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11 August 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஆகஸ்ட் 12

 St. Eusebius of Milan


Feastday: August 12

Death: 462



Bishop of Milan, Italy, the successor of St. Lazarus. A Greek by birth, Eusebius aided Pope St. Leo the Great in repressing the heresy of Eutychianism.


Eusebius (Italian: Eusebio) was Archbishop of Milan from 449 to 462. He is honoured as a saint and his feast day is 12 August.[1]


Life

According to the writings of Ennodius, bishop of Pavia in early 6th-century, Eusebius was Greek. He probably participated, as bishop of Milan, to a synod held in Rome in 449 which condemned the doctrines of Eutyches, deemed to be heretic.[2] Surely Eusebius was the addressee of a letter written by Pope Leo the Great and carried to Milan in 451 by Abundius bishop of Como and Senator, who were returning to North Italy from Constantinople. In 451 Eusebius convened a Provincial Council in Milan, attended by eighteen bishops,[1] where the Tome of Leo was read and approved, and consequently the doctrines of Eutyches were condemned.[2]


The main political event in Eusebius' episcopate was the 452 invasion of Italy by the Huns led by Attila. The Huns razed Aquileia and then moved East and sacked numerous cities such as Padua. They entered also in Milan where Attila occupied the imperial palace and set fire to a large part of the town, destroying also the cathedral of Saint Tecla.[3] Eusebius, along with many citizens, fled from the Huns and left the town. They returned in Milan only when Attila was convinced by Pope Leo to retire. Eusebius led the reconstruction of the town, including the cathedral which was re-consecrated in 453 by Maximus II bishop of Turin (not to be confused with Saint Maximus of Turin)[2] who for the occasion spoke the homely De reparatione ecclesiae mediolanensis.[4]


Eusebius died on 8 August, probably in 462, and his remains were interred in the city’s basilica of St. Lorenzo Maggiore. His feast is celebrated on 12 August.[3] A late tradition, with no historical basis, associates Eusebius with the Milan's family of the Pagani.




St. Cassian of Benevento


Feastday: August 12

Death: 340


Bishop of Benevento in southern Italy. His relics are enshrined there.




St. Jane Frances de Chantal



† இன்றைய புனிதர் †
(ஆகஸ்ட் 12)

✠ புனிதர் ஜேன் ஃபிரான்செஸ் டி சான்ட்டல் ✠
(St. Jane Frances de Chantal)

நிறுவனர்:
(Foundress)

பிறப்பு: ஜனவரி 28, 1572
டிஜோன், பர்கண்டி, ஃபிரான்ஸ்
(Dijon, Burgundy, France)

இறப்பு: டிசம்பர் 13, 1641 (வயது 69)
மௌலின்ஸ், ஃபிரான்ஸ்
(Moulins, France)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:
ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை
(Roman Catholic Church)

முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: நவம்பர் 21, 1751 
திருத்தந்தை 14ம் பெனடிக்ட்
(Pope Benedict XIV)

புனிதர்பட்டம்: ஜூலை 16, 1767 
திருத்தந்தை 13ம் கிளமென்ட்
(Pope Clement XIII)

முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:
அன்னேஸி, சவோய்
(Annecy, Savoy)

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஆகஸ்ட் 12

பாதுகாவல்:
மறக்கப்பட்ட மக்கள்; மாமியார் பிரச்சினைகள்; காணாமல் போன பெற்றோர்;
பிள்ளைகளிடமிருந்து பிரிக்கப்பட்ட பெற்றோர்; விதவைகள்.

மனைவி, தாய், துறவி என பன்முகம் கொண்ட புனிதர் ஜேன் ஃபிரான்செஸ் டி சான்ட்டல், “தூய மரியாளின் திருவருகையின் அருட்சகோதரியர்” (Congregation of the Visitation) எனும் பெண்களுக்கான துறவற சபையின் நிறுவனரும், ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் புனிதரும் ஆவார்.

“பேரன் டி சான்ட்டல்” (Baronne de Chantal) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட இவர், ஃபிரான்ஸ் (France) நாட்டின் “டிஜோன்” (Dijon) நகரில் பிறந்த ஜேன், “பர்கண்டி” (Burgundy) மாநில பாராளுமன்ற அரசவை தலைவரின் மகள் ஆவார். பதினெட்டு மாத குழந்தையாய் இருக்கையிலேயே தமது தாயை இழந்த இவர், தமது தந்தையால் கல்வி கற்பிக்கப்பட்டு, அழகும், உற்சாக குணமும் கொண்ட, மகிழ்ச்சியான பெண்ணாக வளர்ந்தார்.

இருபத்தொரு வயதில், “பேரோன் தெ சான்ட்டல்” (Baron de Chantal) என்ற அரச குடும்பத்தைச் சார்ந்த ஒருவருக்கு திருமணம் செய்து வைக்கப்பட்டார். இருபத்தெட்டு வயதில், ஆறு குழந்தைகளுக்கு தாயானார். இதில் மூன்று குழந்தைகள், குழந்தைப் பருவத்திலேயே மரித்துப் போயின. கி.பி. 1601ம் ஆண்டு நடத்த ஒரு துப்பாக்கி சுடும் பயிற்சியின்போது, விபத்து காரணமாக, “பேரோன் தெ சான்ட்டல்” (Baron de Chantal) இறந்து போனார். ஜேன் அரண்மனையில் வாழ்ந்தபோதும், வரிசையாக தமது குடும்ப அங்கத்தினர்களின் மரணத்தால் மனமுடைந்து போனார். அவரது தாயார், வளர்ப்புத் தாயார், சகோதரி, தமது இரண்டு குழந்தைகள் - இப்போது தமது கணவர் என மரணங்கள் இவரை மனமுடைய வைத்தன.

இதனால் ஆன்மீகக் காரியங்களில் அக்கறைக்காட்டி வந்தார். கற்பு நிலைக்கான உறுதிப்பாடு எடுத்துக்கொண்டார். தாம் வசித்த வீட்டிலேயே தினமும் திருப்பலிகள் நிறைவேற்றும் வழக்கத்தினை ஏற்படுத்தினார். பல்வேறு தொண்டு பணிகளில் ஈடுபட்டார். 75 வயதான இவரது மாமனார், வீண் பிடிவாதமும், கொடூர, ஊதாரி குணமுள்ளவராய் இருந்தார். தமது வீட்டுக்கு திரும்பி வரவில்லையெனில் அவருடைய குழந்தைகளை பரித்துக்கொள்வதாக பயமுறுத்தினார். இத்தனைக்கும், ஜேன் இன்முகத்துடன் நடந்து கொண்டார்.

கி.பி. 1604ம் ஆண்டு, “டிஜொன் சிற்றாலயத்தில் (Sainte Chapelle in Dijon) பிரசங்கிக்க வந்திருந்த “ஜெனீவாவின்” ஆயரான (Bishop of Geneva) புனிதர் “ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டே சலேஸ்” (Francis de Sales) அவர்களை ஜேன் சந்தித்தார். ஆயரை ஜேன் தமது ஆன்மீக வழிகாட்டியாக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். தாம் துறவறம் ஏற்க வேண்டுமென்ற தமது விருப்பத்தை தெரிவித்தார். ஆனால், அந்த முடிவினை தாமதப்படுத்துமாறு “ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டே சலேஸ்” அறிவுறுத்தினார். ஜேன், மறுமணம் செய்துகொள்வதில்லை என்றும், தமது ஆன்மீக வழிகாட்டிக்கு கீழ்படிவதாகவும் உறுதி ஏற்றார்.

மூன்று வருடங்களின் பின்னர், “ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டே சலேஸ்” ஜேனிடம் தமது திட்டத்தை கூறினார். வயது, உடல்நிலை, மற்றும் பிற காரணங்களுக்காக ஏற்கனவேயுள்ள ஆன்மீக – துறவற சபைகளில் சேர இயலாத பெண்களுக்கான ஒரு ஆன்மீக துறவற சபையை தோற்றுவிப்பதே அத்திட்டமாகும். அங்கே கன்னியர்க்கான மடம் இருக்காது. ஆனால், ஆன்மிகம் மற்றும் இரக்கத்தின் இயல்பான பணிகள் செய்வதற்கான பூரண சுதந்திரம் இருக்கும் என்றார். எலிசபெத் அம்மாளைக் காண வந்த தூய மரியாளின் நற்குணங்களையும் நல்லொழுக்கங்களையும் முன்மாதிரியாக கொண்டிருக்க வேண்டும். ஆகவே, அவர்கள் தாழ்ச்சியும் சாந்த குணமும் நிறைந்த “திருவருகையின் அருட்சகோதரியர்” (Visitation Nuns) என்றழைக்கப்படுவர் என்றார்.

“திருவருகையின் அருட்சகோதரியர்” சபையை தொடங்குவதற்காக, தென் ஃபிரான்ஸில், ஜெனீவாவுக்கு (Geneva) 35 கிலோமீட்டர் தெற்கேயுள்ள “அன்னேசி” (Annecy) எனுமிடத்திற்கு ஜேன் பயணமானார். கி.பி. 1610ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூன் மாதம், 6ம் தேதி, திரித்துவ ஞாயிறு அன்று, “திருவருகையின் அருட்சகோதரியர் சபை” (Congregation of the Visitation) நிறுவப்பட்டது.

ஊழியங்களில் பெண்களுக்கெதிரான வழக்கமான எதிர்ப்பு இதிலும் இருந்தது. ஆகவே, புனித அகுஸ்தினாரின் (Rule of Saint Augustine) துறவற சட்ட திட்டங்களை இச்சமூகத்தினரிடையே “ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டே சலேஸ்” செயல் படுத்தினார். உடல் நலம் குறைந்த மற்றும் வயோதிக வயது பெண்களை சபையில் ஏற்றுக்கொள்வதற்காக மக்கள் அவரை விமர்சித்தபோது, "நான் என்ன செய்ய வேண்டும் என்று விரும்புகிறீர்கள்? நான் நோய்வாய்ப்பட்ட மக்களையே விரும்புகிறேன். நான் அவர்கள் பக்கத்திலேயே இருப்பேன் என்றார்.

புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டே சலேஸ் (Saint Francis de Sales) அவர்கள் மரித்தபோது, சபை பதின்மூன்று இல்லங்களைக் கொண்டிருந்தது. ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டே சலேஸ் மரணத்தின் பின்னர், “புனிதர் வின்சென்ட் டே பவுல்” (St. Vincent de Paul) இவரது ஆன்மீக வழிகாட்டியாக இருந்தார். “மௌலின்ஸ்” (Moulins) நகரிலுள்ள இவர்களது சபையின் இல்லத்தில், தமது 69 வயதில் ஜேன் மரணத்தின் முன்னர், இவர்களது சபைக்கு 86 இல்லங்கள் இருந்தன. கி.பி. 1767ம் ஆண்டு, சபைக்கு 164 இல்லங்கள் இருந்தன. ஜேன், இயேசுவின் தூய இருதய பக்தியிலும் மரியாளின் (Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Heart of Mary) தூய இருதய பக்தியிலும் மிகவும் ஆர்வமுள்ளவராய் விளங்கினார்.



Feastday: August 12


What a way to start a marriage! Jane no sooner arrived at her new home then she discovered she might lose it. Her husband, Christophe, had not only inherited the title of baron but enormous debts as well.



But Jane had not come to the marriage empty-handed. She brought with her a deep faith instilled by her father who made daily religious discussion fun, allowing the children to talk about anything -- even controversial topics. She also brought a good-hearted way that made a friend comment, "Even stupid jokes were funny when she told them."


These qualities helped the twenty-year-old French woman take charge by personally organizing and supervising every detail of the estate, a method which not only brought the finances under control but won her employees' hearts as well.


Despite the early financial worries, she and her husband shared "one heart and one soul." They were devoted to each other and to their four children.


One way Jane shared her blessings was by giving bread and soup personally to the poor who came to her door. Often people who had just received food from her would pretend to leave, go around the house and get back in line for more. When asked why she let these people get away with this, Jane said, "What if God turned me away when I came back to him again and again with the same request?"



Her happiness was shattered when Christophe was killed in a hunting accident. Before he died, her husband forgave the man who shot him, saying to the man, "Don't commit the sin of hating yourself when you have done nothing wrong." The heartbroken Jane, however, had to struggle with forgiveness for a long time. At first she tried just greeting him on the street. When she was able to do that, she invited him to her house. Finally she was able to forgive the man so completely that she even became godmother to his child.


