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25 November 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் நவம்பர் 26

 St. Phileas


Feastday: November 26

Death: 307


Martyr. Born in Thumis, Egypt, he became bishop of his native city in the Nile Delta and was renowned for his learning and wisdom. Arrested during the persecution of Emperor Maximinus, he refused to offer sacrifices to the gods and was beheaded by the local governor. With him died Philoromus, a tribune and treasurer at Alexandria, who objected to the cruelties inflicted upon Phileas and a group of Christians. A reliable contemporary account is extant, and Phileas was mentioned by the historian Eusebius of Caesarea.



St. Faustus


Feastday: November 26

Death: 311


Egyptian martyr with Ammonius, Didius, Hesychius, Pachomius, Phileas, Theodore, and more than six hundred fifty others. Faustus was a priest of Alexandria, Egypt. Phileas, Pachomius, Hesychius, and Theodore were bishops.



St. Dominic Doan Xuyen


Feastday: November 26

Death: 1839

Canonized: Pope John Paul II


Martyr of Vietnam, beheaded with St. Thomas Du. He was a Vietnamese Dominican canonized in 1988.


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).




St. John Berchmans


Feastday: November 26

Patron: of Altar Servers

Birth: 1599

Death: 1621



Eldest son of a shoemaker, John was born at Diest, Brabant. He early wanted to be a priest, and when thirteen became a servant in the household of one of the Cathedral canons at Malines, John Froymont. In 1615, he entered the newly founded Jesuit College at Malines, and the following year became a Jesuit novice. He was sent to Rome in 1618 to continue his studies, and was known for his diligence and piety, impressing all with his holiness and stress on perfection in little things. He died there on August 13. Many miracles were attributed to him after his death, and he was canonized in 1888. He is the patron of altar boys. His feast day is November 26.


John Berchmans (Dutch: Jan Berchmans [jɑm ˈbɛr(ə)xmɑns]; 13 March 1599 – 13 August 1621) was a Jesuit scholastic and is a saint in the Catholic Church. In 1615, the Jesuits opened a college at Mechelen and Berchmans was one of the first to enroll. His spiritual model was his fellow Jesuit Aloysius Gonzaga, and he was influenced by the example of the English Jesuit martyrs. Berchmans is the patron saint of altar servers, Jesuit scholastics, and students.



Early life

John Berchmans was born on 13 March 1599, in the city of Diest situated in what is now the Belgian province of Flemish Brabant, the son of a shoemaker. His parents were John Charles and Elizabeth Berchmans. He was the oldest of five children and at baptism was named John in honor of John the Baptist. He grew up in an atmosphere of political turmoil caused by a religious war between the Catholic and Protestant parts of the Low Countries.[1] When he was age nine, his mother was stricken with a very long and a very serious illness. John would pass several hours each day by her bedside.[2] He studied at the Gymnasium (grammar school) at Diest and worked as a servant in the household of Canon John Froymont at Mechelen in order to continue his studies.[1] John also made pilgrimages to the Marian shrine of Scherpenheuvel, some 30 miles east of Brussels, but only a few miles from Diest.


Call to the Society of Jesus

In 1615, the Jesuits opened a college at Mechelen and Berchmans was one of the first to enroll. Immediately upon entering, he enrolled in the Sodality of the Blessed Virgin. When Berchmans wrote his parents that he wished to join the Society of Jesus, his father hurried to Mechelen to dissuade him and sent him to the Franciscan convent in Mechelen. At the convent, a friar who was related to Berchmans also attempted to change his mind. Finally as a last resort, Berchmans's father told him that he would end all financial support if he continued with his plan.[3]


Nevertheless, on 24 September 1616, Berchmans entered the Jesuit novitiate. He was affable, kind, and endowed with an outgoing personality that endeared him to others. He requested that after ordination as a priest he could become a chaplain in the army, hoping to be martyred on the battlefield.[1]


On 24 January 1618, he made his first vows and went to Antwerp to begin studying philosophy. After only a few weeks he was sent to Rome, where he was to continue the same study. He set out on foot, with his belongings on his back, and on arrival was admitted to the Roman College to begin two years of study. He entered his third-year class in philosophy in the year 1621.[2]



Later, in August 1621, the prefect of studies selected Berchmans to participate in a discussion of philosophy at the Greek College, which at the time was administered by the Dominicans. Berchmans opened the discussion with great clarity and profoundness, but after returning to his own quarters, was seized with the Roman fever.[2] His lungs became inflamed and his strength diminished rapidly.[3] He succumbed to dysentery and fever on 13 August 1621, at the age of twenty-two years and five months.[4] When he died, a large crowd gathered for several days to view his remains and to invoke his intercession. That same year, Phillip-Charles, Duke of Aarschot, sent a petition to Pope Gregory XV with a view to beginning the process leading to the beatification of Berchmans, whose remains were eventually buried in Sant'Ignazio Church.


