs, see China Martyrs of 1900. For other martyrs, see Chinese Martyrs.

The Martyr Saints of China, or Augustine Zhao Rong and his 119 companions, are saints of the Catholic Church. The 87 Chinese Catholics and 33 Western missionaries[1] from the mid-17th century to 1930 were martyred because of their ministry and, in some cases, for their refusal to apostatize.


Many died in the Boxer Rebellion, in which anti-colonial peasant rebels slaughtered 30,000 Chinese converts to Christianity along with missionaries and other foreigners.


In the ordinary form of the Latin Rite, they are remembered with an optional memorial on July 9.



The 17th and 18th centuries

On January 15, 1648, during the Manchu Invasion to Ming China, Manchu Tatars, having invaded the region of Fujian and Francisco Fernández de Capillas, a Dominican priest aged 40.[2] After having imprisoned and tortured him, they beheaded him while he recited with others the Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary. Father de Capillas has since been recognised by the Holy See as the protomartyr of China.


After the first wave of missionary activities in China during the late Ming to early Qing dynasties, the Qing government officially banned Catholicism (Protestantism was considered outlawed by the same decree, as it was linked to Catholicism) in 1724 and lumped it together with other 'perverse sects and sinister doctrines' in Chinese folk religion.[3]


While Catholicism continued to exist and increase many-fold in areas beyond the government's control (Sichuan notably), and many Chinese Christians fled the persecution to go to port cities in Guangdong or to Indonesia, where many translations of Christian works into Chinese occurred during this period, there were also many missionaries who broke the law and secretly entered the forbidden mainland territory.[3] They eluded Chinese patrol boats on the rivers and coasts; however, some of them were caught and put to death.


Towards the middle of the 18th century five Spanish missionaries, who had carried out their activity between 1715–1747, were put to death as a result of a new wave of persecution that started in 1729 and broke out again in 1746. This was in the epoch of the Yongzheng Emperor and of his successor, the Qianlong Emperor.


Peter Sanz, O.P., bishop, was martyred on May 26, 1747, in Fuzhou.

All four of the following were killed on October 28, 1748:


Francis Serrano, O.P., vicar apostolic and bishop-elect

Joachim Royo, O.P., priest

John Alcober, O.P., priest

Francis Diaz, O.P., priest.

Early 19th-century martyrdoms

A new period of persecution in regard to the Christian religion occurred in the 19th century.


While Catholicism had been authorised by some Chinese emperors in the preceding centuries, the Jiaqing Emperor published, instead, numerous and severe decrees against it. The first was issued in 1805. Two edicts of 1811 were directed against those among the Chinese who were studying to receive sacred orders, and against priests who were propagating the Christian religion. A decree of 1813 exonerated voluntary apostates from every chastisement – that is, Christians who spontaneously declared that they would abandon their faith – but all others were to be dealt with harshly.


In this period the following underwent martyrdom:


Peter Wu, a Chinese lay catechist. Born of a pagan family, he received baptism in 1796 and passed the rest of his life proclaiming the truth of the Christian religion. All attempts to make him apostatize were in vain. The sentence having been pronounced against him, he was strangled on November 7, 1814.

Joseph Zhang Dapeng, a lay catechist, and a merchant. Baptised in 1800, he had become the heart of the mission in the city of Guiyang. He was imprisoned, and then strangled to death on March 12, 1815.

Also in the same year, there came two other decrees, with which approval was given to the conduct of the Viceroy of Sichuan who had beheaded Monsignor Dufresse, of the Paris Foreign Missions Society, and some Chinese Christians. As a result, there was a worsening of the persecution.


The following martyrs belong to this period:


Gabriel-Taurin Dufresse, M.E.P., Bishop. He was arrested on May 18, 1815, taken to Chengdu, condemned and executed on September 14, 1815.

Augustine Zhao Rong, a Chinese diocesan priest. Having first been one of the soldiers who had escorted Monsignor Dufresse from Chengdu to Beijing, he was moved by his patience and had then asked to be numbered among the neophytes. Once baptised, he was sent to the seminary and then ordained a priest. Arrested, he was tortured and died in 1815.[4]

John da Triora, O.F.M., priest. Put in prison together with others in the summer of 1815, he was then condemned to death, and strangled on February 7, 1816.

Joseph Yuan, a Chinese diocesan priest. Having heard Monsignor Dufresse speak of the Christian faith, he was overcome by its beauty and then became an exemplary neophyte. Later, he was ordained a priest and, as such, was dedicated to evangelisation in various districts. He was arrested in August 1816, condemned to be strangled, and was killed in this way on June 24, 1817.

Paul Liu Hanzuo, a Chinese diocesan priest, killed in 1819.

Francis Regis Clet of the Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians). After obtaining permission to go to the missions in China, he embarked for the Orient in 1791. Having reached there, for 30 years he spent a life of missionary sacrifice. Upheld by an untiring zeal, he evangelised three immense Chinese provinces: Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan. Betrayed by a Christian, he was arrested and thrown into prison where he underwent atrocious tortures. Following sentence by the Jiaqing Emperor he was killed by strangling on February 17, 1820.

Thaddeus Liu, a Chinese diocesan priest. He refused to apostatize, saying that he was a priest and wanted to be faithful to the religion that he had preached. Condemned to death, he was strangled on November 30, 1823.

Peter Liu, a Chinese lay catechist. He was arrested in 1814 and condemned to exile in Tartary, where he remained for almost twenty years. Returning to his homeland he was again arrested, and was strangled on May 17, 1834.

Joachim Ho, a Chinese lay catechist. He was baptised at the age of about twenty years. In the great persecution of 1814 he had been taken with many others of the faithful and subjected to cruel torture. Sent into exile in Tartary, he remained there for almost twenty years. Returning to his homeland he was arrested again and refused to apostatize. Following that, and the death sentence having been confirmed by the Emperor, he was strangled on July 9, 1839.

John Gabriel Perboyre, C.M., entered the Vincentians as a high school student. The death of his younger brother, also a Vincentian priest, moved his superiors to allow him to take his brother's place, arriving in China in 1835. Despite poor health, he served the poverty-stricken residents of Hubei. Arrested during a revival of anti-Christian persecution, upon imperial edict, he was strangled to death in 1840.

Augustus Chapdelaine, M.E.P., a priest of the Diocese of Coutances. He entered the Seminary of the Paris Foreign Missions Society, and embarked for China in 1852. He arrived in Guangxi at the end of 1854. Arrested in 1856, he was tortured, condemned to death in prison, and died in February 1856.

Lawrence Bai Xiaoman, a Chinese layman, and an unassuming worker. He joined Blessed Chapdelaine in the refuge that was given to the missionary and was arrested with him and brought before the tribunal. Nothing could make him renounce his religious beliefs. He was beheaded on February 25, 1856.

Agnes Cao Guiying, a widow, born into an old Christian family. Being dedicated to the instruction of young girls who had recently been converted by Blessed Chapdelaine, she was arrested and condemned to death in prison. She was executed on March 1, 1856.

Martyrs of Maokou and Guizhou


Saint Paul Chen

Three catechists, known as the Martyrs of Maokou (in the province of Guizhou) were killed on January 28, 1858, by order of the officials in Maokou[citation needed]:


Jerome Lu Tingmei

Laurence Wang Bing

Agatha Lin

All three had been called on to renounce the Christian religion and having refused to do so were condemned to be beheaded.


In Guizhou, two seminarians and two lay people, one of whom was a farmer, the other a widow who worked as a cook in the seminary, suffered martyrdom together on July 29, 1861. They are known as the Martyrs of Qingyanzhen (Guizhou):


Joseph Zhang Wenlan, seminarian

Paul Chen Changpin]], seminarian

John Baptist Luo Tingyin]], layman

Martha Wang Luo Mande]], laywoman

In the following year, on February 18 and 19, 1862, another five people gave their life for Christ. They are known as the Martyrs of Guizhou.


Jean-Pierre Néel, a priest of the Paris Foreign Missions Society,

Martin Wu Xuesheng, lay catechist,

John Zhang Tianshen, lay catechist,

John Chen Xianheng, lay catechist,

Lucy Yi Zhenmei, lay catechist.

19th-century social and political developments

In June 1840, Qing China was forced to open to open the borders and afforded multiple concessions to European Christian missions after the First Opium War, including allowing the Chinese to follow the Catholic religion and restoring the property confiscated in 1724.[3] The 1844 treaty also allowed for missionaries to come to China, provided if they come to the treaty ports opened to Europeans.


The subsequent Taiping Rebellion significantly worsened the image of Christianity in China. Hong Xiuquan, the rebel leader, claimed to be a Christian and brother of Jesus who received a special mission from God to fight evil and usher in a period of peace. Hong and his followers achieved considerable success in taking control of a large territory, and destroyed many Buddhist and Taoist shrines, temples to local divinities and opposed Chinese folk religion.[3] The rebellion was one of the bloodiest armed conflicts in human history, accounting for an estimated number of 20-30 million deaths. As missionary activities became increasingly associated with European imperialism, violence against missionaries arose.[3]


In 1856, the death of missionary Augustus Chapedelaine trigged a French military expedition during the Second Opium War, which China lost. The resulting Treaty of Tientsin, granted Christian missionaries the freedom of movement throughout China and the right to land ownership.[3]


As missionaries started to build churches or schools in offensive locations like old temples or near official buildings, tensions with the local Chinese population arose. The missionaries also abolished indigenous Chinese Catholic institutions that had survived the imperial ban.[3] In some regions, Catholic missionaries started "quarantining" new Chinese converts from the hostile social environment as they see the mission as "enclaves of Christianity in an alien world". The separation sparked conspiracy theories about the Christians and eventually accumulated in a the massacre of 60 people in a Catholic orphanage.[3] In comparison, Protestant missions were less secretive and treated more favorably by the authorities.[3]


Chinese literati and gentry produced a pamphlet attacking Christian beliefs as socially subversive and irrational. Incendiary handbills and fliers distributed to crowds were also produced, and were linked to outbreaks of violence against Christians. Sometimes, no such official incitement was needed in order to provoke the populace to attack Christians. For example, among the Hakka people in southeastern China, Christian missionaries frequently flouted village customs that were linked with local religions, including refusal to take part in communal prayers for rain (and because the missionaries benefitted from the rain, it was argued that they had to do their part in the prayers) and refusing to contribute funds to operas for Chinese gods (these same gods honoured in these village operas were the same spirits that the Boxers called to invoke in themselves, during the later rebellion).[3]


Catholic missions offered protection to those who came to them, including criminals, fugitives from the law, and rebels against the government; this also led to hostile attitudes developing against the missions by the government.[3]


Boxer Rebellion

And so passed an era of expansion in the Christian missions, with the exception of the period in which they were struck by the uprising by the "Society for Justice and Harmony" (commonly known as the "Boxers"). This occurred at the beginning of the 20th century and caused the shedding of the blood of many Christians.


It is known[citation needed] that mingled in this rebellion were all the secret societies and the accumulated and repressed hatred against foreigners in the last decades of the 19th century, because of the political and social changes following the Second Opium War and the imposition of the so-called unequal treaties on China by the Western Powers.


Very different, however, was the motive for the persecution of the missionaries, even though they were of European nationalities. Their slaughter was brought about solely on religious grounds. They were killed for the same reason as the Chinese faithful who had become Christians. Reliable historical documents provide evidence of the anti-Christian hatred which spurred the Boxers to massacre the missionaries and the Christians of the area who had adhered to their teaching. In this regard, an edict[citation needed] was issued on July 1, 1900, which, in substance, said that the time of good relations with European missionaries and their Christians was now past: that the former must be repatriated at once and the faithful forced to apostatize, on penalty of death.


Following the failure of the Boxer Rebellion, China was further subject to Western spheres of influence, which in turn led to a booming conversion period in the following decades. The Chinese developed respect for the moral level that Christians maintained in their hospital and schools.[3] The continuing association between Western imperialism in China and missionary efforts nevertheless continued to fuel hostilities against missions and Christianity in China. All missions were banned in China by the new communist regime after the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, and officially continue to be legally outlawed to the present.