These troubles opened her heart to her longing for God and she sought God in prayer and a deepening spiritual life. Her commitment to God impressed Saint Francis de Sales, the bishop who became her director and best friend. Their friendship started before they even met, for them saw each other in dreams, and continued in letters throughout their lives.


With Francis' support, Jane founded the Visitation order for women who were rejected by other orders because of poor health or age. She even accepted a woman who was 83 years old. When people criticized her, she said, "What do you want me to do? I like sick people myself; I'm on their side." She believed that people should have a chance to live their calling regardless of their health.


Still a devoted mother, she was constantly concerned about the materialistic ways of one of her daughters. Her daughter finally asked her for spiritual direction as did may others, including an ambassador and her brother, an archbishop. Her advice always reflected her very gentle and loving approach to spirituality:


"Should you fall even fifty times a day, never on any account should that surprise or worry you. Instead, ever so gently set your heart back in the right direction and practice the opposite virtue, all the time speaking words of love and trust to our Lord after you have committed a thousand faults, as much as if you had committed only one. Once we have humbled ourselves for the faults God allows us to become aware of in ourselves, we must forget them and go forward."


She died in 1641, at sixty-nine years of age.


In Her Footsteps

We have been told the secret of happiness is finding: finding yourself, finding love, finding the right job. Jane believed the secret of happiness was in "losing," that we should "throw ourselves into God as a little drop of water into the sea, and lose ourselves indeed in the Ocean of the divine goodness." She advised a man who wrote to her about all the afflictions he suffered "to lose all these things in God. These words produced such an effect in the soul, that he wrote me that he was wholly astonished, and ravished with joy."


Today, when any thoughts or worries come to mind, send them out into the ocean of God's love that surrounds you and lose them there. If any feelings come into your heart -- grief, fear, even joy or longing, send those out into the ocean of God's love. Finally, send your whole self, like a drop, into God. There is no past no future, here or there. There is only the infinite ocean of God.


Prayer: Saint Jane, you forgave the man who killed your husband. Help me learn to forgive a particular person in my life who has caused me harm. You know how difficult it is to forgive. Help me to take the steps you took to welcome this person back into my life. Amen


*In the USA, Jane Frances de Chantal's feast day was moved to August 12 in order to celebrate the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on December 12.


Jane Frances de Chantal (Jeanne-Françoise Frémiot, Baronne de Chantal; 28 January 1572 – 13 December 1641) is a Catholic saint, who was beatified in 1751 and canonized in 1767. She founded the religious Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary.[1] The order accepted women who were rejected by other orders because of poor health or age.[2] When people criticized her, Chantal famously said, "What do you want me to do? I like sick people myself; I'm on their side." During its first eight years, the new order also was unusual in its public outreach, in contrast to most female religious who remained cloistered and adopted strict ascetic practices.



Her life

Jane Frances de Chantal was born in Dijon, France, on 28 January 1572, the daughter of the royalist president of the Parliament of Burgundy, Bénigne Frémyot and his wife, Margaret de Berbisey. Her paternal uncle was the prior at Val des Choux.[3] Her brother André became the Archbishop of Bourges (1602–1621).


Her mother died when Jane was 18 months old. Her father became the main influence on her education. She developed into a woman of beauty and refinement.


Baroness

Having turned down two prior suitors, in 1592, she married the Baron de Chantal when she was 20 and they lived in the feudal castle of Bourbilly. There they hosted hunting parties and other entertainments for the neighboring nobles. Their first two children died shortly after birth. When her older sister Margaret died, the baroness brought her three small children to Bourbilly. She and her husband subsequently had a son and three daughters. Baron de Chantal was occasionally away from home on service to the king. Chantal gained a reputation as an excellent manager of the estates of her husband, as well as of her difficult father-in-law, while also providing alms and nursing care to needy neighbors.


In 1601, the Baron was accidentally killed in a hunting accident. Left a widow at 28, with four children, the broken-hearted baroness took a vow of chastity.[5] Chantal then put the estate in order and acceded to her father's request that she and her children to stay for a time with him in Dijon. She had not long returned to Bourbilly when she received a letter from her widowed father-in-law demanding that she live with him in his castle at Monthelon, Saône-et-Loire. Towards the end of 1602, Chantal closed up Bourbilly and moved to Monthelon.


Francis de Sales

In 1604, her father invited her to come to Dijon to hear the bishop of Geneva, Francis de Sales, preach the Lenten sermons at the Sainte Chapelle.[6] They became close friends and de Sales became her spiritual director. He "...bade her avoid scruples, hurry, and anxiety of mind, which above all things hinder a soul on the road to spiritual perfection."[3] At De Sales suggestion, she divided her time between Dijon and Monthelon so to attend to both her father and father-in-law.


In 1605, Pierre de Bérulle sent Anne of Jesus to found a Carmelite house in Dijon. She wanted to become a nun but he persuaded her to defer this decision.[4] As for her request to perform additional austerities, De Sales was firm in advising between seven and eight hours sleep. In 1610 Chantal's daughter, Marie Aymée, married De Sales youngest brother, Bernard. Shortly after this, Chantal's youngest daughter, Charlotte, died of an illness. With the death of De Sales' mother, Chantal moved to Annecy to be of assistance to Marie Aymée with her remaining daughter Françoise. Her fifteen-year-old son, Celse Bénigne, lived with his grandfather in Dijon.


Daughters of the Visitation

De Sales purchased a small house on Lake Annecy, where she was joined by Marie Favre, daughter of president of Savoy, and Charlotte de Bréchard, whom De Sales had also recruited. The Congregation of the Visitation was canonically established at Annecy on Trinity Sunday, 6 June 1610.[5] Chantal had previously made over her wealth to her children, so the circumstances of the group were rather poor. The order accepted women who were rejected by other orders because of poor health or age. Their office was the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary.


During its first eight years, the new order also was unusual in its public outreach, in contrast to most female religious who remained cloistered and adopted strict ascetic practices. A second convent was established in Lyon. The usual opposition to women in active ministry arose and Francis de Sales was obliged to make it a cloistered community following the Rule of St. Augustine. He wrote his Treatise on the Love of God for them.[4] When people criticized her for accepting women of poor health and old age, Chantal famously said, "What do you want me to do? I like sick people myself; I'm on their side."


Her reputation for sanctity and sound management resulted in many visits by (and donations from) aristocratic women. The order had 13 houses by the time de Sales died, and 86 before Chantal herself died at the Visitation Convent in Moulins, aged 69. Vincent de Paul served as her spiritual director after de Sales' death. Her favorite devotions involved the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Heart of Mary.[8] Chantal was buried in the Annecy convent next to de Sales.[5] The order had 164 houses by 1767, when she was canonized. Chantal outlived her son (who died fighting Huguenots and English on the Île de Ré during the century's religious wars) and two of her three daughters, but left extensive correspondence. Her granddaughter also became a famous writer, Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, marquise de Sévigné.


Veneration


Francis de Sales meets Jane Frances de Chantal, cutout from a window in the cathedral of Annecy

She was beatified on 21 November 1751 by Pope Benedict XIV, and canonized on 16 July 1767 by Pope Clement XIII.


Saint Jane Frances's feast day was included in the General Roman Calendar in 1769, two years after she was canonized. Her feast was set as 21 August. In the 1969 revision of the calendar, her feast was moved to 12 December, to be closer to the day of her death, which occurred on 13 December 1641, the feast of Saint Lucy.[9] In 2001, Pope John Paul II included in the General Roman Calendar the memorial of Our Lady of Guadalupe on 12 December.[10] Consequently, he moved the memorial of Saint Jane Frances to 12 August.


Patronage

Jane Frances de Chantal is invoked as the patron of forgotten people, widows, and parents who are separated from their children




St. James Nam


Feastday: August 12

Death: 1838

Canonized: Pope John Paul II


Vietnamese martyr. A native of Vietnam, he became a priest and joined the Paris Society of Foreign Missions. Seized in the anti Christian persecutions, he was beheaded with Sts. Anthony Dich and Michael My. 


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

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


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




Bl. Isidore Bakanja


Feastday: August 12

Birth: 1887

Death: 1909

Beatified: 24 April 1994 by Pope John Paul II



Isidore Bakanja (c. 1887 at Bokendela in Congo Free State – 15 August 1909 at Busira, Belgian Congo) was beatified on 24 April 1994 by Pope John Paul II. His feast day is 12 August on the Carmelite Calendar of Saints, and 15 August in the general Church calendar. Isidore Bakanja is considered a strong witness to the grace of reconciliation that can be experienced between peoples of different races.


Bakanja accepted the Christian faith at eighteen years of age through the ministry of Cistercian missionaries in what is today the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly known as the "Congo Free State" Belgian Congo). He was a very devout convert and catechist. Bakanja had a great love for the Blessed Virgin Mary that he expressed through recitation of the Rosary and by being invested in the Brown Scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. His employers had ordered him to cease sharing the Gospel as well as remove the scapular that he wore as a witness to his faith. Isidore's refusal to comply with the demands of his supervisor resulted in his being brutally beaten and chained.


As a result of the beating and persistent ill treatment he received, Bakanja's wounds became severely infected. As his condition worsened his supervisor sought to keep him from the view of the plantation's inspector. However, Bakanja was discovered and taken to the inspector's home for treatment. His condition had deteriorated so severely, however, that no further medical attention could help him.


At this point Isidore told the inspector "tell them that I am dying because I am a Christian." Missionaries in the area visited Isidore and urged him to forgive the supervisor. He assured them that he already had, declaring "When I am in heaven, I shall pray for him very much."[1]



The National Shrine of Saint Jude, Faversham, United Kingdom contains an icon of Isidore. In 2004 a fire broke out in the Shrine Chapel which destroyed the murals which hung there, and it damaged much of the other artwork. The decision was made to install icons depicting saints inspired by the Carmelite Rule of Saint Albert, and in commemoration of the 8th centenary of the Carmelite Rule in 2007. The icons were written by Sister Petra Clare, a Benedictine hermit living in Scotland, United Kingdom





Saint Jeanne de Chantal


Also known as

• Jane Frances of Chantel

• Jane Frances Fremiot de Chantal


Additional Memorials

• 18 August (United States)

• 12 December (from 1970 to 2001)

• 21 August (the date of the founding of her Order; from 1769 to 1969)



Profile

Born to the nobility, the daughter of the president of the Parliment of Burgundy who raised her alone after the death of her mother when Jeanne was 18 months old. Married in 1592 at age twenty to Baron de Chantal. Mother of four. Widowed at 28 when the Baron was killed in a hunting accident and died in her arms. Taking a personal vow of chastity, she was forced to live with her father-in-law, which was a period of misery for her. She spent her free time in prayer, and received a vision of the man who would become her spiritual director. In Lent, 1604, she met Saint Francis de Sales, and recognized him as the man in her vision. She became a spiritual student and close friend of Saint Francis, and the two carried on a lengthy correspondence for years. On Trinity Sunday, 6 June 1610 she founded the Order of the Visitation of Our Lady at Annecy, France. The Order was designed for widows and lay women who did not wish the full life of the orders, and Jeanne oversaw the founding of 69 convents. Jeanne spent the rest of her days overseeing the Order, and acting as spiritual advisor to any who desired her wisdom. Visitationist nuns today live a contemplative life, work for women with poor health and widows, and sometimes run schools.


Born

28 January 1572 at Dijon, Burgundy, France


Died

• 13 December 1641 at the Visitationist convent at Moulins, France of natural causes

• relics at Annecy, Savoy (in modern France


Canonized

16 July 1767 by Pope Clement XIII


Patronage

• against in-law problems

• against the death of parents

• forgotten people

• parents separated from children

• widows



Blessed Pope Innocent XI


Also known as

Benedetto Odescalchi



Profile

Born to a pious patrician family; his brother became bishop of Novara, Italy. Benedetto felt an early call to the priesthood. Educated by Jesuits at Como, Italy. Apprentice at his family's bank in Genoa, Italy when he was fifteen. Studied law at Rome and Naples in Italy, and received his Doctor of law degree in 1639. Protonotary apostolic to Pope Urban VIII. President of the Apostolic Chamber. Commissary at Ancona, Italy. Papal administrator of Macerata, Italy. Papal financial commissary in the Marches. Governor of Picena. Cardinal-deacon of Santi Cosma e Damiano on 6 March 1645. Prefect of the Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature of Grace on 22 January 1647. Cardinal-priest of Sant' Onofrio. Papal legate to Ferrara, Italy, assigned to oversee famine relief on 15 June 1648. Bishop from Novara, Italy on 4 April 1650 to 6 March 1656. Noted for spending all the revenues of his see in charity to the poor and sick. Part of the conclave of 1655 that chose Pope Alexander VII. Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals from 12 January 1660 to 24 January 1661. Papal legate to Ferrara in 1666. Part of the conclave of 1667 that chose Pope Clement IX. Part of the conclave of 1669 - 1670 that chose Pope Clement X; was nearly elected himself. Chosen 240th pope on 21 September 1676 after a two month inter-regnum, taking the name Innocent XI.