Spirituality of John Berchmans

John Berchmans took as his spiritual model his fellow Jesuit Aloysius Gonzaga and he was also influenced by the example of the English Jesuit martyrs. It was his realistic appreciation for the value of ordinary things, a characteristic of the Flemish mystical tradition, that constituted his holiness. He had a special devotion to Mary, mother of Jesus; and to him is owed the Little Rosary of the Immaculate Conception.[3]


Veneration

Jan Berchmans, by Boetius Adams Bolswert.jpg

At the time of Berchmans's death, his heart was returned to his homeland in Belgium where it is kept in a silver reliquary on a side altar in the church at Leuven (Louvain).[5] Berchmans was declared Blessed in 1865, and canonized in 1888.[2] Statues frequently depict him with hands clasped, holding his crucifix, his book of rules, and his rosary.


The miracle that led to his canonization occurred at the Academy of the Sacred Heart in Grand Coteau, Louisiana. In 1866, one year after the Civil War, he appeared to novice Mary Wilson. Mary's health was poor, and her parents thought that the gentler climate of south Louisiana could be a remedy. However, her health continued to decline, to the point where for about 40 days she had only been able to take liquids. "Being unable to speak, I said in my heart: 'Lord, Thou Who seest how I suffer, if it be for your honor and glory and the salvation of my soul, I ask through the intercession of Blessed Berchmans a little relief and health. Otherwise give me patience to the end.'" She went on to describe how John Berchmans then appeared to her, and she was immediately healed.[6] When the Academy opened a boys school in 2006, the trustees named it St. John Berchmans School. It is the only shrine at the exact location of a confirmed miracle in the United States.[7]


The feast day of John Berchmans has never been inscribed in the General Roman Calendar, but prior to the liturgical reforms of Pope John XXIII there was a Mass set for him among the section of Masses for Various Places (Missae pro aliquibus locis) of the Roman Missal which foresaw that it would be celebrated in different places on either 13 August or 26 November. Berchmans is currently inscribed in the 2004 official edition of the Catholic Church's Martyrologium Romanum (p. 451) on 13 August, the date of his dies natalis (heavenly birthday). He is celebrated by the Society of Jesus on 26 Nov.


Kelby Tingle, a seminarian from the diocese of Shreveport, Louisiana, where the Cathedral is named for the Saint, is known for his devotion to St. John Berchman and is known to frequent the spot of his burial at the Ignazio Church in Rome.





Blessed Gaetana Sterni


Also known as

Cajetana Sterni


Profile

Daughter of Giovanni Battista Sterni and Giovanna Chiuppani; one of six children. Her father was an administrator for the country property of the Mora, who were members of the Venetian nobility. The family lived relatively comfortably until Gaetana was about 15 years old when, in short order, her elder sister Margherita died, her father died, and her brother Francesco left home to become an actor, leaving the rest of the family in sad shape financially. Gaetana, a pious girl, did what she could to help her mother, but soon attracted the attention and a marriage offer from Liberale Conte, a widower with three children.



Gaetana accepted, and was soon very happily married and pregnant. However, during prayer one day she received a prophecy of her husband's early death; it proved true, and she widowed before their child was born. The baby died a few days after birth, and her late husband's family demanded that her three step-children be returned to them. At age 19 Gaetana found herself a widow, alone, broke, alienated from her in-laws, and having buried a child; she returned to her mother's house.


She spent much of her time there in prayer, looking for a direction for her future, and finally came to understand that she had a call to the religious life. Joined the Canosian convent at Bassano, Italy for five months, but received another prophetic message in prayer that foretold her mother's death. Her mother died a few days later, and Gaetana left the convent to care for her younger siblings. She was head of the household for the next six years.


Free at last at age 26, she began to fulfill anther message she had received in prayer while with the Canosians. There she had been told "to employ there all of herself in the service of the poor and thus fulfill His will." A Jesuit priest confirmed this message for her, and in 1853, she began work at the hospice for beggars in Bassano. She would remain there for her remaining 36 years, tending to the aged, the sick, the dying. In 1860, at age 33 she made a private vow of total devotion to God.


In 1865 Gaetana and two like-minded friends formed what would become the Daughters of the Divine Will, a name chosen to indicate that the members would surrender themselves completely to God's plans. They dedicated themselves to service to the sick and poor, and worked especially with those who were sick, but still able to live in their own homes. The bishop of Vicenza, Italy approved the congregation in 1875, and today the Daughters are working across Europe, America, and Africa.