St. Charalampias


Feastday: February 18

Death: 203



Martyr of Magnesia, in Asia Minor, with companions. He was a priest taken in the persecution of Emperor Septimius Severus. He was martyred with two soldiers and three women.




Saint Jean-François-Régis Clet



Profile

Tenth of fifteen children; his father was a farmer and merchant, and the boy was named after Saint John Francis Regis. He was raised in a pious family; one brother became a priest, one sister a nun. Studied at the Jesuit Royal College at Grenoble, France. Joined the Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians) in Lyons, France on 6 March 1769, making his final vows in 1771. Ordained in 1773. Professor of moral theology at the Vincentian seminary in Annecy, France. Nicknamed "the walking library" due to his encyclopedic knowledge. Rector of Annecy in 1786. Director of novices in Paris in 1788. Director of the internal seminary at mother-house of the Congregation of the Lazarists in Paris, France. His community was disbanded, and their house destroyed by the French Revolutionists. Missionary to China in 1791. Assigned to Kiang-si in October 1792, the only European in the area; in 28 years of work, he never mastered the language. In 1793 Clet moved to Hou-Kouang in the Hopei Province where he served as superior of an international group of Vincentian missioners scattered over a very large territory; his pastoral area covered 270,000 square miles. In 1811 government anti-Christian persecutions intensified; the missionaries were accused of inciting rebellion, and had to pursue their work while on the run, often hiding in the mountains. On 16 June 1819, with a bounty on his head, Francis was betrayed by a Christian schoolmaster whose behavior the missionary had tried to correct. Force marched hundreds of miles in chains to trial. On 1 January 1820 he was found guilty of deceiving the Chinese people by preaching Christianity. Martyr.


Born

1748 at Grenoble, France


Died

• slowly strangled to death with a rope while tied on a cross on 18 February 1820 at Au-tshung-fu, China

• buried on Red Mountain by local Christians

• re-interred at the Vincentian motherhouse, Paris, France

• relics moved to Saint Lazare church, Paris


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Theotonius of Coimbra


Also known as

Teotonio



Profile

Nephew of the bishop of Coimbra, Portugal. Educated at the University of Coimbra. Parish priest, assigned to Viseu, Portugal. His powerful and outspoken preaching against vice gained him a great reputation, the animosity of the ruling class, and the affection of the king and queen. Counselor to the throne. Rebuked the queen for adultery, and refused a bishopric from her, seeing it as an attempt to buy his affection. He was once asked by the queen to shorten a Mass so she could attend to other business; he send back word that he answered to true sovereigns, and the queen was free to stay or go as she liked.


Theotinus had a great devotion to the poor, and to souls in purgatory. Each Friday he combined these devotions by singing a Solemn Mass for the dead, leading a large procession to the cemetery to pray for the local dead, collecting alms there, and distributing the money to the local poor.


Twice a pilgrim to the Holy Lands. Augustinian Canon Regular, which order he helped bring to Portugal in 1131, entering the monastery at Coimbra. Spent his last 30 years there as monk and prior. Devoted to the daily offices, never allowing the monks to hurry through them. King Alphonsus attributed his victories to the prayers of Theotonius and his brothers, and in gratitude, free all his Mozarabic Christian captives. First Portuguese saints canonized by the modern method.


Born

1086 at Gonfeo, Spain


Died

1166 of natural causes


Canonized

• 1167 by the Portguese bishops

• cultus confirmed by Pope Benedict XIV




Blessed Jerzy Kaszyra


Also known as

• George Kashira

• George Kaszyra

• Juryj Kašyra

• Giorgio, Jerzy, Yuri


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Martyrs of World War II



Profile

Raised in an Orthodox family, George converted to Roman Catholicism in 1922 at age 18. He joined the Marians of the Immaculate Conception in 1924 in Druya, Belarus, and made his profession on 2 August 1929. He studied theology and philosophy in Rome, Italy, then at the seminary of Vilnius, Lithuania. Ordained a priest on 20 June 1935. He taught catechism in Druja, and in the seminary in Vilnius.


In 1938, Polish authorities ordered Father George to end his pastoral work in western Belarus; he moved to the monastery of Rasno in eastern Belarus and continued his work. In 1940, Soviet authorities, in line with their atheist ideology, kicked him out of the monastery; Father George travelled the area of Belarus and Lithuania, staying at assorted monasteries and continuing his work. On 18 February 1943 the occupation Nazis accused him of helping the partisans, and with several other Catholics, he was locked in the basement of a church which was then set on fire, killing them all. Martyr.


Born

4 April 1904 in Aleksandravele, Vilniaus rajonas, Lithuania


Died

burned alive on 18 February 1943 in Rositsa (Rosica), Vitebskaya voblasts', Belarus


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Tarasius of Constantinople



Also known as

Tarasio, Tarasios


Additional Memorial

25 February (Byzantine Rite)



Profile

Born to the Byzantine nobility. Consul and then Secretary of State to Emperor Constantine IV and Empress Irene. Though a courtier in the most political of empires, he led the life of a monk. Unanimously chosen Patriarch of Constantinople; Tarasius said that he could not accept such a trust when his see was cut off from full commuion with Rome, which had happened under his predecessor. He convoked a Council on 1 August 786 to settle the dispute of the use of holy images, but Iconoclasts rioted, and the Council was reconvened in 787 in Nicea; the Council determined that the Church was in favour of images, and the Pope approved. Tarasius lived an ascetic life, eating simply and little, sleeping little, reading, praying, working for the Church. When the emperor put away his wife and got a priest to “marry” him to a servant, Tarasius condemned the action and was briefly imprisoned for his defiance.


Born

c.750 at Constantinople


Died

• 25 February 806 of natural causes

• relics preserved in the church of San Zaccaria, Venice, Italy




Saint Simon

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஃபெப்ரவரி 18)


✠ எருசலேம் நகர் புனிதர் சிமியோன் ✠

(St. Simeon of Jerusalem)


ஆயர் மற்றும் மறைசாட்சி:

(Bishop and Martyr)


பிறப்பு: தெரியவில்லை

கலிலேயா, யூதேயா பிராந்தியம்

(Galilee, Judaea Province)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 107 அல்லது கி.பி. 117

ஜெருசலேம், யூதேயா பிராந்தியம்

(Jerusalem, Judaea Province)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

லூதரன் திருச்சபை

(Lutheran Church)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 18


புனிதர் சிமியோன், ஒரு யூத கிறிஸ்தவ தலைவரும் (Jewish Christian Leader), பெரும்பாலான கிறிஸ்தவ பாரம்பரியங்களின்படி, ஜெருசலேம் நகரின் இரண்டாவது ஆயரும் ஆவார்.


புனிதர் யூசேபியஸ் (St. Eusebius of Caesarea) இங்கே ஆயர்களின் அட்டவணையைத் தருகின்றார். அகில உலக பாரம்பரியங்களின்படி, "ஆண்டவரின் சகோதரர் எனப்படும் புனிதர் ஜேம்ஸ்" (Saint James the Just, the "brother of the Lord) ஜெருசலேம் நகரின் முதலாவது ஆயராவார். புனிதர் ஜேம்சை ஜெருசலேமின் முதலாவது ஆயராக நியமனம் செய்தது, அப்போஸ்தலர்கள் புனிதர் பேதுருவும் புனிதர் யோவானும் (Apostles St. Peter and St. John) ஆவர் என்று புனிதர் யூசேபியஸ் கூறுகிறார்.


புனிதர் ஜேம்ஸ் மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்ததன் பிறகு, ஜெருசலேமின் வெற்றிக்குப் பிறகு, புனிதர் ஜேம்ஸின் பின்வருபவராக புனிதர் சிமியோன் ஜெருசலேமின் ஆயராக தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டார்.


புனிதர் ஜேம்ஸ் மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்து, ஜெருசலேம் வெற்றிபெற்றதும் பல்வேறு திசைகளிலிருந்தும் அப்போது உயிருடனிருந்த ஆண்டவரின் சீடர்களும் அப்போஸ்தலர்களும் ஜேம்சுக்குப் பிறகு ஜெருசலேமின் ஆயராக பொறுப்பேற்கப் போவது யார் என்று ஆலோசனை செய்வதற்காக ஜெருசலேம் நகரில் ஒன்றுகூடினர். அவர்களது ஆலோசனையின் முடிவில், சிமியோனை ஒருமனதாக தேர்வு செய்தனர்.


கி.பி. சுமார் 107 அல்லது 117ம் ஆண்டு, ரோமப் பேரரசன் "ட்ராஜன்" (Roman emperor Trajan) என்பவரது கட்டளைப்படி, பண்டைய ரோம் நாட்டில் ஏகாதிபத்திய அதிகாரம் கொண்ட ஆளுநராக இருந்த "டிபேரியஸ்" (Tiberius Claudius Atticus Herodes) என்பவன் சிமியோனை சிலுவையில் அறைந்து கொன்றான்.

Also known as

Simeon



Profile

A relative of Jesus, possibly a first cousin. He is mentioned in the Gospel of Matthew, and was one of the 72 disciples. He was present at the Ascension, and is one of the brethren of Christ mentioned in Acts who was present at the birth of the Church on the first Pentecost. Reported to have been at the martyrdom of Saint James the Lesser, he was chosen to succeed James as bishop of Jerusalem where he served for over 40 years. In 66, before the city fell to the Romans, the Christians received a divine warning, and evacuated to nearby Pella with Simon as their leader. In the aftermath of the destruction of Jerusalem, Simon led the Christians back to the city where they flourished, performed miracles, and converted many. Simon was eventually arrested, tortured and martyred for the twin crimes of being Jewish and Christian during the persecutions of Trajan.


Died

crucified in 106



Blessed Fra Angelico


Also known as

• Angelico of Fiesole

• Beato Angelico

• Fra Giovanni

• Giovanni da Fiesole

• Guido di Pietro

• John of Fiesole

• Painter of the Angels



Profile

Joined the Dominicans in Fiesole, Italy in 1407, taking the name Fra Giovanna. He was taught to illuminate missals and manuscripts, and immediately exhibited a natural talent as an artist. Today his works can be seen in the Italian cities Cortona, Fiesole, Florence, and in the Vatican. His dedication to religious art earned him the title Angelico.


Born

1387 in Vicchio di Mugello near Florence, Italy as Guido di Pietro


Died

18 February 1455 in the Dominican convent in Rome, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

3 October 1982 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Angilbert of Centula

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஃபெப்ரவரி 18)


✠ புனிதர் ஆங்கில்பெர்ட் ✠

(St. Angilbert)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 760


இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 18, 814

ரிக்குயர் (Riquier), ஃபிரான்ஸ்


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1100

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் அர்பன்

(Pope Urban II)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 18


புனிதர் ஆங்கில்பெர்ட், “நார்தும்ப்ரியா’வைச்” (Northumbria) சேர்ந்த பிரபல ஆங்கிலேய அறிஞரும், கவிஞரும், ஆசிரியருமான “அல்குயின்” (Alcuin) என்பவரிடம் கல்வி கற்ற ஒரு உன்னதமான ஃபிரான்கிஷ் கவிஞர் ஆவார். இவர், “ஃபிராங்க்ஸ்” (Franks) மற்றும் “லொம்பார்ட்ஸ்” (Lombards) அரசனும், கி.பி. 800ம் ஆண்டுமுதல் தூய ரோமப் பேரரசருமான (Holy Roman Emperor) “சார்ல்மக்ன்” (Charlemagne) என்றழைக்கப்படும் “முதலாம் சார்லசின்” (Charles I) மருமகனும், அவரது அரசவையில் பணியாற்றிய அரசு செயலாளரும், ராஜதந்திரியுமாவார்.