Stood against the meddling in Church affairs by King Louis XIV of France; Louis tried to get back in papal favour by persecuting Protestants, but Innocent immediately pleaded for a halt to the abuse. Fought nepotism in Church bureaucracy, worked to reduce the expenses of the Curia. Encouraged catechetical instruction. He disapproved of James II's method of attempting to restore Catholicism in England, but it is not true that he supported William of Orange against the king. Fought Jansenism, Quietism, and the heresies promoted by Molinos. He encouraged daily Communion, insisted on a high standard of education in the seminaries, condemned gambling, immodesty in dress, and laxism in moral theology. Noted for his simple, pious life both before and after his ascension to the papacy.


Born

19 May 1611 at Como, Italy as Benedetto Odescalchi


Papal Ascension

• elected unanimously on 21 September 1676

• installed on 4 October 1676


Died

• 12 August 1689 at Rome, Italy of natural causes

• buried in a mausoleum under the altar of San Sebastiano in Saint Peter's Basilica, Vatican City


Beatified

7 October 1956 by Pope Pius XII



Blessed Vittoria Diaz y Bustos de Molina


Profile

Lay woman of the diocese of Córdoba, Spain. She studied at teacher’s college in Seville, Spain, earning her degree in 1923. She joined the Teresian Institute in 1926. Taught school in rural Spain where she worked at night to educate adults and working women. She founded a library, was extremely active in her parish, and organized a Catholic Action group. Arrested on 11 August 1936 by anti–Catholic forces in Spanish Civil War, and murdered the next day. Martyr.



Born

11 November 1903 in Seville, Spain


Died

• shot in the early morning of 12 August 1936 in near an abandoned mine near Hornachuelos, Córdoba, Spain

• relics enshrined at the oratory of the Teresian Institute mother house


Beatification

10 October 1993 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Buenaventura García-Paredes Pallasá


Profile

Born to a pious family of shepherds, and he worked the fields as a boy. Educated at the Dominican Apostolic School. Dominican novice in Toledo, Spain; he made his solemn profession in 1887, taking the name Bonaventure of Saint Louis Bertran. Studied theology in Avila, Salamanca, Valencia and Madrid in Spain, concentrating on the works of Saint Thomas Aquinas. Priest, ordained on 25 July 1891 in Avila. Obtained doctorates in philosophy and civil law. Returned to Avila where he taught and began writing. Prior of his house in 1901. Opened a school in Segovia, Spain. Superior of the province of Manila, Philippines on 14 May 1910. Supervised the building of schools and hospitals in China, Japan and Vietnam; he worked to recruit more Dominican friars, and to insure the proper spiritual formation of those novices. Founded the magazine Missiones Dominicans. Built the Theological Study Center of New Orleans, Louisiana. Elected reluctant Master-General of the Dominicans on 22 May 1926; he was actually hoping to retire, but accepted the duty. Martyred in the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War.



Born

19 April 1866 in Castañedo, Valdés, Asturias, Spain


Died

• shot by firing squad on 12 August 1936 in Fuencarral, Madrid, Spain

• buried in the cemetery of Fuencarral

• re-interred in the crypt of the Santísimo Rosario Church in Madrid in 1940

• re-interred at the Convento de Santo Tomás de ávila, Madrid in 1967


Beatified

28 October 2007 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Karl Leisner


Profile

Studied theology in Münster, and tried to establish Catholic youth groups. However, the Nazis sought control of all work with youth, and he had to take teenagers "camping" in Belgium and the Netherlands in order to freely discuss Catholicism.



He spent six months in compulsory agricultural work during which, despite Nazi opposition, he organized Sunday Mass for his fellow workers. His home was raided by the Gestapo, who seized his diaries and papers. These meticulously preserved documents tell how the spiritual young man became a heroic religious leader.


Ordained deacon by Bishop von Galen in 1939. Imprisoned in Freiburg, Mannheim and Sachsenhausen for criticizing Hitler. Transferred on 14 December 1941 to Dachau, where he was secretly ordained on 17 December 1944 by French bishop Gabriel Piquet, who had been admitted to the camp with the help of local religious authorities. Leisner was so sick he had to postpone his first Mass for over a week.


Still in the camp when it was liberated on 4 May 1945, but was immediately transferred to tuberculosis sanitarium of Planegg, near Munich, Germany for the remaining months of his life.


Born

28 February 1915 at Rees, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany


Died

12 August 1945 at Planneg, Bavaria, Germany of tuberculosis


Beatified

23 June 1996 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Józef Stepniak


Also known as

• Father Florian

• prisoner 22738



Profile

Born to a farm family, the son of Paul and Anna Misztal; he was baptized at the age of one day. Jozef's mother died when the boy was very small. Studied at the Capuchin college of Saint Fidelis in Lomza, Poland; he was a mediocre student, succeeded through simple determination and hard work. Franciscan tertiary. Entered the Capuchin novitiate at Nowe Miasto, Poland on 14 August 1931, taking the name Florian; he made his profession on 15 August 1935. Ordained on 24 June 1938, he continued his studies at the Catholic University of Lublin. When the Nazi anti-Catholic persecutions began soon after the invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939, Father Jozef refused to flee the area, preferring to take his chances so he could continue ministering to his brother frars and the local Christians. Arrested by the Gestapo on 25 January 1940 he was first imprisoned in Sachsenhausen and then Dachau where he was worked and starved until he was of no more use in the fields. Martyr.


Born

3 January 1912 in Zdzary, Mazowieckie, Poland


Died

gassed on 12 August 1942 in the death chambers of Dachau concentration camp, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Manuel Basulto Jiménez


Profile

Son of a miller. Seminarian in Avila, Spain in 1880. Ordained on 15 March 1893. Parish priest in Narros del Puerto, Spain. Studied theology at the San Carlo Borromeo seminary and law at the University of Valladolid. Taught in the seminary in Madrid, Spain. Canon of the cathedral of Leon, Spain. Director of the Circle of Catholic Workers, the Association of the Apostleship of Prayer, and the Conference of Saint Vincent de Paul. Bishop of Lugo, Spain on 3 September 1909. Bishop of Jaén, Spain from 18 December 1919 until his death. Supported catechism of children and adults, and supported the formation of worker's unions and Catholic Action. Arrested for his faith on 2 August 1936. Martyred in the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War.



Born

17 May 1860 in Adanero, ávila, Spain


Died

• shot on a prisoner transport train on 12 August 1936 in Vallecas, Madrid, Spain

• buried in the crypt in the Cathedral of Jaén, Spain


Beatified

• 27 October 2013 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at Tarragona, Spain




Blessed Enrique María Gómez Jiménez


Profile

Baptized at the age of two days. After studying at the seminary of Saint Julian, he was ordained a priest in the diocese of Almería, Spain on 26 May 1888. Chaplain of the convent of San Clemente in 1890. Parish priest in Villar de Cantos, Spain. Bursar of the collegiate church of Belmonte. Canter at the cathedral of Almería. Missionary to Argentina in 1910 where he served for seven years. In 1933, his failing health confined him to the area of Cuenca, Spain. When the anti–Catholic militia in the Spanish Civil War came for him, they first tried to stage his death so it looked like a suicide; the 71 year old man fought so hard to avoid that scandal that the militiamen gave up and killed him outright. Martyr.


Born

15 July 1865 in Cuenca Spain


Died

shot on 12 August 1936 in the bullfighting ring in Cuenca Spain


Beatified

• 25 March 2017 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated in the Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos de Aguadulce, Almería, Spain, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato



Blessed Félix Pérez Portela


Profile

The son of Miguel Pérez and Portela Saturnina. Entered the seminary in Madrid, Spain in 1907. Began studying at the Spanish School of San Jose, in Rome, Italy in October 1913. Studied theology and canon law at the Gregorian University. Ordained on 10 March 1918, and became a parish priest in Madrid. Personal secretary to Venerable Manuel Basulto Jiménez, bishop of Jaén, Spain, in June 1920. Vicar General of the diocese in 1935. Dean of the cathedral of Jaén. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

21 February 1895 in Adanero, ávila, Spain



Died

• shot on a prisoner transport train on 12 August 1936 in Vallecas, Madrid, Spain

• buried in the crypt in the Cathedral of Jaén, Spain


Beatified

• 27 October 2013 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at Tarragona, Spain



Saint Euplus of Catania


Also known as

• Euplio

• Euplius



Profile

Deacon. Tortured and martyred by order of governor Calvisianus in the persecutions of Diocletian for the crime of possessing a copy of the Gospels. His copy of the Scripture was taken when he was arrested; in court he was asked if he had any other copies, and he began to recite them from memory.


Died

• flogged to death on 12 August 304 in Catania, Sicily, Italy

• relics in Trevico, Italy that were long thought to be from Euplus were examined scientifically in 2005 and determined to be from three different people


Patronage

• Catania, Sicily, Italy

• Francavilla di Sicilia, Italy

• Trevico, Italy



Saint Antôn Nguyen Dích


Also known as

Anthony Dich Nguyen


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Married layman in the apostolic vicariate of West Tonkin. A wealthy farmer, solid citizen, and patron of his church. He worked to help the missionaries of the Paris Foreign Mission Society, supporting them financially, and hiding priests from government oppression. Arrested and tortured for his faith, his association with foreigners, and for sheltering priests, especially Saint James Nam, who was arrested on Anton's property. One of the Martyrs of Vietnam.


Born

c.1769 in Chi Long, Hanoi, Vietnam


Died

beheaded on 12 August 1838 in Bay Mau, Hanoi, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Pierre Jarrige de la Morelie de Puyredon


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Limoges, France. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti-Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.


Born

19 April 1737 in Saint-Yrieix, Haute-Vienne, France


Died

12 August 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Pedro del Barco


Additional Memorial

1 November (Ávila, Spain)



Profile

Known as a pious child, when Pedro's parents died he moved to the area of modern Ribera Barcense, started a garden which he used to feed himself and the area poor. Catechist to any who would listen. His reputation for holiness and zeal for the faith led to him being chosen canon of the cathedral of Segovia. Priest. Hermit near the river Tormes.


Born

1088 in Ávila, Spain


Died

1155 of natural causes



Saint Giacôbê Do Mai Nam


Also known as

James Nam


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Priest in the apostolic vicariate of West Tonkin. Worked with the Society of Foreign Missions of Paris. One of the Martyrs of Vietnam.


Born

c.1781 in Dông Biên, Thanh Hóa, Vietnam


Died

beheaded on 12 August 1838 in Bay Mau, Hanoi, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Józef Straszewski


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Wloclawek, Poland. Martyred in the Nazi persecutions.


Born

18 January 1885 in Wloclawek, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland



Died

gassed on 12 August 1942 in the death chambers of Dachau concentration camp, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

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



Saint Porcarius of Lérins


Also known as

Porcario


Profile

Benedictine monk. Abbot of Lérins, France, a house of 500 monks. Warned in a vision that the monastery would be attacked, he managed to evacuate about three dozen of the students and younger brothers to the mainland by boat; Porcarius and all but four of the remaining brothers were massacred by invading Saracens. Martyr.


Died

c.732 at Lérins, France



Saint Cecilia of Remiremont


Also known as

Chiara, Gegoberga, Sigaberga



Profile

Daughter of Saint Romaric of Remiremont. In the mid-7th century, she and her sister Azaltrude became nuns at the Remiremont Abbey which her father had built, and Cecilia long served as its abbess.


Patronage

eyes



Blessed Charles Meehan


Also known as

Charles Mahoney


Additional Memorial

22 November as one of the Martyrs of England, Scotland, and Wales


Profile

Franciscan priest. Martyred in connection with the Titus Oates Plot.


Born

c.1640 in Ireland


Died

12 August 1679 at Ruthin, Denbighshire, Wales


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Micae Nguyen Huy My


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Lifelong layman in the apostolic vicariate of West Tonkin. One of the Martyrs of Vietnam.


Born

c.1804 in Ke Vinh, Hanoi, Vietnam


Died

12 August 1838 in Bay Mau, Hanoi, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Anicetus of Marmora


Profile

Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Died

• burned at the stake in 304 at Nicomedia on the shores of the Sea of Marmora

• relics enshrined in a church on the island of Daphnos in the Agean Sea



Saint Simplicio of Vercelli


Also known as

Simplicius



Profile

Eighth bishop of Vercelli, Italy. Served during a period of barbarian invasion. No records of his episcopate have survived.


Died

c.470



Saint Photinus of Marmora


Also known as

Fotinus, Fozio


Profile

Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

• burned at the stake in 304 at Nicomedia on the shores of the Sea of Marmora

• relics enshrined in a church on the island of Daphnos in the Agean Sea



Saint Murtagh of Killala


Also known as

Muredach, Muiredach


Profile

Disciple of Saint Patrick, and may have been a relative. First bishop of Killala, Ireland, consecrated by Patrick c.443. In later years he became a hermit on the island of Innesmurray.


Patronage

diocese of Killala, Ireland



Saint Hilaria of Augsburg


Profile

Mother of Saint Afra of Augsburg. While visiting the tomb of Saint Afra with some friends, she was seized by the authorities and martyred.



Died

burned alive c.304



Saint Gracilian


Also known as

Gratiliano


Profile

While in prison for his faith, Gracilian restored the sight of a blind girl, Saint Felicissima, and converted her to the faith. Martyr.


Born

at Faleria, Italy


Died

beheaded c.304


Patronage

Bassano Romano, Italy



Saint Lelia


Profile

Daughter of Prince Cairthenn. Lived in the Irish cities of Limerick and Kerry. Nun. Superior of a convent in Munster, Ireland. Several Irish place names keep her memory alive, and her house was renamed Saint Lelias’s in honour of her holiness.


Born

Irish


Died

5th century Ireland



Saint Jambert of Canterbury


Also known as

Jaenbert, Janbert


Profile

Abbot of Saint Augustine's monastery, Canterbury, England. Archbishop of Canterbury, England in 765.


Died

792 of natural causes



Saint Herculanus of Brescia


Also known as

Ercolano



Profile

Bishop of Brescia, Italy.


Died

c.550



Saint Discolio of Vercelli



Profile

Fourth bishop of Vercelli, Italy. No records of his episcopate have survived.



Saint Felicissima the Blind


Profile

A blind girl whose sight was restored by Saint Gracilian when he was in prison for his faith. Convert. Martyr.


Died

beheaded c.304



Saint Macarius of Syria


Profile

Monk. Martyred for trying to spread the faith to pagans.


Died

Syria



Saint Julian of Syria


Profile

Monk. Martyred for trying to spread the faith to pagans.


Died

Syria



Saint Ust


Also known as

Just, Justus


Profile

Hermit. The town of Saint Just near Penzance, Cornwall, England is named after him.



Saint Merewenna


Profile

Venerated in Marhamchurch near Bude, Cornwall, England, but no details have survived.



Martyrs of Augsburg


Profile

The mother, Hilaria, and three friends of of Saint Afra of Augsburg. While visiting the tomb of Saint Afra who were seized by the authorities and martyred when they visited Afra's tomb - Digna, Eunomia, Euprepia and Hilaria.


Died

burned alive c.304



Martyrs of Barbastro



Profile

Six Claretian brothers and priests who were martyred together in the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War.



• Gregorio Chirivas Lacamba

• José Pavón Bueno

• Nicasio Sierra Ucar

• Pere Cunill Padrós

• Sebastián Calvo Martínez

• Wenceslau Clarís Vilaregut


Died

12 August 1936 in Barbastro, Huesca, Spain


Beatified

25 October 1992 by Pope John Paul II



Martyrs of La Torre de Fontaubella


Profile

Four parish priests who were murdered together in the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War.


• Antoni Nogués Martí

• Joan Rofes Sancho

• Josep Maria Sancho Toda

• Ramon Martí Amenós


Died

12 August 1936 in La Torre de Fontaubella, Tarragona, Spain


Beatified

• 13 October 2013 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated in Tarragona, Spain



Martyrs of Puerta de Hierro


Profile

Five nun in the Archdiocese of Madrid, Spain, all members of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, and all martyred together in the Spanish Civil War.


• Estefanía Saldaña Mayoral

• María Asunción Mayoral Peña

• María Dolores Barroso Villaseñor

• María Severina Díaz-Pardo Gauna

• Melchora Adoración Cortés Bueno


Died

12 August 1936 in Puerta de Hierro, Aravaca, Madrid, Spain


Beatified

27 October 2013 by Pope Benedict XVI



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group of Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. We know little more than their names - Crescentian, Juliana, Largio, Nimmia and Quiriacus.


Died

• c.304 in Rome, Italy

• buried on the Ostian Way outside Rome



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Antoni Perulles Estivill

• Atilano Dionisio Argüeso González

• Carles Barrufet Tost

• Buenaventura García-Paredes Pallasá

• Carles Barrufet Tost

• Domingo Sánchez Lázaro

• Félix Pérez Portela

• Gabriel Albiol Plou

• José Jordán Blecua

• Josep Nadal Guiu

• Juana Pérez Abascal

• Manuel Basulto Jiménez

• Manuel Borràs Ferré

• Pau Figuerola Rovira

• Pedro José Cano Cebrían

• Perfecto Del Río Páramo

• Ramona Cao Fernández

10 August 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஆகஸ்ட் 11

 St. Lelia


Feastday: August 11



The diocese of Limerick today keeps the feast of St. Lelia, who as well as a commemoration in all other Irish dioceses. Canon O'Hanlon, in his lives of the Irish saints, says of this maiden that "her era and her locality have not been distinctly revealed to us; but there is good reason for supposing that she lived at a remote period, and most probably she let a life of strict observance, if she did not preside over some religious institution in the province of Munster". Lelia is now generally identified with the Dalcassian saint Liadhain, great-grand-daughter of the prince Cairthenn whom St. Patrick baptized at Singland. There are no particulars or traditions about her (in the 17th century she was said to be the sister of St. Munchin), but she gives her name to Killeely (Cill Liadaini) just within the borough boundary of Limerick. Her feast day is August 11th.



Bl. Lawrence Nerucci


Feastday: August 11

Death: 1420


Servite martyr in Bohemia with Augustine Cennini, Bartholomew Donati, and John Baptist Petrucci. These Servites were sent to Bohemia, Czech Republic, by Pope Martin V. They were burned alive in a church With sixty other Servites by Hussite heretics. They were beatified in 1918.



St. Francis of St. Mary


Feastday: August 11

Death: 1627


Martyr of Japan with Bartholomew Laurel, another Franciscan; a doctor, Gasparvaz; and two Japanese. Taken prisoner, Francis, a Spanish-born Franciscan, was accompanied in martyrdom by others of the faith. They were burned alive in Nagasaki, Japan, on August 17. This group was beatified in 1867.



St. Chromatius

 

Feastday: August 11

Death: 3rd century


Martyr and father of St. Tiburtius. Chromatius was reportedly a prefect of Rome. No details of his martyrdom survive.



Saint Clare of Assisi


✠ அசிசியின் புனிதர் கிளாரா ✠

(St. Clare of AssisiSt. Clare of Assisi) 


கன்னியர்/ எளிய பெண்களின் ஆன்மீக துறவற சபை நிறுவனர்: 


(Virgin/ Foundress of the Order of Poor Ladies) 


பிறப்பு: ஜூலை 16, 1194

அசிசி, இத்தாலி

(Assise, Italy) 


இறப்பு: ஆகஸ்ட் 11, 1253 (வயது 59) 


அசிசி, இத்தாலி

(Assise, Italy) 


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:  


ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church) 


ஆங்கிலிகன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion) 


லூதரனியம்

(Lutheranism) 


புனிதர் பட்டம்: செப்டம்பர் 26, 1255 


திருத்தந்தை நான்காம் அலெக்சாண்டர்

(Pope Alexander IV) 


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

புனித கிளாரா பேராலயம், அசிசி

(Basilica of Saint Clare, Assisi) 


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஆகஸ்ட் 11 


சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை:  


கதிர்ப்பாத்திரம் (Monstrance), பெட்டி (Pyx), எண்ணெய் விளக்கு (Lamp), கன்னியர் சீருடை (Habit of the Poor Clares) 


பாதுகாவல்: 


கண் நோய் (Eye disease), பொற்கொல்லர் (Goldsmiths), சலவையகம் (Laundry), தொலைக்காட்சி (Television), பின்னல் பணியாளர் (Embroiderers), நல்ல வானிலை, அலங்கார தையல் பணியாளர் (Needleworkers), சாண்டா கிளாரா ப்யூப்லோ (Santa Clara Pueblo), ஒபாண்டோ (Obando) 


அசிசியின் புனிதர் கிளாரா, ஒரு இத்தாலிய கிறிஸ்தவ புனிதரும் (Italian Saint), “அசிசியின் புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ்” (Saint Francis of Assisi) அவர்களின் ஆரம்பகால சீடர்களுள் ஒருவருமாவார். இவர், ஆண்களுக்கான ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபை ஒழுங்குகளைத் தழுவி, “எளிய பெண்களின் ஆன்மீக துறவற சபையை” (Order of Poor Ladies) நிறுவினார். இவரால் எழுதப்பட்ட இவரது சபையின் சட்ட திட்டங்கள், முதன்முதலாக, ஒரு பெண்ணால் எழுதப்பட்ட சட்ட திட்டங்களாகும். “எளிய பெண்களின் சபை” (Order of Poor Ladies) எனும் பெயர் கொண்ட இவரது சபை, இவரது மரணத்தின் பின்னர், இவரை கௌரவிக்கும் விதமாக, “புனிதர் கிளாராவின் சபை” (Order of Saint Clare) என பெயர் மாற்றம் செய்யப்பட்டது. பொதுவாக, இச்சபையினர் “எளிய கிளாராக்கள்” (Poor Clares) என அறியப்படுகின்றனர். 


தொடக்க காலம்: 


“சியாரா ஆஃரெடுஸியோ” (Chiara Offreduccio ) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட புனிதர் கிளாரா, இத்தாலியின் அசிசி (Assisi) நகரில் பிரபுக்கள் குடும்பமொன்றில் கி.பி. 1194ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூலை மாதம், 16ம் தேதி, பிறந்தார். அசிசியின் “சஸ்ஸோ-ரொஸ்ஸோ” (Sasso-Rosso) பிராந்தியத்தின் பிரபுவான “ஃபேவரினோ ஸ்கிஃப்ஃபி” (Favorino Sciffi) இவரது தந்தை ஆவார். இவரது தாயாரின் பெயர், “ஒர்டோலனா” (Ortolana) ஆகும்.  


இவரது தாயாரும் சகோதரியரும்: 


கிளாராவின் தாயார் “ஒர்டோலனா” (Ortolana), பிற்காலத்தில் தமது சொந்த மகள் கிளாரா நிறுவிய “எளிய பெண்களின் சபையில்” இணைந்து துறவியானார். பின்னர், தமது கணவரின் மரணத்தின் பின்னர் “புனிதர் தமியான் துறவு மடத்தில்” (Monastery of San Damiano) இணைந்தார். இவர், “அருளாளர் அசிசியின் ஒர்டோலனா” (Blessed Ortolana of Assisi) என்று அறியப்படுகிறார். கிளாராவின் சகோதரியரான “பீட்ரிக்ஸ்” மற்றும் “கத்தரீனா” (Beatrix and Catarina) ஆகியோரும் கிளாராவின் சபையின் இணைந்தனர். இவர்களில் “கத்தரீனா”, புனிதர் “அசிசியின் அக்னேஸ்” (St. Agnes of Assisi) ஆவார். 


துறவற வாழ்வு: 


ஆரம்பம் முதலே மிகவும் பக்தியுள்ள பெண்ணாக இவர் வளர்க்கப்பட்டார். இவருக்கு 18 வயது நடந்தபோது, அசிசியிலுள்ள புனித “ஜோர்ஜியோ” தேவாலயத்தில், அசிசியின் புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் ஆற்றிய தவக்கால மறையுரையால் ஈர்க்கப்பட்டார். இறைவனின் நற்செய்திகளின்படி வாழ தமக்கு உதவுமாறு ஃபிரான்சிசை வேண்டினார். கி.பி. 1212ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 20ம் நாள், குருத்து ஞாயிறு அன்று, தனது அத்தையான “பியான்கா” (Bianca) மற்றும் ஒரு பெண் ஆகிய இரண்டு பேரின் துணையுடன் வீட்டை விட்டு வெளியேறி, ஃபிரான்சிசை சந்திப்பதற்காக “போர்ஸியுன்குலா” சிற்றாலயம் (Chapel of the Porziuncula) சென்றார். அங்கே, தமது அழகிய கூந்தலை மழித்தார். தமது அழகிய விலையுயர்ந்த ஆடைகளை களைந்து, வெற்று மேலங்கி மற்றும் முக்காடு ஆகியவற்றை பெற்றுக்கொண்டார். 