அரசன் முதலாம் சார்லசால் (Charles I) வளர்க்கப்பட்ட ஆங்கில்பெர்ட், அரண்மனை பள்ளியிலேயே கல்வியும் கற்றார். பிரபல ஆங்கிலேய அறிஞர் “அல்குயின்” (Alcuin) மாணவரான இவர், பின்னாளில் அவரது நண்பருமானார். அரசன் முதலாம் சார்லஸ், தமது இளைய மகனான “பெபின்” (Pepin) என்பவரை “லொம்பார்ட்ஸ்” (King of the Lombards) அரசனாக பதவியேற்க இத்தாலி அனுப்பினார். அப்போது, அவருக்கு துணையாகவும், அரசவையின் உயர் நிர்வாகியாகவும் ஆங்கில்பெர்ட்டை உடன் அனுப்பினார். அரசன் பெபினின் நண்பராகவும், ஆலோசகராகவும் இத்தாலியின் ஆட்சியிலும், அரசாங்கத்திலும் உதவினார். இவர், மேற்கு ஜெர்மனியின் (Western Germany) “ஃபிரான்க்ஃபர்ட்” (Frankfurt) நகரில் நடந்த ஆலோசனை சபையின் (Synod) அறிக்கைகளை (Document on Iconoclasm) திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் அட்ரியானிடம் (Pope Adrian I) கையளித்தார். பின்னர், கி.பி. 792, 794, மற்றும் 796ம் ஆண்டுகளின் நடந்த மூன்று முக்கிய வெளிநாட்டு தூதரகங்களுக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டார். ஒரு சமயம், அவர் கடல் மாகாணங்களில் ஒரு அதிகாரியாகவும் பணியாற்றினார். அவர் கி.பி. 800ம் ஆண்டு, முதலாம் சார்லசுடன் ரோமுக்குச் சென்றார். கி.பி. 811ம் ஆண்டு, “சார்ல்மக்ன்” (Charlemagne) என்றழைக்கப்படும் தூய ரோமப் பேரரசர் (Holy Roman Emperor) “முதலாம் சார்லசின்” (Charles I) சொத்து உரிமை ஏற்பாடுகளான மரண சாசனத்தை (Testament of Charlemagne) நேரில் பார்த்த பதினோரு சாட்சிகளின் இவரும் ஒருவராவார்.


முதலாம் சார்லசின் மகளான “பெர்த்தா’வுக்கும்” (Bertha) ஆங்கில்பெர்ட்டுக்குமான உறவுகளைப் பற்றின வெவ்வேறு மரபுகள் உள்ளன. அவர்கள் திருமணம் செய்து கொண்டார்கள் என்று ஒரு மரபும், இல்லையென்று பிறிதொன்றும் கூறுகின்றன. எவ்வாறாயினும், அவர்களுக்கு இரண்டு மகன்களும் ஒரு மகளும் பிறந்தனர். அதிலொருவர், ஒன்பதாம் நூற்றாண்டின் மத்தியில் பிரபலமான “நிதார்ட்” (Nithard) ஆவார். பின்னர், பெர்த்தா, பிரபுவான “இரண்டாம் ஹெல்கௌட்” (Helgaud II, count of Ponthieu) என்பவரை திருமணம் செய்து கொண்டார். திருமணத்தின் கட்டுப்பாடுகள் மற்றும் சட்டபூர்வமான அர்த்தங்கள் மத்திய காலங்களில் கடுமையாக போட்டியிட்டன. பெர்த்தா மற்றும் ஆங்கிள்ட்பெர்ட், திருச்சபைகள் நடத்தும் புனிதமான திருமண அருட்சாதன யோசனைக்கு எவ்வாறு எதிர்ப்புத் தெரிவிப்பது என்பதற்கான ஒரு எடுத்துக்காட்டு ஆவர். மறுபுறம், சார்ல்மக்ன் தனது மகள்களுக்கான தகுதிவாய்ந்த திருமணங்களை எதிர்த்து நின்றார் என்று, சில வரலாற்றாசிரியர்கள் யூகிக்கின்றனர். திருமண ஏற்பாடுகளின் அரசியல் வாய்ப்புகள் இருந்தாலும், சார்ல்மக்ன் மகள்களில் யாரும் திருமணம் செய்து கொள்ளவில்லை.


கி.பி. 790ம் ஆண்டு, அவர் தமது பரபரப்பான அரசியல் வாழ்க்கையிலிருந்து ஓய்வு பெற்று, “சென்டுலும் மடாலயம்” (Abbey of Centulum) என்றழைக்கப்படும் “தூய ரிச்சாரியஸ் துறவு மடம்” (Monastery of St Richarius) சென்றார். கி.பி. 794ம் ஆண்டு, மடாதிபதியாக தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டார். அவர் மடாலயத்தை மீண்டும் கட்டியெழுப்பினார் மற்றும் 200 பாகங்களுடன் கூடிய ஒரு நூலகத்தையும் அதற்கு வழங்கினார். உள்ளூர் சிறுவர்களுக்காக ஒரு பள்ளியையும் நிறுவி நடத்தினார்.


அவரது லத்தீன் கவிதைகள், அரச குடும்பங்களுடன் நெருங்கிய உறவை அனுபவிக்கும் உலகின் மனிதனின் கலாச்சாரம் மற்றும் சுவைகளை வெளிப்படுத்துகின்றன.

Also known as

Homer



Profile

Raised at the court of Charlemagne, and became his friend and confidante. Studied under Alcuin. Nicknamed "Homer" because of his Latin poetry. Married to Charlemagne's daughter Bertha. With her permission he turned to religious life when prayers for a successful resistance to a Danish invasion were answered and a storm scattered the Danish fleet; Bertha became a nun. Benedictine monk. Court chaplain, privy councilor, and diplomat. As a reward for his help in court, Charlemagne gave Angilbert the abbey of Saint Riquier in Centula where he served as abbot. He established a library at Centula, and introduced continuous chanting in the abbey using 300 monks and 100 boys in relays. Executor of the emperor's will.


Born

c.740


Died

18 February 814 of natural causes




Saint Colman of Lindisfarne


Also known as

Colman of Mayo



Profile

Spiritual student and disciple of Saint Columba. Monk at Iona. Bishop of Lindisfarne, England in 661. Friend of king Oswy of Northumbria. Defended Celtic church practices against Saint Eilfrid and Saint Agilbert at the Synod of Whitby, and when King Oswy insisted on the use of Latin rites, Colman refused, resigned his see, and in 664 led a group of dissident Irish and English monks first to Scotland, then to the Isle of Innishboffin, and then to Mayo, Ireland. Founded the abbey and diocese of Mayo. One of the great heroes of the faith about whom the Venerable Bede wrote.


Born

c.605 at Connaught, Ireland


Died

8 August 676 at Inishboffin abbey of natural causes




Blessed John Pibush


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Son of Thomas and Jane Pibush. Educated at Rheims, France beginning 4 August 1580. Deacon in 1586. Ordained on 14 March 1587. Returned to England as missioner on 14 January 1588. Arrested at Morton-in-Marsh, Gloucester, England in 1593 for the crime of priesthood. Spent a year in Gatehouse prison, Westminster. Returned to Gloucester, he escaped on 19 February 1594; he was captured the next day at Matson. Sent back to Westminster, he was convicted on 1 July 1595 for the treason of Catholic priesthood. He spent over five years in Queen's Bench prison awaiting execution, ministering to fellow prisoners whenever he could.


Born

at Thirsk, Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged on 18 February 1601 at Saint Thomas's Waterings, Camberwell, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI




Saint Sadoth of Seleucia


Also known as

Sadosh, Sadot, Sadota, Sahdost, Schadost, Schiadustes, Shahdost, Zadok


Profile

Deacon in service to Saint Barbasymas in the diocese of Seleucia-Ctesiphon. Attended the Council of Nicaea in 325. After Saint Barbasymas was martyred, Sadoth was chosen the new bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon. He and his priests went into hiding, covertly ministering to his flock. The forces of King Shapur returned to Seleucia, and Sadoth was arrested along with 128 of his priests, deacons and nuns. Most were immediately executed, but Sadoth and some companions were imprisoned, repeatedly tortured, and offered relief if they would obey the king and worship the sun; they refused.


Died

beheaded c.342 outside the walls of Seleucia, Mesopotamia




Saint Gertrude Caterina Comensoli


Profile

One of a family of eleven children. Member of the Society of Saint Angela Merici. Founder of the Institute of Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament on 15 December 1882.



Born

18 January 1847 in Biennio, Brescia, Italy


Died

18 February 1903 in Bergamo, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

• 26 April 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI

• her canonization miracle involved the cure of 4 year old Vasco Ricchini of life threatening meningitis in 2001 through the prayers of the Sacramentine Sisters for her intercession




Blessed William Harrington


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

After meeting Saint Edmund Campion, William travelled to Rheims, France were he studied for the priesthood. Ordained in 1592, he returned to England to minister to covert Catholics. Arrested in 1593, he was held for several months before being executed for the crime of being a priest. Martyr.


Born

Felixkirk, Borth Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 18 February 1594 at Tyburn, London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI




Saint Jean-Pierre Néel


Also known as

• John Néel

• John Peter Néel


Profile

Jesuit priest. Missionary to Kuy-tsheu, China in 1858. Arrested, tortured and martyred with three of his converts.


Born

18 October 1832 in Soleymieux, Sainte-Catherine-sur-Riviere, France


Died

dragged by his hair by a horse, then beheaded at Kuy-tsheu (Kai-chou), China on 18 February 1862


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Helladius of Toledo


Also known as

Eladio, Eladius



Profile

Minister in the court of Visigoth kings in Toledo, Spain, his heart was in the nearby abbey of Agali. He eventually resigned his position and became a monk there. Abbot in 605. Archbishop of Toledo in 615.


Born

at Toledo, Spain


Died

632 of natural causes




Saint Ioannes Zhang Tianshen


Also known as

• John Zhang Tianshen

• Ruowang


Profile

Married layman in the apostolic vicariate of Guizhou, China. Convert. Catechist. Martyr.


Born

c.1805 in Jiashanlong, Kaiyang City, Guizhou, China


Died

beheaded on 18 February 1862 at Kaiyang, Guizhou, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by PopeJohn Paul II




Saint Martinus Wu Xuesheng


Also known as

Mading, Martin


Profile

Layman in the apostolic vicariate of Guizhou, China. Convert. Catechist. Martyred for sheltering Blessed John Peter Neel.


Born

c.1817 in Chuchangbo, Qingzhen, Guizhou, China


Died

beheaded on 18 February 1862 at Kaiyang, Guizhou, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by PopeJohn Paul II



Saint Ioannes Chen Xianheng


Also known as

• John Chen Xianheng

• Ruowang


Profile

Layman in the apostolic vicariate of Guizhou, China. Convert. Catechist. Martyr.


Born

c.1820 in Chengdu, Sichuan, China


Died

beheaded on 18 February 1862 at Kaiyang, Guizhou, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by PopeJohn Paul II




Saint Constance of Vercelli


Profile

Nun. Sister of Saint Costanzo, bishop of Piedmont, Italy. We know little else about her.


Died

• early 6th century

• relics re-discovered in the 16th century reconstruction of the basilica of Eusebius of Vercelli, interred in the foundations with a placque naming and praising her




Blessed Matthew Malaventino


Profile

Mercedarian friar assigned to ransom Christians from slavery in Muslim north Africa. Along the way, he preached Christianity until he was seized and murdered. Martyr.



Died

thrown off a mountain




Saint Esuperia of Vercelli


Profile

Nun. Sister of Saint Costanzo, bishop of Piedmont, Italy. We know little else about her.


Died

• early 6th century

• relics re-discovered in the 16th century reconstruction of the basilica of Eusebius of Vercelli, interred in the foundations with a placque naming and praising her




Saint Leo of Patera


Profile

Martyred for protesting a pagan festival being held near the grave of Saint Paregorius.


Died

260 at Patara, Lycia




Saint Paregorius of Patara


Profile

Martyr.