ஃபிரான்சிஸ், அவரை “பஸ்டியா” (Bastia) எனும் இடத்தின் அருகேயுள்ள “புனித பாலோவின் பெனடிக்டின் கன்னியாஸ்திரிகளின் பள்ளியில்” (Convent of the Benedictine nuns of San Paulo) தங்க வைத்தார். அங்கே வந்த கிளாராவின் தந்தை, அவரை வலுக்கட்டாயமாக வீட்டுக்கு அழைத்துச் செல்ல முயற்சித்தார். ஆனால், ஆலயத்தின் திருப்பலி பீடத்தினுள்ளே ஓடிப்போன கிளாரா, முக்காடை விலக்கி, தமது கூந்தலற்ற தலையை காட்டினார். 


ஃபிரான்சிஸ் அவரை மற்றுமொரு பெனடிக்டைன் கன்னியாஸ்திரிகள் மடாலயத்துக்கு (Monastery of the Benedictine Nuns) அனுப்பினார். விரைவில் அவரது தங்கை “கத்தரினாவும்” (Catarina) “அக்னேஸ்: (Agnes) என்ற பெயருடன் அவர்களுடன் இணைந்தார். “புனித தமியானோ தேவாலயத்தின்” (Church of San Damiano) அருகே, ஃபிரான்சிஸ் அவர்களுக்காக கட்டித்தந்த சிறிய குடியிருப்பில் தங்கினார்கள். 


அவர்களுடன் இன்னும் பிற பெண்களும் இணைந்தனர். அவர்கள், “புனித தமியானோவின் ஏழைப்பெண்கள்” (Poor Ladies of San Damiano) என்று அறியப்பட்டனர். கிளாரா, 40 ஆண்டுகள் கடுமையான துறவற தவ வாழ்வை மேற்கொண்டார். மிகுந்த எளிமை, தாழ்ச்சி, தொடர்ச்சியான உண்ணா நோன்பு, மாமிச உணவு உண்ணாமை, தொடர்ந்த மவுனம், காலணிகள் அணியாமை போன்ற கடுமையான தவ முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொண்டார். ஏழைகளின் புதல்வியர் சபை என்று பெயர் கொண்டிருந்த கிளாராவின் துறவற சபை, ஏழைப் பெண்களின் முன்னேற்றத்தையே முக்கிய நோக்கமாக கொண்டிருந்தது. 


விசுவாசத் துறவி: 


கி.பி. 1224ம் ஆண்டு, அரசன் “இரண்டாம் ஃபிரடெரிக்கின்” (Frederick II) இராணுவத்தினர் அசிசியை கொள்ளையிட வந்தனர். அப்போது, அர்ச்சிஷ்ட நற்கருணை ஆண்டவரை கையிலேந்தியபடி கிளாரா வெளியே வந்தார். நற்கருணை நாதரின் வல்லமையாலும், திடீரென நிகழ்ந்த அற்புதத்தாலும், அரச இராணுவத்தினர் எவருக்கும் யாதொரு துன்பமும் ஏற்படுத்தாமல் திரும்பிப் போனார்கள். 


கிளாரா, நற்கருணை நாதராம் கிறிஸ்து இயேசுவிடம் மிகுந்த அன்பு கொண்டிருந்தார். இவர் இயேசுவின் வல்லமையையும் அன்பையும் தனது வாழ்வில் எப்போதும் உணர்ந்து வாழ்ந்தார். நற்கருணையின் மதிப்பீடுகளான அன்பு, தியாகம் ஆகியவற்றை தனது வாழ்வில் கடைபிடித்து வாழ்ந்து வந்தார். 


"இறைவா, உம் விருப்பம் போல் என்னை நடத்தும்; என் மனம் என்னுடையதல்ல உமக்குரியது" என்று கிளாரா அடிக்கடி செபித்து வந்தார். தன்னோடு துறவற வாழ்வு மேற்கொண்டிருந்த பெண்கள் இறைவனின் அன்பில் வளர இவர் சிறந்த முன்மாதிரியாக விளங்கினார். ஏழை, எளியப் பெண்களின் வாழ்க்கை மேன்மை அடைய மிகவும் ஆர்வமாகவும் கடுமையாகவும் உழைத்தார். 


கி.பி. 1253ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம், 11ம் தேதி மரித்த கிளாரா, இறைவனின் அமைதியில் உயிர்த்தார். 



Additional Memorials

• 23 September, feast of the finding of her body

• 3 October, feast of her first translation, celebrated within the Poor Clares



Profile

Clare's father was a count, her mother the countess Blessed Orsolana. Her father died when the girl was very young. After hearing Saint Francis of Assisi preach in the streets, Clare confided to him her desire to live for God, and the two became close friends. On Palm Sunday in 1212, her bishop presented Clare with a palm, which she apparently took as a sign. With her cousin Pacifica, Clare ran away from her mother's palace during the night to enter religious life. She eventually took the veil from Saint Francis at the Church of Our Lady of the Angels in Assisi, Italy.


Clare founded the Order of Poor Ladies (Poor Clares) at San Damiano, and led it for 40 years. Everywhere the Franciscans established themselves throughout Europe, there also went the Poor Clares, depending solely on alms, forced to have complete faith on God to provide through people; this lack of land-based revenues was a new idea at the time. Clare's mother and sisters later joined the order, and there are still thousands of members living lives of silence and prayer.


Clare loved music and well-composed sermons. She was humble, merciful, charming, optimistic, chivalrous, and every day she meditated on the Passion of Jesus. She would get up late at night to tuck in her sisters who'd kicked off their blankets. When she learned of the Franciscan martyrs in Morrocco in 1221, she tried to go there to give her own life for God, but was restrained. Once when her convent was about to be attacked, she displayed the Sacrament in a monstrace at the convent gates, and prayed before it; the attackers left, the house was saved, and the image of her holding a monstrance became one of her emblems. Her patronage of eyes and against their problems may have developed from her name which has overtones from clearness, brightness, brilliance - like healthy eyes.


Toward the end of her life, when she was too ill to attend Mass, an image of the service would display on the wall of her cell; thus her patronage of television. She was ever the close friend and spiritual student of Francis, who apparently led her soul into the light at her death.


Born

16 July 1194 at Assisi, Italy

  

Died

11 August 1253 of natural causes


Canonized

26 September 1255 by Pope Alexander IV


Patronage

• embroiderers, needle workers

• eyes, against eye disease

• for good weather

• gilders, gold workers, goldsmiths

• laundry workers

• telegraphs

• telephones

• television (proclaimed on 14 February 1958 by Pope Pius XII)

• television writers

• Poor Clares

• Assisi, Italy

• Santa Clara Indian Pueblo




Saint Philomena

இன்றைய புனிதர் 


(ஆகஸ்ட் 11) 


✠ புனித பிலோமினா ✠

Saint Philomena 


புனித பிலோமினம்மாள்


பிறப்பு                 :  10 Jan 291

இறப்பு                 :  10 Aug 304

புனிதர் பட்டம் :  1837 by Pope Gregory XVI

பாதுகாவலி      :  Children, Youth, Babies, Priests, Lost   causes, Infants, Sterility Children of Mary,   The Universal Living Rosary Association

திருவிழா           : 11 Aug புனித பிலோமினம்மாள் 13 வயதில் வேதசாட்சி மரணம் அடைந்தார்.இவரைப் பற்றிய முழு தகவல்கள் கிடைக்கப்பெறவில்லை.

                     இவர் ஒரு கிரேக்க இளவரசி .  தன் சிறுவயதிலே  அவள் கற்பு என்னும் புண்ணியத்தை ஆடையாக தரிப்பதாக ஆண்டவருக்கு தன்னை ஒப்புக் கொடுத்தாள் .   அவளுடைய  13ம் வயதில் அவளை திருமணம் செய்து கொள்ள ஒரு ரோமை அரசன் விருப்பம் தெரிவித்தான்.   ஆனால் அவள் அதை ஏற்க மறுத்தாள்.   அவன் அவளை தன் விருப்பத்துக்கு சம்மதிக்க அவளை மிரட்டினான்.  ஆனால் அவள் எதற்கும் அஞ்சவில்லை.  காரணம் அவள் தன்னை முழுதும் ஆண்டவருக்கு அர்ப்பணித்து இருந்தாள்.

 பல முறை முயற்சி செய்தும் அந்த அரசனால் அவளை தன் ஆசைக்கு இணங்க வைக்க முடியவில்லை.இதனால் கோபம் கொண்ட அரசன் அவளை சாவுக்கு தீர்ப்பளித்தான்.  அர்ச்.  பிலோமினம்மாள் 13 வயதில் வேதசாட்சி மரணம் அடைந்தார்.

  அவளுடைய அழியா உடல் 1802ம் ஆண்டு கண்டுப்பிடிக்கப்பட்டது.  அவள் கல்லறையில்  மூன்று பெரிய கற்கள் இருந்தன.  அந்த கற்களில்  நான்கு அடையாளங்கள் பொறிக்கப்பட்டு இருந்தன.

அவை:           2 நங்கூரம்            3 அம்பு            1 தென்னை ஓலை            1 லில்லிப் பூ

சிறப்பு

            ஒரு புனிதருடைய முழு விவரங்கள் தெரியாமல் அவருடைய புதுமைகளைக் கொண்டு புனிதர் பட்டம் வழங்கப்பட்ட ஒரே புனிதர் அர்ச்.  பிலோமினம்மாள்


Also known as

• Filomena, Filumena, Philumena, Philomene

• Thaumaturga of the Nineteenth Century

• Wonder Worker of the Nineteenth Century



Profile

Little is known of her life, and the information was have was received by private revelation from her. Martyred at about age 14 in the early days of the Church.


In 1802 the remains of a young woman were found in the catacomb of Saint Priscilla on the Via Salaria, Rome, Italy. It was covered by stones, the symbols on which indicated that the body was a martyr named Saint Philomena. The bones were exhumed, cataloged, and effectively forgotten since there was so little known about the person.


In 1805 Canon Francis de Lucia of Mugnano, Italy was in the Treasury of the Rare Collection of Christian Antiquity (Treasury of Relics) in the Vatican. When he reached the relics of Saint Philomena he was suddenly struck with a spiritual joy, and requested that he be allowed to enshrine them in a chapel in Mugnano. After some disagreements, settled by the cure of Canon Francis following prayers to Philomena, he was allowed to translate the relics to Mugnano. Miracles began to be reported at the shrine including cures of cancer, healing of wounds, and the Miracle of Mugnano in which Venerable Pauline Jaricot was cured a severe heart ailment overnight. Philomena became the only person recognized as a Saint solely on the basis of miraculous intercession as nothing historical was known of her except her name and the evidence of her martyrdom.


• Pope Leo XII granted permission for the erection of altars and churches in her honour

• Pope Gregory XVI authorized her public veneration, and named her patroness of the Living Rosary

• The cure of Pope Blessed Pius IX, while archbishop of Imola, was attributed to Philomena; in 1849, Pius named her patroness of the Children of Mary

• Pope Leo XIII approved the Confraternity of Saint Philomena, and raised it to an Archconfraternity

• Pope Pius X raised the Archconfraternity to a Universal Archconfraternity, and named Saint John Vianney its patron

• Saint John Vianney himself called Philomena the New Light of the Church Militant, and had a strong and well-known devotion to her


Others with known devotion to her include • Saint Anthony Mary Claret

• Saint Mary Euphrasia Pelletier

• Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini

• Saint John Nepomucene Neumann

• Saint Madeline Sophie Barat

• Saint Peter Chanel

• Saint Peter Julian Eymard

• Blessed Anna Maria Taigi

• Venerable Pauline Jaricot


Died

• relics discovered on 24 May 1802

• relics translated to Mugnano, Italy on 10 August 1805


Canonized

by Pope Gregory XVI


Patronage

• against barrenness, infertility, sterility

• against bodily ills

• against mental illness

• against sickness, sick people

• babies, infants, newborns, toddlers

• children, young people, youth

• Children of Mary

• desperate, forgotten, lost or impossible causes

• Living Rosary

• orphans

• poor people

• priests

• prisoners

• students, school children

• test takers




Blessed Maurice Tornay


Also known as

Mauritius, Mauricio



Profile

Seventh of eight children born to Jean-Joseph Tornay and Faustina Dossier, and likely named for Saint Maurice of the Theban Legion who had been martyred in the area. He was baptised at 13 days old, made his First Communion at age 7, and during his youth he walked a hour each way each week through the mountain passes to get to church. Raised on a farm, he helped his family work it in his time after school. In his teens, he studied for six years at the school at the Abbey of Saint Maurice where he was an exceptional student with a love of French literature, and where he served as president of his class. Pilgrim to Lourdes, France. Maurice had a special devotion to Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, and would read to class mates from works by Saint Thérèse and Saint Francis de Sales.


Member of the Canons Regular of Saint Augustine, Hospitallers of Saint Nicholas and Grand-St-Bernard of Mont Joux, beginning his novitiate on 25 August 1931 and making his first vows on 8 September 1932. His studies and plans to be a missionary were interrupted for surgery and recovery in 1934 due to a stomach ulcer, but he made his solemn vows in 1935, and in 1936 was sent to the mission in Weixi, Yunnan in southwest China on the border of Tibet. There he spent his initial time studying theology, medicine, dentistry, the local language, and praying about his vocation. Ordained a priest in Hanoi (in modern Vietnam) on 24 April 1938. In the summer of 1938 he was tasked with founding and supervising the Houa-Lo-Pa seminary for local students; he also taught and worked on spiritual formation. He claimed that the largest hurdle to overcome in all this work was his own laziness. When the Japanese invaded the region in 1939, some of the work had to be scaled back, and Father Maurice was forced to beg for food for his seminarians.


In 1945 he was named pastor of the Yerkalo mission in Tibet where Dalai Lama Gun-Akhio ruled. The Lama hated Christian missionaries, helped instigate anti-Christian persecutions, and Maurice withdrew to China in hopes of convincing the Buddhists to reduce the pressure on Tibetan Christians. In addition to ministering to converts and the sick, and praying for a way to resume his mission, Maurice asked the Apostolic Nuncio and Chinese government to intervene with Gun-Akhio, but diplomacy failed. In July 1949 he planned to travel to Lhasa to plead with the Dalai Lama for religious freedom for Christians, but some Tibetan guards ambushed and shot him; the guards later received a cash reward for this work. Martyr.


Born

31 August 1910 in Rosière, Valais, Switzerland


Died

• shot by Tibetan guards on 11 August 1949 in To-Thong, Tibet

• buried in the garden of the Atuntze mission

• re-interrred at the graveyard of the Yerkalo mission in Tibet in 1985


Beatified

16 May 1993 by Pope John Paul II at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy




Saint Alexander the Charcoal Burner


Also known as

• Alexander of Comana

• Alexander of Cuma

• Alexander the Carbonaio

• Alessandro....



Profile

Well-born, educated, and erudiate 3rd century Greek with philosophical training. Convert to Christianity. To escape his pagan roots and live for God, he left his native area and became a charcoal burner at Comana, Pontus, Asia Minor (in modern Turkey). Noted for being exceptionally ragged and filthy.


When Saint Gregory Thaumaturgus oversaw a council of laymen and religious to pick a bishop for Comana, he told them to ignore outward appearance, and choose the most spiritual person among them. Alexander, dressed in his work rags, and covered in soot and dirt, was dragged forward, apparently as a joke. He tried to play dumb, but when Gregory ordered him to be honest, he admitted his education, his study of the Scriptures, and his life of living as a "fool for Christ." Scrubbed and robed, the council questioned him, recognized his spiritual wisdom, and chose him as their bishop.


Well-loved by his people, Alexander died a martyr in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Born

Greek


Died

burned alive c.275 at Comana (in modern Turkey)


Patronage

charcoal burners




Blessed Carlos Díaz Gandía


Profile

Lifelong layman in the archdiocese of Valencia, Spain, baptized at the age of one day. Member of Youth Catholic Action at age 14; he eventually served as president of the local chapters. An excellent catechist, he established several “catechist centers” where he would teach each Sunday, travelling by foot or bicycle to one after the other throughout the day; he was roundly heckled and abused by people on his way as there was growing anti–Christian sentiment in the area. One night he had to resort to violence to protect his parish priest and spiritual director from a mob; this led to organizing faithful members of Catholic Action to patrol churches and convents, and Carlos himself was only just in time to rescue consecrated hosts from a church that was being looted. He was devoted to daily Mass, a daily morning Rosary, and developed a minstry to the poor. Married to Louisa Tomo Perseguar on 3 November 1934 at the parish church of Santa Maria Ontinyet; they had one daughter. Arrested at dawn on 4 August 1936 in the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War for the crime of being an active Christian. Martyr.



Born

25 December 1907 in Ontinyent, Valencia, Spain


Died

shot on 11 August 1936 in Agullent, Valencia, Spain


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II


/


Blessed Benjamín Fernández de Legaria Goñi


Also known as

• Father Teofilo

• Teofilo Fernández de Legaria Goñi



Profile

The son of Tomas, a farmer, and Fermina, a school teacher for over 50 years. He began studying at a junior seminary when he was ten years old, and throughout his school years was known as an excellent student. In 1915 he became a novice in the Picpus Fathers at the San Miguel del Monte convent near Miranda, Spain. He was immediately recognized as an gifted teacher.


Ordained a priest on 22 September 1925, and he earned a doctorate in theology. He worked to continue education in Madrid in the face of rising anti–Catholicism in the years leading up to the Spanish Civil War. When the war began, he converted his seminary to a hospital. However, when some Communist militia men arrived with wounded men, they recognized Teofilo as a priest, took him away at gun point, and murdered him soon after. Martyr.


Born

5 July 1898 in Torralba de Río, Navarra, Spain


Died

• shot on 11 August 1936 in El Escorial, Madrid, Spain

• buried at the chapel of Saint Damien of Molokai, parish of the Sacred Hearts, Madrid


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Saint Gaugericus of Cambrai


Also known as

Djèri, Gau, Gery, Gagericus, Gaugerico, Gorik



Additional Memorials

• 18 November for the exhumation of his relics

• 24 September for the translation of his relics


Profile

Son of Gaudentius and Austadiola. Pious youth. Ordained as a deacon when he showed he knew all the Psalms by heart. Priest, ordained by Saint Magnericus of Trier. Bishop of the dioceses of Cambrai and of Arras, Gaul for 39 years beginning c.586. He convinced his people to destroy their old pagan idols; when there were only a few left in private hands, he bought them and destroyed them himself. Tirelessly travelled his territory, and spent largely to ransom prisoners. Attended the Council of Paris in 614.


Born

at Trier, Germany


Died

• c.625 of natural causes

• interred in the church of Saint Medard, Cambrai, France

• some relics in assorted churches in Belgium




Saint Attracta of Killaraght

புனித அட்ராக்டா ( ஆறாம் நூற்றாண்டு)


(ஆகஸ்ட் 11)




இவர் அயர்லாந்து நாட்டைச் சார்ந்தவர். இவரது குடும்பம் மிகவும் செல்வச் செழிப்பான குடும்பம்.


சிறுவயதிலேயே கடவுள்மீது மிகுந்த பற்று கொண்ட இவர், வளர்ந்து பெரியவரான போது, துறவியாகப் போக முடிவு செய்தார். இதற்கு இவரது பெற்றோர் மறுப்பு தெரிவித்தனர். ஆனாலும் இவர் தன் பெற்றோரின் எதிர்ப்பையும் மீறித் துறவியானார். 


இவர் 'அயர்லாந்து நாட்டின் திருத்தூதர்' என அழைக்கப்படும் புனித பேட்ரிக், பெண்களுக்ககெ ஒரு துறவற சபையை‌ நிறுவிய போது, இவரைத் தான் தலைவியாக நியமித்தார். 


இவர் வழிப்போக்கர்கள் தஙகி ஓய்வெடுத்துச் செல்ல விடுதி ஒன்றைக் கட்டி, அதன் மூலம் வழிப்போக்கர்களுக்குப் பேருதவியாக இருக்கும்.


தன்னை நாடி வந்தோருக்கு இவர் தாராளமாக உதவி செய்தார். இவ்வாறு அறச்செயல்கள் செய்வதற்கு மிகச்சிறந்த எடுத்துக்காட்டாக இவர் விளங்கினார்.


கடவுள் இவருக்கு அருமடையாளங்கள் செய்வதற்கான ஆற்றலைத் தந்திருந்தார்.  இதன் மூலம் இவர் பலரையும் நோய்நொடிகளிலிருந்து  விடுவிடுத்து நல்வாழ்வு தந்தார். இவர் பல கோயில்களையும் துறவுமடங்களையும் கட்டியெழுப்பினார் என்பது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது

Also known as

Abaght, Adhracht, Araght, Athracta, Taraghta, Tarahata



Profile

Daughter of an Irish noble. Drawn from an early age to a religious vocation, which was opposed by her family. Made her religious vows to Saint Patrick at Coolavin, Ireland. Worked with Patrick for the conversion of Ireland. Anchoress at Drumconnell, County Roscommon. At Killaraght (Cill Attracta) on Lough Gara she founded a hospice that still existed as late as 1539. Founded several churches and convents in County Galway and County Sligo. The convents were known for their care of the sick, and were traditionally built at crossroads so they would available to more travellers. Miracle worker, and noted healer. A healing well with her name survives at Clogher, Monasteraden; it has a reputation for especial powers against warts and rickets. Incredibly popular in her own day and in the Middle Ages when popular (i.e., fantastic) biographies of her circulated.


Born

5th century in County Sligo, Ireland


Died

6th century in Ireland of natural causes


Patronage

• Achonry, Ireland, city of

• Achonry, Ireland, diocese of

• Men of Lugna



Blessed Rafael Alonso Gutiérrez


Profile

A lifelong layman, Rafael was married to Maria Adelaid Ruiz Glens in 1916; the couple were parents to four daughters. He worked as postmaster in Ontinyent, Valencia, Spain, and served as catechist and youth teacher by night at his parish. Member of the Catholic Legion, Catholic Action, School of Christ, Association of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and was a Franciscan Tertiary.



Arrested for his faith by Communist militia during the Spanish Civil War, he was imprisoned and abused in hopes of getting him to renounce Catholicism; it didn’t work. He was shot on a roadside with Blessed Carlos Diaz and abandoned, but Rafael survived. Friends hid him at a local Capuchin convent, and later died of his wounds. He forgave his killers and insisted that there be no retribution, revenge or feud between his family and theirs. Martyr.


Born

14 June 1890 in Ontinyent, Valencia, Spain


Died

shot 11 August 1936 in Agullent, Valencia, Spain


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Susanna of Rome


Profile

Roman noble, the beautiful daughter of Saint Gabinus, and niece of Pope Caius, living in the early part of Diocletian's reign when the last large-scale persecutions were building steam. Having made a private vow of virginity, and not wanting to be part of a family that murdered her family in faith, she refused to marry Maximian, Diocletian's son-in-law. Her piety was such that she converted Claudius and Maximus, relatives and the messengers sent to bring her to Maximian. In revenge, she was exposed as a Christian, beaten, and martyred.



No reliable Acta of her life have survived, but her story has, and she is commemorated in many ancient Martyrologies. A Roman parish and church has borne her name since the fifth century. In 1969 she was dropped from the universal calender of saints, but her memorial is still celebrated in Saint Susanna's basilica in Rome.


Died

• beheaded in 295 in her father's house at Rome, Italy

• buried by Diocletian's wife, a closet Christian

• the house became the original church with her name



Blessed Stephen Rowsham 


Also known as

Stephen Rouse




Additional Memorials

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai

• 22 November as one of the Martyrs of England, Scotland and Wales

• 1 December as one of the Martyrs of Oxford University


Profile

Studied at Oriel College, Oxford University. Anglican vicar of Saint Mary the Virgin, Oxford, England. Convert to Catholicism. Studied at the Douai College in Rheims, France. Ordained a priest in 1582 at Soissons, France. He then returned to England to minister to covert Catholics during a period of persecution. He was soon arrested for the crime of priesthood, and exiled. When he returned to England he was arrested again, convicted again, and executed. Martyr.


Born

c.1555 in Oxfordshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 3 April 1587 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Equitius of Valeria


Also known as

Equizio



Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Benedict of Nursia. Benedictine monk. Worked to spread monasticism throughout Italy, bringing many scholars and future saints to the religious life and the Benedictine Order. Abbot of a house in Valeria, Italy. Noted preacher Pope Saint Gregory the Great refers to Equitius in his Dialogues.