Died

260 at Patara, Lycia




Saint Ethelina


Also known as

Eudelme


Profile

No information has survived.


Patronage

Little Sodbury, England




Martyrs in North Africa

Profile

Group of Christians who were martyred together, date unknown. We know nothing else but seven of their names - Classicus, Fructulus, Lucius, Maximus, Rutulus, Secundinus and Silvanus.


Born

African


Died

North Africa



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group of Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. We know nothing else but their names - Alexander, Claudius, Cutias, Maximus and Praepedigna.


Died

295 in Rome, Italy

17 February 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 17

 Servites

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஃபெப்ரவரி 17)


✠ மரியாளின் ஊழியர்கள் சபையின் ஏழு நிறுவனர்கள் ✠

(Seven Founders of the Servite Order)


வகை:

அர்ப்பண வாழ்க்கை நிறுவனம் (Mendicant Order (Institute of Consecrated Life)

மரியான் பக்தி சமுதாயம் (Marian Devotional Society)


உருவாக்கம்: ஆகஸ்ட் 15, 1233


உலகின் வசதி வாய்ப்புள்ள ஏதேனும் ஒரு நகரிலுள்ள ஏழு முக்கிய பிரமுகர்கள் ஒன்றுசேர்ந்து, தங்கள் வீடுகளையும், உத்தியோகங்களையும் விட்டுவிட்டு, நேரடியாக கடவுளுக்கு சேவை செய்வதற்காக அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட ஒரு வாழ்க்கைக்காக தனிமையில் வாழப் போகிறார்கள் என்று நினைக்க இயலுகிறதா? ஆனால், கி.பி. 13ம் நூற்றாண்டின் மத்தியில், இத்தாலி நாட்டின் மேற்கு-மத்திய பிராந்தியமான “டுஸ்கனியின்” (Tuscany) வளர்ந்த, வளமான, பணக்கார தலைநகரான “ஃபுளோரன்ஸ்” (Florence) நகரில் இதுதான் நடந்தது. அரசியல் சச்சரவுகளாலும், "கத்தாரியின்" (Catharism) மதங்களுக்கு எதிரான கொள்கைகளாலும் சின்னாபின்னமாகியிருந்த அக்காலத்தில் அறநெறிகள் குறைவாகவும், சமயங்களும் ஆன்மீக உணர்வுகளும் அர்த்தமற்றதாகவும் தோன்றியது.


கி.பி. 1240ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபுளோரன்ஸ் நகரின் பிரபுக்கள் குடும்பங்களைச் சேர்ந்த எழுவர், பிரார்த்தனைகள் மூலம் கடவுளுக்கு நேரடி சேவை செய்யும் நோக்கில், நகரையும் தமது குடும்பங்களையும் விட்டு விலகி, தனிமை வாழ்வு வாழ பரஸ்பரம் முடிவு செய்தனர். அவர்களது ஆரம்ப பிரச்சினையே, தம்மைச் சார்ந்திருப்பவர்களுக்கு செய்ய வேண்டிய கடமைகளே. காரணம், அவர்களில் இருவர் ஏற்கனவே திருமணமானவர்கள். இருவர் திருமணமாகி, மனைவியை இழந்தவர்கள். அவர்களின் நோக்கமே, தவம் மற்றும் பிரார்த்தனைகளுடனான ஒரு வாழ்க்கை வாழ்வதேயாம். ஆனால், விரைவிலேயே அவர்கள் ஃபுளோரன்ஸ் நகரிலிருந்து தம்மை அடிக்கடி காண வந்த பார்வையாளர்களால் தொந்தரவை உணர்ந்தனர். பின்னர் அவர்கள், “வக்லியா” (Vaglia) எனுமிடத்திலுள்ள “மான்டே செனரியோ” (Monte Senario) துறவு மடத்தின் வனாந்தரமான சரிவுகளுக்கு திரும்பினர்.


கி.பி. 1244ம் ஆண்டு, தூய பீட்டரின் (Saint Peter of Verona) வழிகாட்டுதலின்படி, இச்சிறிய குழு, டொமினிக்கன் சபையினரின் துறவற சீருடையைப் போன்ற சீருடையை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டனர். தூய அகுஸ்தினாரின் (St. Augustine) சட்ட விதிகளின்படி வாழ முடிவு செய்தனர். “மரியாளின் ஊழியர்கள்” (Servants of Mary) எனும் பெயரை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். அதன் குறிக்கோள்கள், அதன் உறுப்பினர்களின் புனிதத்துவமும், நற்செய்தியைப் பிரசங்கிப்பதும், கடவுளின் அதிதூய தாயாரான கன்னி மரியாளின் வியாகுலங்களுக்கு முக்கியத்துவம் தந்து, அவரது பக்தியை பரப்புவதுமாகும்.


ஆரம்பத்திலிருந்தே இச்சபையின் உறுப்பினர்கள், வியாகுல அன்னை மரியாளுக்கு தம்மை அர்ப்பணித்திருந்தனர். இயேசுவின் அன்னைக்கு தமது பக்தியை அர்ப்பணித்த இவர்கள், அன்னை மரியாளின் விருந்தோம்பல் மற்றும் இரக்கத்தினை தமது முத்திரையாக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டனர்.


“மரியாளின் ஊழியர்கள் சபையின்" (Servite Order) ஏழு நிறுவனர்கள் (Seven Holy Founders):

1. புனிதர் போன்ஃபிளியஸ் (St. Buonfiglio dei Monaldi (Bonfilius)

2. புனிதர் பொனஜுன்க்டா (St. Giovanni di Buonagiunta (Bonajuncta)

3. புனிதர் பார்டொலொமியஸ் (St. Amadeus of the Amidei (Bartolomeus)

4. புனிதர் ஹூக் (St. Ricovero dei Lippi-Ugguccioni (Hugh)

5. புனிதர் மனேட்டஸ் (Benedetto dell' Antella (Manettus)

6. புனிதர் சோஸ்டென் (Gherardino di Sostegno (Sostene)

7. புனிதர் அலெக்ஸியஸ் (St. Alessio de' Falconieri (Alexius)


கி.பி. 1888ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், பதினைந்தாம் நாளன்று, திருத்தந்தை “பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ” (Pope Leo XIII), இவர்களனைவரையும் புனிதர்களாக அருட்பொழிவு செய்வித்தார்.

Also known as

• Confraternity of Our Lady

• Order of Servants of Mary

• Servant Friars

• The Seven Holy Founders



About

Named the fifth mendicant order by Pope Martin V, it was founded in 1233 by


• Saint Alexis Falconieri

• Saint Bartholomew degli Amidei

• Saint Benedict dell'Antella

• Saint Buonfiglio Monaldi

• Saint Gherardino Sostegni

• Saint Hugh dei Lippi-Uguccioni

• Saint John Buonagiunta Monetti


On the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1240 the Founders received a vision of Our Lady. She held in her hand the black habit, and a nearby angel bore a scroll reading Servants of Mary. Mary told them,


"You will found a new order, and you will be my witnesses throughout the world. This is your name: Servants of Mary. This is your rule: that of Saint Augustine. And here is your distinctive sign: the black scapular, in memory of my sufferings."


From their first establishment at La Camarzia, near Florence, Italy, they removed to the more secluded Monte Senario where the Blessed Virgin herself conferred on them their habit, instructing them to follow the Rule of Saint Augustine and to admit associates. Official approval was obtained in 1249; confirmed in 1256; suppressed in 1276; definitely approved in 1304; and again by Brief in 1928. The order was so rapidly diffused that by 1285 there were 10,000 members with houses in Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, and early in the 14th century it numbered 100 convents, besides missions in Crete and India. The Reformation reduced the order in Germany, but it flourished elsewhere. Again meeting with political reverses in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, it nevertheless prospered, being established in England in 1867, and in America in 1870. The Servites take solemn vows and venerate in a special manner the Seven Dolors of Our Lady. They cultivate both the interior and the active life, giving missions and teaching.


An affiliation, professing exclusively the contemplative life is that of the Hermits of Monte Senario. Reinstated in France, 1922. Cloistered nuns, forming a Second Order, have been affiliated with the Servites since 1619 when Blessed Benedicta di Rossi called the nuns of her community Servite Hermitesses. They have been established in England, Spain, Italy, the Tyrol, and Germany.


A Third Order, the Mantellate, founded by Saint Juliana Falconieri under Saint Philip Benizi, c.1284, has houses in Italy, France, Spain, England, Canada, and the United States. Secular tertiaries and a confraternity of the Seven Dolors are other branches.


Canonized

1887 by Pope Leo XIII



Blessed Edvige Carboni


Profile

The second child of Giovanni Battista Carboni and Maria Domenica Pinna, Edvige had to leave school at the 4th grade. She felt drawn to the religious life, but stayed at her parents’ home to care for her chronically ill mother; she spent all her free time there in prayer. On 14 July 1911 she received the signs of the stigmata; she tried to hide it and the blood stains that resulted, but it soon became obvious. She moved to Rome, Italy just prior to the outbreak of World War II; she spent the war years working with charities and praying for all the dead. She reported apparitions of Jesus Christ, Saint Anne, Saint Catherine of Siena, Saint Dominic Savio, Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Gemma Galgani, Saint Genaro of Naples, Saint John Bosco, Saint Paul the Apostle, Saint Rita of Cascia, Saint Sebastian, Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, and attacks by demons.



Born

late night of 2 May 1880 in Pozzomaggiore, Sassari, Italy


Died

• 17 February 1952 in Rome, Italy of angina pectoris

• re-interred at the Sanctuary of Santa Maria Goretti in Nettuno, Italy in 2015


Venerated

4 May 2017 by Pope Francis (decree of heroic virtues)


Beatified

• on 7 November 2018, Pope Francis promulgated a decree of a miracle obtained through the intercession of Venerable Edvige

• beatification recognition scheduled for 16 June 2019 in Sardinia, Italy



Blessed Luke Belludi

சபை மாநிலத்தலைவர் லூக்காஸ் பெலூடி Lukas Belludi OFM


பிறப்பு 

1200, 

பதுவை இத்தாலி

இறப்பு 

17 பிப்ரவரி 1285,

பதுவை இத்தாலி


இவர் ஓர் உயர்தர குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். 1220 ஆம் ஆண்டு புனித பிரான்சிஸ் அசிசியாரின் சபையில் சேர்ந்தார். பின்னர் பதுவை நகர் புனித அந்தோனியாரிடம் கல்வி பயின்றார். பெலூடி புனித பிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையில் மிகச் சிறந்தவராக திகழ்ந்தார். இவர் தான் வாழும் போதே கடவுளின் அருளால் பல நோய்களை குணமாக்கினார். சிறப்பாக "புண்களை" குணமாக்குவதில் சிறப்பான வல்லமையைப் பெற்றிருந்தார். இவர் புனித அந்தோனியாரிடம் மிகுந்த நட்பு கொண்டிருந்தார். இதன் விளைவாக அந்தோனியார் இறந்தபிறகு அவரின் பெயரில் 1232 ஆம் ஆண்டு பதுவை நகரில் பேராலயம் ஒன்றை எழுப்பினார். அவர் இவ்வாலயத்தை கட்டிக்கொண்டிருக்கும் போதே கப்புச்சின் சபையின் மாநிலத் தலைவராகத் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். இவர் பதுவை நகர் லூக்காஸ் என்று அழைக்கப்பட்டார். 


இவர் இறந்து 100 ஆண்டுகள் கழித்து 1382 ஆம் ஆண்டு பதுவை நகர் லூக்கா என்ற பெயரில் புனித அந்தோனியாரின் பேராலயத்திற்குள்ளேயே ஆலயம் ஒன்று கட்டப்பட்டது. 1927 ஆம் ஆண்டு மே மாதம் 18 ஆம் நாள் திருத்தந்தை 11 ஆம் பயஸ் திருநிலைப்படுத்தி பிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் மறைப்போதகர் என்ற பெயரை அளித்தார்.