Born

between 480 and 490 in the area of Valeria Suburbicaria (present-day L'Aquila-Rieti-Tivoli), Abruzzi, Italy


Died

• c.570 at the monastery of San Lorenzo di Pizzoli of natural causes

• relics translated to Aquila, Italy


Patronage

Aquila, Italy




Saint Rusticola of Arles


Also known as

Marcia


Profile

Born to the nobility and raised in a Christian family. Nun at an early age at an abbey founded by Saint Caesarius of Arles. Abbess in Arles, Provence (in modern France) for almost 60 years. Known for her deep and meditative prayer life, asceticism, and her endless fight to defend the abbey from political pressure. At one point, because of her defiance of civil authorities, she was imprisoned; King Clotaire II recognized her innocence and ordered her released.


Born

551 in Vaison (in modern Séguret, France)


Died

• 11 August 632

• buried at her abbey in Arles, France



Blessed Jean-Georges Rehm


Also known as

Father Thomas


Profile

Dominican priest. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti-Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.


Born

21 April 1752 in Katzenthal, Haut-Rhin, France


Died

11 August 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed John Sandys


Additional Memorial

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai

• 22 November as one of the Martyrs of England, Scotland, and Wales


Profile

Priest in the apostolic vicariate of England. Martyred in the persecutions of Queen Elizabeth I.


Born

c.1552 in Lancashire, England


Died

11 August 1586 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed William Lampley


Additional Memorial

22 November as one of the Martyrs of England, Scotland, and Wales


Profile

Layman in the apostolic vicariate of England during a period of persecutions of Catholics. Martyr.


Born

in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England


Died

December 1588 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Tiburtius of Rome


Also known as

Tiburcio, Tiburzio



Profile

Son of Saint Chromatius the Prefect. Martyr. Pope Saint Damasus wrote about him.


Died

• beheaded c.286 in Rome, Italy

• entombed in the Ad duas lauros cemetery at the three mile marker on the Via Lavicana of Rome



Saint Taurinus of Evreux


Also known as

Taurino



Profile

Evangelist in Milan, Italy. First bishop of Evreux, Normandy (in modern France) c.385. Fought against the pagan customs of the region. Miracle worker.


Born

c.350


Died

c.412


Patronage

Evreux, France



Saint Rufinus of Assisi


Also known as

Rufino



Profile

First century bishop of Assisi, Umbria, Italy. Martyr.


Died

1st century


Patronage

• diocese of Assisi-Nocera Umbra-Gualdo Tadino, Italy

• Assisi, Italy

• Umbria, Italy



Blessed Theobald of England


Profile

Mercedarian friar. He and several brother Mercedarians were sent to Africa to ransom Christians held in slavery by Muslims. They were captured by pirates, imprisoned, and eventually martyred.



Died

burned at the stake in 1499



Saint Digna of Todi


Also known as

Degna


Profile

Young woman in 4th-century Todi, Italy who made a private vow of consecration to God. During the persecutions of Diocletian she retreated to the nearby mountains to live as an anchoress.



Saint Cassian of Benevento


Profile

Bishop of Benevento, Italy.


Died

• c.340

• relics in the church of Saint Mary in Benevento, Italy



Saint Chromatius the Prefect


Profile

Third-century imperial Roman prefect. Brought to the faith by Saint Tranquillinus. Father of Saint Tiburtius of Rome.



Saint Rufinus of Marsi


Profile

Early bishop. Martyred with several Christian companions whose names have not come down to us.


Died

in Italy



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Antoni Casany Villarrasa

• Blessed Armando Óscar Valdés

• Blessed Miquel Domingo Cendra

• Blessed Ramon Rosell Laboria

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஆகஸ்ட் 10






St. James of Manug


Feastday: August 10


Martyrs of Gamnudi in lower Kemet with John and Abraham at Farama, authorities beheaded us. 10 Aug.


James of Manug was a Christian martyr.


He was a native of Manug, of the Absu area of Lower Egypt. He studied at Absu. During a period of Christian persecution he professed belief in Christianity at Farama. With two other believers, Abraham and John of Samanoud, two natives of Gamndui, he was martyred. His tongue was cut out, he was blinded and then, finally beheaded.


Their feast day is celebrated on August 10 in the Coptic Church, or August 11 in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.




St. Acrates (Aragawi)


Feastday: August 10


Ethiopian saint. Traditions says I was a companion of St. Jacob of Mahdjudh. St. Entheus' brother, the one to whom I owe my conversion.




St. Thiento & Companions


Feastday: August 10
Death: 955

An abbot and six of his monks in Bavaria, Germany. They were martyred by the Magyars of Hungary during an invasion.

.


Saint Lawrence of Rome

✠ புனிதர் லாரன்ஸ் ✠



திருத்தொண்டர், மறைசாட்சி:

(Deacon and Martyr)



பிறப்பு: டிசம்பர் 26, 225

வலென்சியா அல்லது ஒஸ்கா, ஹிஸ்பானியா (தற்போதைய ஸ்பெயின்)

(Valencia or less likely Osca, Hispania (modern-day Spain)


இறப்பு: ஆகஸ்ட் 10, 258

ரோம் (Rome)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodoxy)

ஆங்கிலிகன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion)

லூதரனியம் 

(Lutheranism)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

புனிதர் லாரன்ஸ் ஃபுவோரி லெ முரா பேராலய திருத்தலம், ரோம்

(Basilica di San Lorenzo fuori le Mura in Rome)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஆகஸ்ட் 10


பாதுகாவல்: 

கனடா (Canada), இலங்கை (Sri Lanka), நகைச்சுவையாளர்கள் (Comedians), நூலகர்கள் (Librarians), மாணவர்கள் (students), சுரங்கத் தொழிலாளர்கள் (miners), சமையல்காரர்கள் (Chefs), ரோஸ்டர்ஸ் (Roasters), ரோம் (Rome), ரோடர்டாம் (நெதர்லாந்து) (Rotterdam (Netherlands), ஹூஸ்கா (ஸ்பெயின்) (Huesca (Spain), சான் லாரென்ஸ் (San Lawrenz), கோசோ மற்றும் பிர்யூ (மால்டா) (Gozo and Birgu (Malta), பாராங்கை சான் லோரென்சோ சான் பப்லோ (பிலிப்பைன்ஸ்) (Barangay San Lorenzo San Pablo (Philippines), ஏழை (Poor), தீயணைப்பு வீரர்கள் (Firefighters).


புனிதர் லாரன்ஸ், “திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் சிக்ஸ்டஸின்” (Pope Sixtus II) கீழே ரோம் நகரில் பணியாற்றி, ரோமப் பேரரசன் “வலேரியன்” (Roman Emperor Valerian) என்பவனது ஆட்சிக் காலத்தில் நடந்த கிறிஸ்தவ துன்புருத்தல்களின்போது கி.பி. 258ம் ஆண்டு கொல்லப்பட்ட ஏழு திருத்தொண்டர்களுள் (Deacon) ஒருவர் ஆவார்.


மரபுகளின்படி, மறைசாட்சிகள் – புனிதர் “ஒரேன்ஷியஸ்” (St Orentius) மற்றும் புனிதர் “பேஷியன்ஷியா” (St Patientia) ஆகியோர் இவரது பெற்றோர் என நம்பப்படுகிறது.


இவர், கிரேக்க குடியும், மிகவும் பிரபலமான மற்றும் மிகவும் மதிப்புமிக்க ஆசிரியர்களுல் ஒருவரும், எதிர்கால திருத்தந்தையுமான இரண்டாம் சிக்ஸ்டசை” (Pope Sixtus II) தற்போதைய “சரகோஸா” (Zaragoza) எனுமிடத்தில் சந்தித்தார். இறுதியில் இருவரும் ஸ்பெயின் (Spain) நாட்டை விட்டு, ரோம் (Rome) நகர் புறப்பட்டுச் சென்றனர். கி.பி. 257ம் ஆண்டு, சிக்ஸ்டஸ் திருத்தந்தையானபோது, அவர் லாரன்ஸையும் இன்னும் ஆறு பேரையும் திருத்தொண்டர்களாக (Deacon) அருட்பொழிவு செய்வித்தார். லாரன்ஸ் இளைஞராக இருப்பினும், அவர்களில் முதன்மைத் திருத்தொண்டராக (Archdeacon of Rome) நியமித்தார்.


ரோமானிய அதிகார வர்க்கம், விதிமுறை ஒன்றினை நிறுவியதாக “கர்தாஜ்” ஆயரான (Bishop of Carthage) “புனிதர் சைப்ரியன்” (St. Cyprian) குறிப்பிடுகிறார். அந்த விதிமுறையில், கண்டிக்கப்பட்ட அனைத்து கிறிஸ்தவர்களும் தூக்கிலிடப்பட வேண்டுமென்றும், அவர்களின் பொருட்கள் மற்றும் சொத்துக்கள் பேரரசின் கருவூலத்தால் பறிமுதல் செய்யப்பட வேண்டுமென்றும் குறிப்பிடப்பட்டுள்ளதாக கூறுகிறார்.


“பேரரசன் வலேரியன்” (Emperor Valerian), கி.பி. 258ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாத தொடக்கத்தில், அனைத்து ஆயர்கள், குருக்கள் மற்றும் திருத்தொண்டர்கள் அனைவரும் உடனடியாக தூக்கிலடப்படவேண்டும் என்ற உத்தரவினை வெளியிட்டான். கி.பி. 258ம் ஆண்டு ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் ஆறாம் தேதி, “புனிதர் கல்லிக்ஸ்டஸின்” (Cemetery of St Callixtus) கல்லறையில் வழிபாடு நடத்திக்கொண்டிருந்த திருத்தந்தை “இரண்டாம் சிக்ஸ்டஸ்” (Pope Sixtus II) பிடிக்கப்பட்டு, உடனடியாக தூக்கிலிடப்பட்டார்.


சிக்ஸ்டசின் மரணத்தின் பின்னர், திருச்சபையின் சொத்துக்கள் அனைத்தையும் திருப்பி ஒப்படைக்க வேண்டுமென ரோம தலைமை அதிகாரி (Prefect) கட்டளையிட்டான். சம்பவங்களின் ஆரம்ப ஆதாரமாக இருந்த புனிதர் “அம்ப்ரோஸ்” (St Ambrose), சொத்துக்களை ஒன்று திரட்ட தமக்கு மூன்று நாட்கள் அவகாசம் வேண்டுமென லாரன்ஸ் கேட்டதாகவும், இயன்றவரை சொத்துக்களை வேக வேகமாக ஏழைகளுக்கு பகிர்ந்தளித்ததாகவும் கூறுகிறார். சொத்துக்கள் ரோம தலைமை அதிகாரியின் (Prefect) கைகளுக்கு போய் விடக்கூடாதே என்ற அவசரம் அவரது வேகத்திலிருந்தது என்கிறார்.


மூன்றாவது நாள், ஒரு சிறு குழுவை தலைமை தாங்கி வந்த லாரன்ஸ், தலைமை அதிகாரி முன்னிலையில் ஆஜரானதாக கூறுகிறார். திருச்சபையின் சொத்துக்களை ஒப்படைக்குமாறு உத்தரவிடப்பட்டபோது, அவர் தம்முடன் வந்திருந்த எளியவர்கள், ஊனமுற்றோர், பார்வையற்றோர் மற்றும் வேதனையால் துன்புருவோரை அதிகாரியின் முன்னிறுத்தி, இவர்களே திருச்சபையின் உண்மையான சொத்துக்கள் என்றார். “திருச்சபை உண்மையிலேயே செல்வம் மிகுந்தது; உங்களுடைய பேரரசனை விட எவ்வளவோ செல்வம் உள்ளது” என்று, லாரன்ஸ் தலைமை அதிகாரியிடம் அறிக்கையிட்டார். இத்தகைய அறைகூவல், லாரன்ஸை நேரடியாக மரணத்தின் வாயிலுக்கு இட்டுச் சென்றது. கடும் கோபமடைந்த தலைமையதிகாரி, தாம் ஏற்கனவே தயாரித்து வைத்திருந்த, இறைச்சி போன்றவற்றை சுடுவதற்கு பயன்படும் கம்பி போன்ற பெரிய அளவிலான சூடான இரும்பு கம்பிகளில் லாரன்ஸை படுக்கவைத்தான். நெடு நேர வேதனை அனுபவித்த லாரன்ஸ், சிரித்த முகத்துடன், “இந்த பக்கம் வெந்துவிட்டது; மறுபக்கம் திருப்பி போடு” என்றார்.