Also known as

Lucas, Lukas



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility. Brought into the Franciscans by Saint Anthony of Padua and Saint Francis of Assisi. Anthony's companion in his travels and preaching, tending to him in his last days and taking Anthony's place upon his death. Guardian of the Friars Minor in the city of Padua.


In 1239 Padua fell, nobles were executed, the mayor and council banished, the university of Padua closed, and the church dedicated to Saint Anthony left unfinished. Luke was expelled, but secretly returned, visiting the tomb of Saint Anthony to pray for help. One night a voice from the tomb assured him that the city would soon be delivered; it was.


Luke was elected provincial minister, and furthered the completion of the great basilica in honor of Anthony. Founded convents. Miracle worker.


Born

c.1200 in Padua, Italy


Died

• c.1285 of natural causes

• relics in the basilica of Saint Anthony




Saint Alexis Falconieri

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஃபெப்ரவரி 17)


✠ புனிதர் அலெக்ஸிஸ் ஃபல்கொனியெரி ✠

(St. Alexis Falconieri)


நிறுவனர்/ ஆன்மபலம் கொண்டவர்:

(Founder and Mystic)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1200

ஃப்ளோரன்ஸ்

(Florence)


இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 17, 1310

செனாரியோ மலை

(Mount Senario)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: டிசம்பர் 1, 1717

திருத்தந்தை பதினோராம் கிளமென்ட்

(Pope Clement XI)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜனவரி 15, 1888

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ

(Pope Leo XIII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:

சேன்டிஸ்ஸிமா அன்னுன்ஸியேடா, ஃப்ளோரன்ஸ்

(Santissima Annunziata, Florence)


பாதுகாவல்:

ஓர்வியேடோ நகர் (இத்தாலி)

(City of Orvieto (Italy)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 17


புனிதர் அலெக்ஸிஸ் ஃபல்கொனியெரி, "செர்வைட் துறவிகள்" (Servite Friars) அல்லது "மரியாளின் சேவகர்கள்" (Servants of Mary) என்றழைக்கப்படும் "செர்வைட் சபை"யை (Servite Order) நிறுவிய ஏழு தூய நிறுவனர்களுள் ஒருவராவார். இவர் மரணமடைந்த தினத்தன்று அனைத்து எழுவரினதும் நினைவுத் திருநாள் கொண்டாடப்படுகின்றது.


அலெக்ஸிஸின் தந்தை "பெர்னார்ட் ஃபல்கொனியெரி" (Bernard Falconieri) ஃப்ளோரன்ஸ் (Florence) மாநிலத்தின் வர்த்தக இளவரசரும், குடியரசின் முன்னணி தலைவர்களுள் ஒருவரும் ஆவார். இவர்களது குடும்பம், "குவெல்ஃப்" (Guelph party) என்ற அரசியல் கட்சியை சார்ந்ததாகும். "குவெல்ஃப்" கட்சியானது, பாரம்பரியப்படி, திருத்தந்தைக்கு ஆதரவாகவும், ரோமப் பேரரசுக்கு எதிராகவும் செயல்படுவதாகும். இவர்கள், ஏகாதிபத்தியவாதிகளை எதிர்த்து வந்தனர்.


அலெக்ஸிஸ் ஆழ்ந்த பணிவுடன் வளர்க்கப்பட்டார். இத்தாலி நாட்டின் வசதியான, கலாச்சாரம் மிகுந்த நகரமொன்றின் வசதி வாய்ப்புள்ள பிரபுவாக வளர்ந்தார். அலெக்ஸிஸ், "லௌடெசி" (Laudesi) எனப்படும் "அதிதூய அர்ச்சிஷ்ட கன்னி மரியாளின் தோழமைக் கூட்டுறவு பக்தி"யில் இணைந்தார். அங்கே, அவர் தமது புனித வாழ்க்கையின் துணைவர்கள் ஆறு பேரை சந்தித்தார்.


கி.பி. 1233ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம், 15ம் நாளன்றும், அலெக்ஸிஸ் மற்றும் அவரது துணைவர்கள் ஆறு பேரும் கடவுளின் அதிதூய அன்னை கன்னி மரியாளின் திருக்காட்சி காணும் பேறு பெற்றார்கள். பின்னர், ஏழு பேரும் இணைந்து "செர்வைட்" (Servites) எனப்படும் “மரியாளின் ஊழியர்கள்” எனும் துறவற சபையைத் தோற்றுவித்தனர். குடும்பம், வர்த்தகம் என, திடீரென அனைத்தையும் ஒரேநாளில் கைவிட்ட அலெக்ஸிஸ் நகருக்கு வெளியே "லா கமார்ஸியா" (La Camarzia) எனும் இடத்திலுள்ள ஒரு வீட்டில் ஓய்வு பெற சென்றார். பின்னர், ஒரு வருடத்தின் பிறகு "செனாரியோ மலை"யில் (Mount Senario) போய் தங்கினார்.


வசதி வாய்ப்புள்ள குடும்பத்து பிள்ளையாக அவர் வளர்ந்த அதே நகரின் தெருக்களில் ஒரு பிச்சைக்காரனாக அலெக்ஸிஸ் வலம்வந்தார். மிகுந்த உண்மையான தாழ்ச்சியுடன் தமது சகோதரர்களுக்காக பிச்சை வேண்டி சுற்றினார். நூற்றுபத்து வயது வரை அவர் வாழ்ந்திருந்தபோதும், குருத்துவம் பெற எப்போதும் மறுத்து வந்திருக்கிறார். தாம் அதற்கு பொருத்தமானவரில்லை என்றே இறுதிவரை கூறினார்.


ஃப்ளோரன்ஸ் நகரின் புறவழியில் உள்ள "கஃபஜ்ஜியோ" (Cafaggio) எனும் இடத்தில் இவரது நேரடி மேற்பார்வையில் கட்டப்பட்ட தேவாலயம் கி.பி. 1252ம் ஆண்டு கட்டி முடிக்கப்பட்டது. இவரது சொந்த மருமகளான “புனிதர் ஜூலியானா ஃபல்கொனியெரி" (Saint Juliana Falconieri) இவரிடமே துறவற பயிற்சி பெற்றவர் ஆவார்.

Also known as

Alessio Falconieri



Profile

One of the Seven Founders of the Servants of Mary; uncle of Saint Juliana Falconieri. Son of Bernard Falconieri, a wealthy Florentine merchant and a Guelph. Joined the Laudesi, also known as the Praisers of Mary, a confraternity of the Blessed Virgin in Florence, Italy c.1225, and in this group met the others who would be the Servite Founders. Received the vision of Mary on 15 August 1233. The other members of the Laudesi were ordained, but Alexis felt himself unworthy, remained a lay-brother, and worked to insure the material and financial requirements of the community, often begging in the street when he had no other resources. Helped build the Servite church at Cafaggio. He was the only one of the seven founders still alive when the Order was approved by Pope Benedict XI in 1304.


Born

13th century at Florence, Italy


Died

17 February 1310 at Monte Sennario, Italy


Canonized

15 January 1887 by Pope Leo XIII


Patronage

Orvieto, Italy



Blessed Isabel Sánchez Romero


Also known as

• Sister Asunción of Saint Joseph

• Sister Ascensión de San José

• Isabella...


Profile

Isabella joined the Dominicans at age 17, taking the name Sister Ascensión de San José; she was known as an obedient, silent, hardworking and humble sister. Imprisoned and abused by anti–Catholic Communist forces in the Spanish Civil War, she was ordered to renounce her faith and blaspheme; her captors apparently thought it would be funny to see a 76 year old nun do so. She refused. She was murdered with a group of fellow Christians, including her nephew Florencio. She was the last one killed, she never stopped praying during the massacre, and her captors decided not to simply shoot her like the others, but to beat her to death with a rock. Martyr.


Born

9 May 1861 in Huéscar, Granada, Spain


Died

skull smashed with a rock on 17 February 1937 at the cemetery in Huéscar, Granada, Spain


Venerated

11 December 2019 by Pope Francis (decree of martyrdom)



Blessed Martí Tarrés Puigpelat


Additional Memorial

6 November as one of the Martyred Franciscan Capuchins of Barcelona



Also know as

Frederic of Berga


Profile

Joined the Franciscan Capuchins on 21 November 1886 in Arenys de Mar, Spain. Ordained on 24 June 1901. Extremely popular preacher. Superior of monasteries in Igualada and Arenys de Mar, Spain. Capuchin visitator of Central America. Provincial superior of his Order. Arrested on 16 February 1937 in a residence where he was hiding from anti-Catholic Marxists forces during the Spanish Civil War; as soon as they determined that he was a priest, he was murdered. Martyr.


Born

8 October 1877 in a farm house outside Berga, Barcelona, Spain


Died

17 February 1937 in Barcelona, Spain


Beatified

• 21 November 2015 by Pope Francis

• celebrated at the cathedral of Santa Creu i Santa Eulàlia, Barcelona, Spain presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Saint Silvinus of Auchy


Also known as

• Silvinus of Therouanne

• Silvin, Silvino


Additional Memorial

15 February at Auchy, France


Profile

Silvinus spent his youth in the courts of King Childeric II and King Thierry III. On the eve of his marriage, he left for a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and decided to turn his back on worldly life. Priest, ordained in Rome, Italy. Regional bishop with his see in Toulouse. Successful travelling evangelist in the area around Thérouanne and Toulouse, and throughout the region that is modern Belgium. Ransomed slaves. In later life he retired to become a Benedictine monk at the abbey of Auchy-les-Moines, Artois, France.


Born

near Toulouse, France


Died

• 15 February 718 at the abbey of Auchy-les-Moines, Artois, France of natural causes

• relics translated to Saint-Bertin's Church at Saint-Omer in 951 to protect them from invading Normans



Saint Fintán of Clonenagh


Also known as

Fintán of Clúain Ednech


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Columba. Austere hermit at Clonenagh, Ireland. Many would-be students gathered around him that he founded a house for them and served as their abbot. He set such an austere example that neighboring monasteries complained they could not keep up; though he was very severe on himself, Fintan was known to be gentle and forgiving with others. Spiritual teacher of Saint Comgall of Bangor.


Legend says that Fintan's mother received an angelic visit to explain what a holy son she would have. Fintan was reputed to have the gifts of prophecy and knowledge of distant events. Witnesses say that when he prayed by himself, he was surrounded by light.


Born

at Leinster, Ireland


Died

603 of natural causes



Saint Flavian of Constantinople



Profile

Patriarch of Constantinople c.446. He condemned Eutyches, who began the heresy of Monophysitism. He refused to bribe Emperor Theodosius II in order to hold his see, and, against Theodosius's wishes, he made the emperor's sister Pulcherius a deaconess. Theodosius had him deposed and exiled. When Flavian tried to appeal Pope Leo the Great to hold his seat, the emperor had him beaten so badly that he died three days later from his wounds.


Died

449


Canonized

451 by the Council of Chalcedon




Saint Mesrop the Teacher

#புனிதமெஸ்ரோப் (362-440)


பிப்ரவரி 17


இவர் (#StMesropOfArmenia) அர்மேனியாவில் பிறந்தவர்.


இவர் வளர்ந்து பெரியவரான பின்பு சில காலத்திற்கு இராணுவத்தில் சேர்ந்து பணியாற்றினார். பின்னர் அப்பணியை துறந்துவிட்டு, ஒரு துறவியை போன்று வாழ்ந்து, பல இடங்களுக்கும் சென்று நற்செய்தி அறிவித்தார்.


இவர் அர்மேனியாவில் மட்டுமல்லாது, ஜார்ஜியாவிற்கும் சென்று நற்செய்தி அறிவித்தார். 


இவர் பள்ளிக்கூடங்களை நிறுவி மக்களுக்குக் கல்வி தந்தார். இதை விடவும் இவர் திருவிவிலியத்தை அர்மேனிய மொழியில் மொழிபெயர்த்து, அர்மேனியத் திருஅவைக்கு மிகப்பெரிய பங்காற்றினார்.


இப்படிப் பல்வேறு பணிகளைச் செய்த இவர் 440 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

• Mesrop Mashtot

• Mesrob...



Additional Memorial

5 July (Armenian Apostolic Church)


Profile

Career soldier who retired from the military to become a hermit, monk and preacher. Worked with Saint Isaac the Great in the formation of the Armenian Church. Civil servant. Missionary to Armenia and Georgia. Developed the alphabet for writing Armenian. Organized schools and the translation of the Bible into Armenian, translating the New Testament himself.


Born

c.362 in Hatsik, Taron Province, Kingdom of Armenia


Died

17 February 440 in Vagharshapat, Armenia of natural causes




Saint Finan of Iona


Also known as

Finan of Lindisfarne



Profile

Monk at Iona. Succeeded Saint Aidan of Lindisfarne as governor of the Church in Northumbria, England. Bishop of Lindesfarne, England in 651. Built the cathedral, and the monasteries of Gilling and Whitby. Opposed the replacement of the Celtic liturgy with the Roman one. Evangelized southern England, working with Saint Cedd. Friend of King Oswiu of Northumbria and Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne. Baptized King Penda and King Saint Sigebert of the East Saxons, and brought Saint Ebbe the Elder into the Benedictines.


Born

in Ireland


Died

9 February 661 in Ireland



Saint Petrus Yu Chong-nyul


Also known as

• Peter Yu Chong-nyul

• Peteuro Yu Jeong-nyul



Profile

Married layman and father in the apostolic vicariate of Korea. While reading the Bible to a group of friends at the home of a catechist one night, he was arrested, imprisoned and murdered for the offense of teaching Christianity. Martyr.


Born

1837 in Taphyen, Yulli county, near Pyongyang, North Korea


Died

beaten to death on the evening of 17 February 1866 in prison in Pyongyang, North Korea


Canonized

6 May 1984 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Bartholomew degli Amidei


Also known as

• Amadeus degli Amidei

• Amadio Amidei

• Bartholomes degli Amidei

• Bartolomeo degli Amidei



Profile

One of the Seven Founders of Servants of Mary (Servites). Governed the important Servite convent of Carfaggio. Third general of the Servites. In his later years he retired to spend his final days at the monastery at Monte Sennario, Italy.


Died

at Monte Sennario, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

15 January 1887 by Pope Leo XIII




Blessed Constabilis of Cava


Also known as

Constabile, Costabile



Profile

Benedictine monk under Saint Leo at Cava monastery, Salerno, Italy. Abbot of Cava in 1122. Built the town of Castelabbate around the monastery.


Born

1060 at Lucania, Italy


Died

• 1124 of natural causes

• buried in the church overhanging the grotto of Arsicia


Beatified

21 December 1893 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

• Castelabbate, Italy

• sailors




Blessed Elisabetta Sanna


Profile

Married lay women in the dioceses of Rome and Sassari, Italy. Widow. Member of the Secular Franciscan Order, and of the Union of the Catholic Apostolate.



Born

23 April 1788 in Codrongianos, Sassari, Italy


Died

17 February 1857 in Rome, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 17 September 2016 in Pope Francis

• the beatification was celebrated at the Basilica of Santissima Trinità di Saccargia, Codrongianos, Italy, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Saint Benedict dell'Antella


Also known as

Manettus, Manetius, Manetto



Profile

One of the Seven Founders of the Servants of Mary. Attended the Council of Lyons in 1246. Governed the Servites in the Tuscan province in 1260. Took the Servite Order to France at the request of King Saint Louis IX. Fourth prior-general of the Servites. Sent missionaries to Asia. Retired to turn authority over to Saint Philip Benizi.


Died

20 August 1268 of natural causes


Canonized

15 January 1888 by Pope Leo XIII



Saint John Buonagiunta Monetti


Also known as

• John Buonagiunta

• John Bonaiuncta


Profile

One of the Seven Founders of Servants of Mary. The youngest of the Founders. Elected as the second prior-general of the Servites in 1256.


Died

1256 of natural causes while sitting in chapel listening to the Gospel account of the Passion


Canonized

1887 by Pope Leo XIII




Blessed Antoni Leszczewicz



Profile

Priest. Member of the Marians of the Immaculate Conception. One of the 108 Polish Martyrs of World War II.


Born

30 September 1890 in Abramovsk, Vilniaus rajonas, Lithuania


Died

burned to death on 17 February 1943 at the death camp in Rositsa, Vitebskaya voblasts', Belarus


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II at Warsaw, Poland




Saint Hugh dei Lippi-Uguccioni


Also known as

Ricovero dei Lippi-Ugoccioni


Profile

One of the Seven Founders of the Servants of Mary. Worked with Saint Philip Benizi in France and Germany. Vicar-general of the Servites in Germany for eight years.


Born

Florence, Italy


Died

3 May 1282 at Mount Senario, Italy of natural causes




Saint Gherardino Sostegni


Also known as

• Gherardino Sostenes

• Gherardino Sostegno

• Gerardino...


Profile

One of the Seven Founders of the Servants of Mary. Led the Servite province of Umbria, Italy from 1260 until his death, and brought the Servite Order to Germany.


Canonized

1887 by Pope Leo XIII




Saint Loman of Trim


Also known as

• Loman mac Dalláin

• Lommán, Luman


Profile

Son of Tigris. Nephew of Saint Patrick. He evangelized Ireland with Patrick, and converted Saint Fortchern of Trim and his family, including the pagan chieftain Fedelmid, to the faith. Bishop of Trim, Meath, Ireland.


Died

c.450 of natural causes


Patronage

Trim, Ireland




Saint Bonosus of Trier


Also known as

Bonosio, Bonoso


Profile

Priest. Imprisoned c.353 for supporting his bishop, Saint Paulinus, and orthodox Christianity in the face of Arians. Bishop of Trier, Gaul (in modern Germany) in 358; he continued to fight Arianism.


Died

• c.373 of natural causes

• relics enshrined in the church of San Paolino in Trier




Saint Benedict of Cagliari


Also known as

Benedict of Dolia


Profile

Benedictine monk at Cagliari, Sardinia. Bishop of Dolia, Sardinia for five years. Shortly before his death he resigned his see, and spent his last days as a prayerful recluse at the basilica abbey.


Died

c.1112 at Saint Saturninus Basilica monastery, Cagliari, Sardinia



Saint Guevrock


Also known as

Gueroc, Guevroc, Guirec, Guivrok, Keric, Kerric, Kirecq



Profile

Sixth century Briton. Friend and travelling companion of Saint Tudwal. Abbot at Loc-Kirec, Brittany. Assisted bishop Saint Paul of Léon.




Saint Fortchern of Trim


Also known as

Forkernus


Profile

The son of a pagan chieftain, he was converted to Christianity by Saint Loman of Trim. Sixth century bishop of Trim, Ireland. Hermit.


Patronage

bell-founders


Representation

bishop standing amidst bell-founders




Saint Julian of Caesarea


Profile

Catechumen at Caesarea, Palestine. Arrested for venerating the martyred Saint Elias and companions. Martyred by order of Firmilian, governor of Palestine.


Died

burned to death in 309 at Caesarea, Palestine




Saint Theodulus of Caesarea


Profile

Member of the household of the governor of Palestine. When the governor learned of Theodulus's Christianity, he ordered his execution. Martyr.


Died

crucified in 309 at Caesarea, Palestine




Saint Silvinus of Cremona


Also known as

Silvano, Silvanus, Silvin, Silvino


Profile

Mid-eighth century bishop of Cremona, Italy, serving for 39 years.


Born

Cremono, Italy


Died

773




Saint Donatus the Martyr


Profile

One of a group of over 80 Christians martyred together during the persecutions Diocletian.


Died

304 at Porto Gruaro, near Venice, Italy




Saint Secundian the Martyr


Profile

One of a group of over 80 Christians martyred together during the persecutions Diocletian.


Died

304 at Porto Gruaro, near Venice, Italy




Saint Evermod of Ratzeburg


Profile

Priest. Evangelized with Saint Norbert. Abbot of Gottesgnaden and Magdeburg. Bishop of Ratzeburg, Germany.


Died

1178 of natural causes




Saint Romulus the Martyr


Profile

One of a group of over 80 Christians martyred together during the persecutions Diocletian.


Died

304 at Porto Gruaro, near Venice, Italy




Saint Habet-Deus


Profile

Bishop of Luna, Tuscany, an Italian city which exists now only in ruins. Martyred by Arian Vandals.


Died

c.500




Saint Polychronius of Babylon


Profile

Bishop of Babylon. Martyr.




Saint Faustinus the Martyr


Profile

The only one of a group of 45 Christian martyrs whose name has come down to us.




Saint Lupiano


Profile

Baptized by Saint Hilary of Poitiers c.360, and died within the week. Saint Gregory of Tours wrote about him.

16 February 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 16

 St. Pamphilus


Feastday: February 16

Death: 309


Biblical scholar and a devotee of the controversial theologian Origen. From Berytus, in Phoenicia, Pamphilus studied in his native city and then at the famed Catechetical School of Alexandria, where he was taught by Pierius, a student of Origen. Ordained at Caesarea, Pamphilus became the head of a catechetical school there, and soon acquired a reputation for learning, biblical study, and the size and brilliance of his library. One of the students of this school was the historian Eusebius of Caesarea who held him in such high regard that he adopted the name Eusebius of Pamphilus. Arrested in 308 for being a Christian by Urban, the governor of Palestine, Pamphilus spent two years in prison before being beheaded as part of the Roman persecution of the faith. A number of others died in connection with his martyrdom, including a student named Porphyrius and a Cappadocian, Seleucus, who was accused of applauding Porphyrius aplomb in enduring torture. Pamphilus collaborated with Eusebius perhaps a fellow prisoner at some point on an Apology of Origen. Originally five books, only one book of the Apology has survived, and even this portion is of doubtful authenticity, perhaps being a Latin version undertaken by Rufinus of Aquileia. Eusebius added a sixth book after Pamphilus' martyrdom, wrote a biography of his beloved mentor of which fragments are still available, and praised him extravagantly in his Ecclesiastical History. Pamphilus' library survived in Alexandria until destroyed by the Arabs in the seventh century.


This article is about Saint Pamphilus of Caesarea. For Saint Pamphilus of Sulmona, see Pamphilus of Sulmona.

Saint Pamphilus (Greek: Πάμφιλος; latter half of the 3rd century – February 16, 309), was a presbyter of Caesarea and chief among the biblical scholars of his generation. He was the friend and teacher of Eusebius of Caesarea, who recorded details of his career in a three-book Vita that has been lost.



Eusebius' Martyrs of Palestine attests that Pamphilus was of a rich and honorable family of Beirut. This work also asserts that he gave all his property to the poor and attached himself to the "perfect men". Photius[1] quotes Pamphilus's Apology for Origen to the effect that Pamphilus went to Alexandria, where his teacher was Pierius, the head of the famous catechetical school there, before settling in Caesarea Maritima, where he was ordained a priest. In Alexandria, Egypt, Pamphilus became devoted to the works of Origen of Alexandria. Photius says that Pamphilus was a Phoenician born at Berytus, and a scholar of Pierius, who collected sacred literature. According to Eusebius, he suffered martyrdom in the third year of the Diocletianic persecution, after spending two years in prison. While he was in prison, Pamphilus and Eusebius worked together on five books in defense of Origen.[2]


The Diocletianic persecution began in earnest in the year 303. In 306 a young man named Apphianus-–a disciple of Pamphilus "while no one was aware; he even concealed it from us who were even in the same house"[3]–-interrupted the governor in the act of offering sacrifice, and paid for his boldness with martyrdom. His brother Aedesius, also a disciple of Pamphilus, suffered martyrdom about the same time at Alexandria under similar circumstances.[3] St Pamphilus's turn came in November, 307. He was brought before Urbanus, the governor of Palestine,[4] and upon refusing to offer sacrifice, was cruelly tortured, and then relegated to prison. In prison he continued copying and correcting manuscripts. He also composed, in collaboration with Eusebius, also imprisoned,[4] an Apology for Origen in five books, which Eusebius edited and to which he added a sixth book. St Pamphilus and other members of his household, along with Valens, deacon of the Church of Jerusalem and Paul of Jamnia,[4] men "in the full vigour of mind and body", were without further torture sentenced to be beheaded in February, 309. While sentence was being given a youth named Porphyrius - "the slave of Pamphilus", "the beloved disciple of Pamphilus", who "had been instructed in literature and writing" – demanded the bodies of the confessors for burial. He was cruelly tortured and put to death, the news of his martyrdom being brought to Pamphilus before his own execution. Nearly at the same time another of his companions, Patriklos, suffered a martyr death in Caesarea and was later interred after the payment of a ransom to Diocletian in Cappadocia.[5]


Veneration

St Pamphilus is regarded as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church. His feast day is celebrated on June 1.