மரபுப்படி, புனித லாரன்ஸை கௌரவிக்கும் விதமாக, பேரரசர் “முதலாம் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன்” (Emperor Constantine I) ஒரு சிற்றாலயம் அமைத்தார். இது ரோம் நகரின் ஏழு திருப்பயண ஆலயங்களுல் ஒன்றாக துவக்கக்காலம் முதலே கருதப்பட்டது. இவ்வாலயத்தை திருத்தந்தை “முதலாம் டமாஸ்கஸ்” (Pope Damasus I) சீரமைத்து “புனித லாரன்ஸ் பேராலயமாக” (Basilica di San Lorenzo fuori le Mura) மாற்றினார். புனிதர் லாரன்ஸ் மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்த இடத்தில், “புனித லாரன்ஸ் சிறு பசிலிக்கா” (Minor Basilica of San Lorenzo in Panisperna) உருவாக்கப்பட்டது. லாரன்ஸ் மறைசாட்சியாக உபயோகப்பட்ட இரும்புக்கம்பி, அங்கேயே வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Also known as

Laurence, Laurent, Laurentius, Lorenço, Lorenzo



Profile

Third-century archdeacon of Rome, distributor of alms, and "keeper of the treasures of the church" in a time when Christianity was outlawed. On 6 August 258, by decree of Emperor Valerian, Pope Saint Sixtus II and six deacons were beheaded, leaving Lawrence as the ranking Church official in Rome.


While in prison awaiting execution Sixtus reassured Lawrence that he was not being left behind; they would be reunited in four days. Lawrence saw this time as an opportunity to disperse the material wealth of the church before the Roman authorities could lay their hands on it. On 10 August Lawrence was commanded to appear for his execution, and to bring along the treasure with which he had been entrusted by the pope. When he arrived, the archdeacon was accompanied by a multitude of Rome's crippled, blind, sick, and indigent. He announced that these were the true treasures of the Church. Martyr.

Lawrence's care for the poor, the ill, and the neglected have led to his patronage of them. His work to save the material wealth of the Church, including its documents, brought librarians and those in related fields to see him as a patron, and to ask for his intercession. And his incredible strength and courage when being grilled to death led to his patronage of cooks and those who work in or supply things to the kitchen. The meteor shower that follows the passage of the Swift-Tuttle comet was known in the middle ages as the "burning tears of Saint Lawrence" because they appear at the same time as Lawrence's feast.


He and his brother and sister, SS Laurentius and Clerina, were put to death (St. Ignatius) were put to death near Carthage during the reigh of Decius. Their nephew Celerinus suffered so extremely that he also is termed a martyr, though he lived to be ordained a deacon by S.t Cyprian. Feast day is Feb. 3rd

Born

at Huesca, Spain


Died

• cooked to death on a gridiron on 10 August 258 in Rome, Italy

• tradition says that the ashes of his burned body were dispersed by the winds, and appear at different places around the world on his feast day

• buried in the cemetery of Saint Cyriaca on the road to Tivoli, Italy

• tomb was later opened by Pelagius to inter the body of Saint Stephen the Martyr

• his mummified head is enshrined at the Quirinal Chapel of the Vatican Apostolic Library in Rome

• other relics and the gridiron believes to have been his deathbed are enshrined in the crypt of the Basilica of San Lorenzo Outside the Walls, Rome

• his garments are enshrined in Our Lady’s Chapel in the Lateran Palace, Rome


Patronage

• against fire

• against lumbago

• archives, archivists

• armories, armourers

• brewers

• butchers

• chefs, cooks

• comedians, comediennes, comics

• confectioners

• cutlers

• deacons

• glaziers

• laundry workers

• librarians, libraries

• paupers, poor people

• restauranteurs

• schoolchildren, students

• seminarians

• stained glass workers

• tanners

• vine growers, vintners, wine makers

• ---

• Ceylon, Sri Lanka

• ---

• 38 cities and dioceses




Blessed Amadeus of Portugal


Also known as

• Amadeus Menez de Silva

• Amedeus....

• João de Menezes da Silva

• João Mendes de Silva

• Peter John Silva Meneses



Profile

Born to the Portugese nobility, the youngest of eleven children of Rui Gomes, the Count of Viana, and Isabel de Menezes; brother of Saint Beatrice da Silva Meneses. Courtier to Empress Eleonaora of Portugal. Married briefly. Monk at the Hieronymite monastery of Santa María de Guadalupe for ten years. Entered the Franciscans in 1453 in Assisi, Italy as a lay brother. Hermit. Ordained in 1459. Founded the monastery Virgin of Peace near Milan, Italy and led a community under strict Franciscan rules; they were known as the Amadeistene, Amadeeërs or Marignano reform, and at one point there were 28 houses following their example, but all eventually merged with the Franciscans. Wrote on prophesy, and a commentary on the Book of Revelations. Amadeus's work was praised by Pope Sixtus IV, King Ferdinand the Catholic of Aragon, and Saint Louis IX of France.


Born

1420 in Morocco as João de Menezes da Silva


Died

• 10 August 1482 in Milan, Italy of natural causes

• buried under the high altar of his monastery in Milan


Patronage

against fever (water from a spring at his monastery was reported to heal fever patients)



Saint Bessus


Also known as

Besso, Besse



Profile

Soldier of the Theban Legion. Convert to Christianity. He escaped the massacre of the Legion and became an evangelist in the mountain district of Val Soana. Reported to be a miracle worker and able to heal by prayer. Martyr.


Because of the understandably poor records from the period, and the similarity of his name both to other evangelists in the region and to a pre-Christian god, Bessus has figured into a lot of folk tales, practices and later legends.


Died

• thrown from Mount Fautenio c.286 Campiglia Soana, Turin, Italy

• the spot where he landed (and died) left an impression in the rock, and a shrine was soon built over it

• relics taken to Ozegna in the 9th century and enshrined a chapel now known as the Beata Vergine del Convento e del Bosco

• relics later taken to the cathedral of Virea, Italy and enshrined in a sacrophagus

• relics later enshrined in a side altar in the cathedral with those of several other martyr saints


Patronage

• soldiers

• for fertility

• Campiglia Soana, Italy

• Cogne, Italy

• Ivrea, Italy

• Valprato Soana, Italy




Blessed Archangelus Piacentini


Also known as

Arcangelo Placenza



Profile

Born to the nobility. Known as a quiet and pious child, it was no surprise when he went to live as a hermit in a cave near the church of Santa Maria dei Giubino in Sicily. His reputation for holiness spread, and the young hermit attracted would-be spiritual students - which caused him to move to Alcamo, Sicily to get away from them. His reputation went with him, and he was asked to restore broken down shelters for the poor in the area. The job finished, Arcangelo returned to his hermitage. However, Pope Martin V, working to restore papal authority, decreed that all hermits in Sicily should join approved religious orders; and so Arcanglo joined the Franciscans in Palermo, receiving the habit from Blessed Matthew of Girgenti. Priest. Assigned to establish a new Franciscan house in Alcamo; he used part of the structures he had helped to restore. He led both his brothers and the laity by his example, supported Franciscans throughout Sicily, turned down the bishopric in Alcamo, and spent his last days helping Blessed Matthew.


Born

c.1390 at Calatafimi, Sicily, Italy


Died

10 August 1460 in Alcamo, Sicily, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

9 September 1836 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmed)



Saint Blane


Also known as

Blaan, Blan, Blain



Profile

Nephew of Saint Cathan. Studied in Ireland under Saint Comgall of Bangor, Saint Kenneth, and Saint Canice. Monk. After seven years, he returned to Scotland; tradition says he travelled in a boat without oars or rudder, but that it took him safely home. Monk at the monstery founded by Cathan; ordained by his uncle. Missionary to the Scottish Picts. Bishop of Kingarth, Scotland, ordained by Cathen. Pilgrim to Rome to seek papal blessing on his bishopric; made the return trip entirely on foot.


Reputed miracle worker, including bringing the young son of a British chief back to life, curing the blind, and lighting fire by making small bolts of lightning jump between his fingers. Devotion to Blane soon followed his death, was widespread in Scotland, and very popular; his monastery became the site of the cathedral of Dunblane, Scotland and there were several churches with his name.


Born

6th century at Isle of Bute, Scotland


Died

• c.590 at Kingarth, Isle of Bute, Scotland of natural causes

• buried in Dunblane, Scotland which was named for him



Blessed Lazare Tiersot


Profile

Joined the Carthusians on 18 December 1769 at the monastery of Fontenay, France. Priest. Served as vicar of his house until June 1791 when the monastery was suppressed by the civil authorities of the French Revolution. Arrested on 19 April 1793 for refusing to take the oath that would have switched his allegience from the Vatican to the civil authorities of the Revolution. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die. There he ministered to other prisoners, hearing confessions, doing what little he could for the sick. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.



Born

29 March 1739 in Semur-en-Auxois, Diocese of Sens-Auxerre, Côte-d'Or, France


Died

• 10 August 1794 aboard the prison ship Washington, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France of a fever

• buried on the island of Aix, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Franciszek Drzewiecki


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Orionist friar. After studies at the mother-house in Tortona, Italy, he was ordained on 6 June 1936. Returning to Poland, he taught at the college of Zdunska Wola. Parish priest in Wloclawek, Poland. Arrested on 7 November 1939 and condemned to forced labour at the Dachau concentration camp farms during the Nazi persecutions; he kept consecrated hosts in a small box he wore around his neck, and spent his time in the fields in Eucharistic adoration. Martyr.


Born

26 February 1908 in Zduny, Lódzkie, Poland


Died

gassed on 10 August 1942 at the prison camp at Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed François François


Also known as

Sébastien of Nancy


Profile

Franciscan Capuchin priest. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti-Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.


Born

17 January 1749 in Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France


Died

10 August 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Claude-Joseph Jouffret de Bonnefont


Profile

Sulpician priest. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti-Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.


Born

23 December 1752 in Gannat, Allier, France


Died

10 August 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Edward Grzymala


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Priest in the diocese of Wloclawek, Poland. Imprisoned and murdered in the Nazi persecutions. Martyr.


Born

19 September 1906 in Kolodziaz, Podlaskie, Poland


Died

gassed on 10 August 1942 at the prison camp at Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Augustine Ota


Also known as

Augustinus Ota


Profile

Worked as a catechist, helping Jesuit missionaries. Imprisoned at Ikinoshima for his faith. While imprisoned, he was received into the Jesuits. Martyr.


Born

1572 in Ojika, Goto-retto, Nagasaki, Japan


Died

beheaded 10 August 1622 at Ikinoshima, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Saint Gerontius


Also known as

Geraint



Profile

King of Damnonia (in modern Devon, England). He and his wife Enid are the subjects of romantic legends in the region.


Died

killed c.508 in battle against Saxons



Saint Asteria of Bergamo


Also known as

Hesteria


Profile

Sister of Saint Grata of Bergamo. Worked to provide Christian burial for martyrs. Executed by Diocletian for doing it. Martyr.


Died

• beheaded c.307

• venerated in Bergamo, Italy



Saint Agilberta of Jouarre


Also known as

Aguilberta, Gilberta


Profile

Related to Saint Ebrigisil, Saint Ado of Jouarre, and Saint Agilbert of Paris. Nun. Abbess of Jouarre Abbey c.660.


Died

c.680



Blessed Hugh of Montaigu


Profile

Nephew of Saint Hugh of Cluny, who was his teacher and spiritual director. Benedictine monk at Cluny Abbey in France. Bishop of Auxerre, France in 1096.


Died

1136 of natural causes



Saint Deusdedit the Cobbler


Profile

Poor layman shoemaker in sixth-century Rome, Italy. Pope Saint Gregory the Great wrote that every Saturday Deusdedit would give away all the profits from that week to the poor.



Saint Bettelin


Also known as

Bertram


Profile

I have no details on this saint.


Died

• 8th century

• relics enshrined in Ilam, Staffordshire, England


Patronage

Stafford, England



Saint Aredius of Lyons


Also known as

Aregius, Arige


Profile

Archbishop of Lyons, France.


Died

c.614



Saint Agathonica of Carthage


Profile

Nun. Martyr.


Died

in Carthage in North Africa



Saint Bassa of Carthage


Profile

Nun. Martyr.


Died

in Carthage in North Africa



Saint Paula of Carthage


Profile

Nun. Martyr.


Died

in Carthage in North Africa



Martyrs of Alexandria


Profile

A large number of Christians who died in Alexandria, Egypt between 260 and 267 in the persecutions of Decius and Valerian, whose names have not come down to us, and who are commemorated together.



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

Group of 165 Christians martyred in the persecutions of Aurelian.


Died

274 in Rome, Italy



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Antonio González Penín

• Blessed José Toledo Pellicer

• Blessed José Xavier Gorosterratzu Jaunarena

• Blessed Juan Martorell Soria

• Blessed Pedro Mesonero Rodríguez

• Blessed Victoriano Calvo Lozano