St. Daniel


Feastday: February 16




Died in 309, He and four companions, Elias, Isaias, Jeremy and Samuel were Egyptians who visited Christians condemned to work in the mines of Cilicia during Maximus persecution, to comfort them. Apprehended at the gates of Caesarea, Palestine, they were brought before the governor, Firmilian and accused of being Christians. They were all tortured and then beheaded. When Porphyry, a servant of St. Pamphilus demanded that the bodies be buried, he was tortured and then burned to death when it was found he was a Christian. Seleucus witnessed his death and applauded his constancy in the face of his terrible death; whereupon he was arrested by the soldiers involved in the execution, borught before the governor and was beheaded at Firmilian's order. Feast day Feb. 16.





St. Elias & Companions


Feastday: February 16

Death: 309


Egyptian martyr with Daniel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Samuel. They went to the mines in Cilicia, to comfort the Christians held there. They were arrested at the gate of the mine and martyred. The historian Eusebius was in Caesarea, in Israel, and gave a vivid account of their martyrdom by torture and beheading. Two others, St. Pamphilus and St. Seleucus, were also caught up in the martyrdom, sharing Elias' fate. Porphy, the servant of Pamphilus, demanded that the bodies of the martyrs be buried and was burned to death as a Christian.


Elias and four companions, Daniel, Isaiah, Jeremiah (also known as Jeremy and Jeremias), and Samuel were Egyptian martyrs. Their feast day is February 16.


During Maximinus' persecution, a number of Christians were condemned for life to slavery in the copper mines of Roman Cilicia. Elias and his companions visited them to provide comfort.[1]


Upon their return to Egypt in 309, they were stopped at the gates of Caesarea, Palestine, and questioned. Upon confessing the reason for their journey, they were arrested. The following day they, along with Pamphilus who had also been caught up in the persecutions, were brought before the provincial governor Firmilian.[2]


Accused of being Christians, they were racked and interrogated. Elias and his friends identified themselves by their baptismal names and their country as "Jerusalem", a reference to the Christians' heavenly Jerusalem. The city of Jerusalem had been sacked by Titus and later rebuilt as Aelia Capitolina. Firmilian had them further tortured to discover the location of their true country, and at last, tired with tormenting them, condemned them to be beheaded.[3]


When Porphyry, a servant of Pamphilus, demanded that the bodies be buried, he was tortured and then burned to death when it was found that he was a Christian.[2] St. Seleucus witnessed his death and was overheard applauding Porphyry's constancy in the face of this terrible death; whereupon he was arrested by the soldiers involved in the execution, brought before the governor, and beheaded at Firmilian's order.[4] The historian Eusebius was in Caesarea, and gave a vivid account of their martyrdom by torture and beheading.




St. Honestus


Feastday: February 16

Death: 270



Saint Honestus (Spanish: San Honesto, French: Saint Honest) was, according to Christian tradition, a disciple of Saturninus of Toulouse and a native of Nîmes.[1]


Saturninus and Honestus evangelized in Spain, and Honestus was martyred at Pampeluna during the persecutions of Aurelian. Elaboration of this legend states that Honestus was a nobleman of Nîmes who was appointed "apostle to Navarre and the Basque Country."[2]


Further elaboration of his legend states that at Pampeluna, he converted the senator Firmus and his family to Christianity, while Firmus's son, Saint Firminus, was christened by Saint Saturninus.[3] Variants of this legend state that Honestus baptized Firminus himself




St. Jeremy


Feastday: February 16



Elias and four companions, Daniel, Isaias, Jeremy, and Samuel were Egyptians who visited Christians condemned to work in the mines of Cilicia during Maximus' persecution, to comfort them. Apprehended at the gates of Caesarea, Palestine, they were brought before the governor Firmilian, and accused of being Christians. They were all tortured and then beheaded. When Porphyry, a servant of St. Pamphilus, demanded that the bodies be buried, he was tortured and then burned to death when it was found that he was a Christian. Seleucus witnessed his death and applauded his constancy in the face of this terrible death; whereupon he was arrested by the soldiers involved in the execution, brought before the governor, and was beheaded at Firmilian's order. Feast day is February 16.


Elias and four companions, Daniel, Isaiah, Jeremiah (also known as Jeremy and Jeremias), and Samuel were Egyptian martyrs. Their feast day is February 16.


During Maximinus' persecution, a number of Christians were condemned for life to slavery in the copper mines of Roman Cilicia. Elias and his companions visited them to provide comfort.[1]


Upon their return to Egypt in 309, they were stopped at the gates of Caesarea, Palestine, and questioned. Upon confessing the reason for their journey, they were arrested. The following day they, along with Pamphilus who had also been caught up in the persecutions, were brought before the provincial governor Firmilian.[2]


Accused of being Christians, they were racked and interrogated. Elias and his friends identified themselves by their baptismal names and their country as "Jerusalem", a reference to the Christians' heavenly Jerusalem. The city of Jerusalem had been sacked by Titus and later rebuilt as Aelia Capitolina. Firmilian had them further tortured to discover the location of their true country, and at last, tired with tormenting them, condemned them to be beheaded.[3]


When Porphyry, a servant of Pamphilus, demanded that the bodies be buried, he was tortured and then burned to death when it was found that he was a Christian.[2] St. Seleucus witnessed his death and was overheard applauding Porphyry's constancy in the face of this terrible death; whereupon he was arrested by the soldiers involved in the execution, brought before the governor, and beheaded at Firmilian's order.[4] The historian Eusebius was in Caesarea, and gave a vivid account of their martyrdom by torture and beheading




Blessed Bernard Scammacca


Additional Memorial

11 January (Dominicans)



Profile

Born to a wealthy and pious family, Bernard was well educated, but spent a wild and dissolute youth. During one of his revels he received a leg wound in a duel. His recovery gave him time to think, and the young man realized that he was headed in the wrong direction. As he was healed, Bernard renewed his life in the Church and then joined the Dominicans in Catania in 1452. Noted for his charitable works, his life of repentance for his earlier ways, his strict adherence to the rules of his Order, and his devotion to contemplation of Christ's Passion, which would sometimes send him into ecstacies. Founded a hospital for the poor. A gifted preacher, he preferred to spend his time in the confessional and working as a spiritual director. Had the gift of prophecy, and used it to warn people to change their lives; prophesied the date of his own death.


Legend says that when Bernard walked in the gardens of his monastery, birds would come down to sing to him, but would stop when he went into prayer. Once when a porter was sent to Bernard's room to fetch him, the man saw a bright light shining under the door, and when he peeked in he saw a beautiful child who was shining with light and holding a book from which Bernard was reading.


Born

1430 in Catania, Sicily


Died

• 11 January 1487 of natural causes

• fifteen years after his death he appeared in a vision to the prior in Catania and asked that his remains be moved to the house's rosary chapel

• during this movement a man was cured of paralysis by touching the relics


Beatified

1825 by Pope Leo XII (cultus confirmed)



Saint Juliana of Nicomedia

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஃபெப்ரவரி 16)


✠ நிக்கொமீடியா நகர் புனிதர் ஜூலியானா ✠

(St. Juliana of Nicomedia)


மறைசாட்சி:

(Martyr)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 286

“கம்பேனியா”விலுள்ள “குமாயே”

(Cumae in Campania)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 304

நிக்கொமீடியா அல்லது நேப்பிள்ஸ்

(Nicomedia or Naples)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

ஓரியண்ட்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Oriental Orthodoxy)


பாதுகாவல்: நோய்கள்


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 16


புனிதர் ஜூலியானா, ரோம பேரரசன் "டையோக்லெஷியன்" (Roman Emperor Diocletian) என்பவரது ஆட்சிக் காலத்தில் நடந்த கிறிஸ்தவர்களின் துன்புருத்தல்களின்போது மறைசாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டவர் ஆவார். மத்திய காலங்களில் நெதர்லாந்து நாட்டில் பிரசித்தி பெற்றவராக திகழ்ந்தார்.


லத்தீன் மற்றும் கிரேக்க திருச்சபைகள் இவரது பெயரை தமது புனிதர்களின் பட்டியலில் தூய மறைசாட்சியாக வைத்துள்ளன.


ஜூலியானா, ஓர் மதிப்புமிக்க "பேகன்" (Pagan) குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவரின் தந்தை அரசு அதிகார சபை அங்கத்தினர் (Senator) ஆவார். அவரது பெயர், "அஃப்ரிகனஸ்" (Africanus) ஆகும். இவர் ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவ எதிர்ப்பாளர் ஆவார்.


ஜூலியானா தமது பெற்றோருக்கு தெரியாமலேயே திருமுழுக்கு பெற்றார். ஜூலியானாவுக்கு சிறு வயதிலேயே திருமண நிச்சயம் செய்யப்பட்டது. பேரரசனின் ஆலோசகர்களில் ஒருவரும் அதிகார சபை உறுப்பினருமான "எலாசியஸ்" (Eleusius) என்பவருடன் திருமண நிச்சயம் நடந்தது.


ஆனால், ஜூலியானாவோ, தமது கன்னித் தன்மையை இழக்க விரும்பவில்லை. இவர் இறைவனுக்காகவே வாழ விரும்பினார். தமது விருப்பத்தை தமது பெற்றோரிடமும் தெரிவித்தார்.


மிகவும் கீழ்படிதலுள்ள தம் பெண், இங்ஙனம் தம்மை மறுத்து பேசியது, அவரது பெற்றோருக்கு பெரும் அதிர்ச்சியை இருந்தது. அவர்கள் எவ்வளவோ எடுத்துச் சொல்லியும் ஜூலியானா கேட்கவில்லை. அவர்கள் ஜூலியானாவை எலாசியஸிடம் ஒப்படைத்தனர்.


உயர் பதவியில் இருப்பதால் அகங்காரம் கொண்டிருந்த எலாசியஸ் ஜூலியானாவை பலி வாங்கும் நாளுக்காக காத்திருந்தான். தமது அதிகாரத்தைப் பயன்படுத்தி, ஜூலியானா கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்துக்கு மாறியதையும் விசாரித்து அறிந்து கொண்டான்.


ஜூலியானா தனது சிறுவயதிலிருந்தே கடவுள் பக்தியில் வளர்ந்தார். தன் தாய்க்கு தெரியாமல் மறைவாகச் சென்று செபவாழ்வில் ஈடுபட்டார். பல முறை தன் தாயிடம் சொல்லாமலேயே தன் ஊரில் நடக்கும் கிறிஸ்தவ செபக்கூட்டங்களில் பங்கெடுத்தார்.


காலப்போக்கில், பண பலம் கொண்ட எலாசியஸ், தமது பணம் மற்றும் அதிகாரத்தைப் பயன் படுத்தி, "பிதினியா" (Bithynia) நாட்டின் 'ரோம ஆளுனராக' பதவி பெற்றான்.


பெற்றோரின் வற்புறுத்தலுக்குப் பின்னரும், ஜூலியானா தமது முடிவில் ஸ்திரமாக இருந்தார். திருமணத்துக்கு சம்மதிக்க மறுத்து விட்டார். இதன் காரணமாகவும் கோபமுற்ற 'ரோம ஆளுனர்' எலாசியஸ், ஜூலியானாவை கைது செய்ய உத்தரவிட்டான். கைது செய்யப்பட்ட ஜூலியானா, 'ரோம ஆளுனரின்' முன்பு நிறுத்தப்பட்டார். ஜூலியானாவின் கணவனாக நிச்சயம் செய்யப்பட்டவனே ஜூலியானாவை தீர்ப்பிடும் நீதிபதியாக இருந்தான்.


கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்தைத் தழுவி அதனைப் பின்பற்றிய காரணத்துக்காக ஜூலியானா கொடூரமாக துன்புறுத்தப் பட்டார். இரக்கமேயில்லாமல் சாட்டையால் அடிக்கப்பட்டார். அவர், அவரது தலை முடியாலேயே கட்டித் தொங்க விடப்பட்டார். பின்னர், அவரது தலை முடி, அவரது தலையிலிருந்து பிடுங்கப்பட்டது.


சிறைச்சாலையில், ஒரு சம்மனசின் வேடமிட்டு அவரை அணுகிய பசாசு, சிலை வழிபாட்டுக்கு சம்மதித்து தியாகம் செய்யும்படி அவரை வற்புறுத்தியது. அதன் சூழ்ச்சியை அறிந்துகொண்ட ஜூலியானா, அதனை அடித்து, அதன் முகத்தில் காரி உமிழ்ந்து விரட்டினார். அதன் பிறகு, அவருக்கு தமது நிலைப்பாட்டில் உறுதியுடன் போராட புதிய சக்தி கிடைத்தது.


அவர், மீண்டும் சிறையிலிருந்து வெளியே கொண்டுவரப்பட்டு, விசாரிக்கப்பட்டார். அவர் தமது முடிவை மாற்றிக் கொண்டால், அவரை திருமணம் செய்து கொள்ள தயாராக இருப்பதாக எலாசியஸ் அறிவித்தான். மற்றும், ஜூலியானா தமது விருப்பப்படி கிறிஸ்துவையே பூஜிக்கலாம் என்றும் சம்மதித்தான். ஆனால், ஜூலியானா யாதொரு சஞ்சலத்துக்கும் ஆளாகாதிருந்தார்.


இறுதியில், ஜூலியானா ஒரு உருக்கப்பட்ட செம்பு கொப்பரையின் முன்பு கொண்டு வரப்பட்டார். அவர் அந்த கொப்பரையைத் தொட, அது விழுந்து, அதன் உருக்கப்பட்ட செம்பு அவரை சுட்டு காயப் படுத்தியது. அங்கே, நூற்றுக்கணக்கான (ஆண்கள் 500 பேரும், பெண்கள் 130 பேரும்) பழமைவாதிகள் கிறிஸ்தவர்களாக மாறுவதற்காக தயாராக காத்திருந்தனர். அவர்களனைவரும், ரோம ஆளுனர் எலாசியஸின் கட்டளைப்படி தலை துண்டிக்கப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டனர்.


எலாசியஸ், அவரது முகத்தில் ஒரு பழுக்க காய்ச்சிய இரும்பால் சூடு போட்டான். பிறகு, "இப்போது போய் கண்ணாடியில் உன் அழகிய முகத்தைப் பார்த்து ரசி" என்றான். ஆனால், மென்மையாக புன்னகைத்த ஜூலியானாவோ, "இறுதித் தீர்ப்பின்போது, உயிர்த்தெழும் என் உடலிலுள்ள காயங்கள் யாவும் ஆறிவிடும்; என் ஆன்மாவை உன்னால் காயப்படுத்த முடியாது" என்றார்.


இறுதியில், ஜூலியானா தலை துண்டிக்கப்பட்டு மறைசாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டார். அப்போது அவருக்கு வயது பதினெட்டு. அவருடன் சேர்த்து, பார்பரா (Barbara) என்ற ஒரு புனிதரும் துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு, தலை துண்டிக்கப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

Juliana of Cumae



Profile

Daughter of a pagan named Africanus who promised the girl to a young noble named Evilase. Juliana put him off, first insisting that he become prefect of Nicomedia. When he became prefect, she insisted he become a Christian before they could marry, a condition he would never meet. Her father, who hated Christians himself, abused Juliana fearfully to get her to change her mind, but she held fast; ancients manuscripts describing these horrors put them in terms of her fighting a dragon, and she is often depicted that way in art. Evilase called her before the tribunal during the persecutions of Maximianus, denounced her as a Christian, and she was martyred. Hers was a favourite story, for telling and creation of stained glass and other art objects, during the Middle Ages.


Died

• burned, boiled in oil, and beheaded c.305

• relics at Cumae, Naples, Italy


Patronage

• against bodily ills or sickness

• sick people




Saint Maruta


Profile

Bishop of Mayferkqat, Syria, part of the kingdom of Persia, in the late 4th and early 5th centuries. Presided over the Council of Seleucia. Worked to build and repair churches that had been lost during the persecutions of King Sapor, and collected so many of the relics that had been scattered during that time that his see city became known as Martyropolis. He composed a number of hymns in honor of the martyrs, and wrote “Acts” of as many as he could research. Because of the wealth of his theological writings, he is honored as the chief Doctor of the Syrian Church.



Maruta once went to the court of King Yezdigerd to seek an end to persecution of Christians. While there, he was able to cure the king of a series of violently painful headaches. The Zoroastrian priests, afraid that the king might convert to Christianity, rigged up a hiding place in the floor of their temple. There a priest waited, and when the king came into the temple, the priest shouted that the Christian should be sent away from such a holy place. The king was ready to obey the mystical voice until Maruta pointed out the trap door and the hidden priest was dragged out. The king did not convert, but grudgingly agreed to tolerate Christians.


Died

c.415 of natural causes




Blessed Nicola Paglia


Profile

Born to the Italian nobility, in his youth Nicola received a vision of an angel who warned him not to eat meat as he would one day join a religious order that had a permanent rule of abstinence. He was a university student in Bologna, Italy when he heard the preaching of Saint Dominic de Guzman. He soon after joined the Dominicans, receiving the habit from Saint Dominic himself. Priest. Noted and successful preacher. Twice provincial of the Dominicans in the enormous province of Rome. Founded monasteries in Perugia and Trani, promoted Scripture study and the compilation of a Bible concordance. Commissioned by Pope Gregory IX to preach Crusade against the Saracens. Reported miracle worker. He spent his final years as a prayerful monk in the Dominican monastery in Perugia.



Born

1197 in Giovinazzo, Bari, Italy


Died

• 1256 at the Dominican monastery in Perugia, Umbia, Italy of natural causes

• buried in the church of Saint Dominic in Perugia


Beatified

26 March 1828 by Pope Leo XII (cultus confirmation)




Blessed Joseph Allamano


Also known as

Giuseppe Allamano



Profile

Fourth of five children; nephew of Saint John Cafasso. His father died when Joseph was three years old. Studied at the Salesian Oratory in Valdocco, Italy; Saint John Bosco was one of Giuseppe's spiritual directors. He entered the diocesan seminary of Turin, Italy in November 1866. Ordained on 20 September 1873. Spiritual director of the Turin seminary. Appointed rector of the Consolata Shrine on 2 October 1880; he remodeled the shrine, and made it a source for spiritual renewal throughout the diocese. Founded the Consolata Missionary Priests and Brothers on 29 January 1901; the first missionaries reached Kenya in 1902. On 29 January 1910 he founded the Consolata Missionary Sisters for women with a missionary vocation.


Born

21 January 1851 at Castelnuova, Asti, Italy


Died

16 February 1926 at Turin, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

7 October 1990 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Tetradius of Bourges


Also known as

Tetradio, Tétrade


Profile

Bishop of Bourges, France in the late 5th and early 6th centuries. Part of the Council of Agde in 506. Part of the Council of Orléans in 511.


Born

mid-5th century


Died

c.512 of natural causes



Saint Julian of Egypt


Profile

Leader of a group of martyrs, some or all of whom may have been imperial soldiers. The dates are unknown, and none of the names of his companions have come down to us, and we have no other details of their demise.


Died

martyred in Egypt, date unknown




Blessed Filippa Mareri

#அருளாளர்_ஃபிலிப்பா_மரேரி (1195-1246)


பிப்ரவரி 16


இவர் (#BlFilippaMareri) இத்தாலியில் பிறந்தவர்.


ஒருமுறை இவர் அசிசி நகர்ப் புனித பிரான்சிசைச் சந்திக்க நேர்ந்தது. அவருடனான இவரது சந்திப்பு இவரது வாழ்வில் மிகப் பெரிய மாற்றத்தை ஏற்படுத்தியது. 


இதன் பிறகு இவர் புனித கிளாரா சபையில் சேர்ந்து, துறவியாக வாழத் தொடங்கினார்.


சிறிது காலத்திற்குப் பிறகு இவர் மரேரி என்ற மலைக்குச் சென்று, இறைவேண்டலிலும் நோன்பிலும் தன் வாழ்நாளைச் செலவழித்தார். பின்னர் ரியெட்டி என்ற இடத்தில் துறவுமடம் ஒன்றை நிறுவி, அங்கே இறுதிவரை வாழ்ந்து, இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.


.

Also known as

Philippa Mareria


Profile

After having met Saint Francis of Assisi in her parents' home, she became a hermit on a mountain above Mareri, Italy. Poor Clare nun. Founded a Franciscan convent in Rieti, Italy with the help of Blessed Roger of Todi. Abbess.



Born

c.1195 at Mareri, Rieti, Italy


Died

16 February 1236 in Borgo San Pietro, Rieti, Italy


Beatified

30 April 1806 by Pope Pius VII (cultus confirmation; decree of heroic virtues)




Saint Simeon of Metz


Additional Memorial

25 October (translation of relics)


Profile

Fourth century bishop of Metz, France.


Died

• buried in the church San Clément aux Arènes

• relics transferred to the Benedictine of Saint Peter in Senones c.770




Saint Pamphilus of Cilicia


Also known as

Pamphilus of Caesarea


Profile

Bishop. Imprisoned and sentenced to forced labour in the mines of Cilicia for two years. Martyr.


Died

309 in Cilicia, Asia Minor (in modern Turkey)




Saint Faustinus of Brescia


Profile

Bishop of Brescia, Italy c.360. Legend says that he was a relative of Saint Faustinus and Saint Jovita, and we know that he researched and wrote their Acts.


Died

381




Saint John III of Constantinople


Profile

Patriarch of Constantinople in 565. Established regulations that became the code of laws known as the "Nomocanon".


Died

577



Blessed Archinrico of Montmajour


Profile

Monk and abbot in the late 10th and early 11th centuries. He is mentioned in some documents, but little about the man has survived.




Saint Aganus of Airola


Profile

Benedictine monk. Abbot of Saint Gabriel's monastery at Airola, Campania, Italy.


Born

1050


Died

1100 of natural causes



Saint Onesimus of Ephesus


Profile

Priest. Bishop of Ephesus. Supported Saint Ignatius of Antioch.



Saint Juliana of Campania


Profile

Martyr.



Martyrs of Cilicia


Profile

A group of Christians who ministered to other Christians who were condemned to work the mines of Cilicia in the persecutions of Maximus. They were arrested, tortured and martryed by order of the governor Firmilian.



• Daniel

• Elias

• Isaias

• Jeremy

• Samuel


The group also includes the three known have been sentenced to the mines -


• Pamphilus

• Paul of Jamnia

• Valens of Jerusalem


and those who were exposed as Christians as a result of these murders -


• Julian of Cappadocia

• Porphyrius of Caesarea

• Seleucius of Caesarea

• Theodule the Servant


Died

309 in Cilicia, Asia Minor (in modern Turkey)