Born

26 June 1827 at Cassola, Vicenza, Italy


Died

• 26 November 1889 of natural causes

• buried at the Daughters mother house at Bassano del Grapo, Vicenza, Italy


Beatified

4 November 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Leonard of Port Maurice

✠ மவுரிஸ் கோட்டை புனிதர் லியோனார்ட் ✠

(St. Leonard of Port Maurice)


இத்தாலிய ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் போதகர்/ துறவற எழுத்தாளர்:

(Italian Franciscan Preacher/ Ascetic writer)


பிறப்பு: டிசம்பர் 20, 1676 

போர்டோ மவுரிஸியோ

(Porto Maurizio)


இறப்பு: நவம்பர் 26, 1751 

ரோம் (Rome)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: ஜூன் 19, 1796

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius VI)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 29, 1867 

திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius IX)


பாதுகாவல்: மறைப்பணியாளர்கள்


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: நவம்பர் 26


“பால் ஜெரோம் கஸனோவா” (Paul Jerome Casanova) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட புனிதர் லியோனார்ட், இத்தாலிய ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபை துறவியும் போதகரும் ஆவார். "டொமினிகோ கஸனோவா" மற்றும் "அன்னா மரியா பென்ஸா" (Domenico Casanova and Anna Maria Benza) இவரது பெற்றோர் ஆவர். இவரது தந்தையார் ஒரு கப்பல் தலைவர் ஆவார். இவர்களது குடும்பம் இத்தாலியின் வடமேற்கு கடற்கரை பகுதியான “போர்ட் மௌரிஸ்” (Port Maurice) எனும் இடத்தில் வசித்து வந்தனர்.


இவர் தமது பதின்மூன்று வயதில் தமது மாமன் “அகோஸ்டினோ” (Agostino) என்பவருடன் தங்கி “இயேசுசபையின் ரோமன் கல்லூரியில்” (Jesuit Roman College) கல்வி பயில்வதற்காக இத்தாலி சென்றார். நல்ல மாணவரான லியோனார்ட், மருத்துவ தொழிலை தேர்வு செய்திருந்தார். ஆனால், கி.பி. 1697ம் ஆண்டில் “இளம் துறவியர்” (Friars Minor ) சபையில் இணைந்தார். அவர் தாம் தேர்வு செய்திருந்த மருத்துவ தொழிலை கைவிட்டபோது, அவரது மாமனும் அவரை கைவிட்டார்.


கி.பி. 1697ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், இரண்டாம் தேதி, தமது துறவற சீருடைகளைப் பெற்றுக்கொண்ட “பால் ஜெரோம் கஸனோவா” “அருட்சகோதரர் லியோனார்ட்” என்ற ஆன்மீக பெயரையும் ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். 


மத்திய இத்தாலியின் "சபின் மலை” (Sabine mountains) பகுதியிலுள்ள “போண்டிசெல்லி" (Ponticelli) என்னும் இடத்தில் “துறவறப் புகுநிலை பயிற்சியை” (Novitiate) பூர்த்தி செய்தபின்னர், ரோம் நகரின் “பாலடின் (Palatine) எனுமிடத்திலுள்ள “தூய போனவெஞ்சுரா” கல்லூரியில் (St. Bonaventura) தமது கல்வியை முடித்தார். குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவின் பிறகு அங்கேயே தங்கி பேராசிரியராக பணியாற்றிய லியோனார்ட், சீன பயணங்களை எதிர்பார்த்து காத்திருந்தார். ஆனால், அந்நேரத்தில் (கி.பி. 1704ல்) அல்ஸர் நோயும் அதில் இரத்தப்போக்குமாக பாதிக்கப்பட்ட லியோனார்ட் அவரது சொந்த ஊரிலுள்ள ஃபிரான்ஸிஸ்கன் துறவு இல்லத்திற்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டார். நான்கு வருடங்களின் பின்னர் நோயிலிருந்து குணமடைந்த அவர் “போர்ட்டோ மௌரிஸோ” (Porto Maurizio) பகுதிகளில் தமது போதனையை தொடங்கினார்.


பதினெட்டாம் நூற்றாண்டின் தலைசிறந்த போதகர் என்று அழைக்கப்பட்ட லியோனார்ட், சமய போதனைகளிலும் தியானங்களிலும் நோன்பு விரதம் போன்றவைகளைப் பற்றியும் பங்கு பயணங்கள் பற்றியும் பிரசங்கிப்பதில் பிரபலமானவராயும் வல்லவராயும் திகழ்ந்தார். சிறந்த மறைப்பரப்பு பணியாளராக செயல்பட்டார். பயணங்கள் பல மேற்கொண்டு, ஊர் ஊராக சென்று மறையுரையாற்றினார். இவரின் மறையுரையால் பலர் கவர்ந்து, இவரை பின்தொடர்ந்தனர். அனைத்து வித மக்களும் எளிமையாக புரிந்துகொள்ளும் விதத்தில் மறையுரை ஆற்றும் திறமையை பெற்றிருந்தார். இயேசுவின் நற்செய்தியை மிக எளிய முறையில் அறிவித்தார். அவரது ஒவ்வொரு போதனை பயணங்களும் பதினைந்து முதல் பதினெட்டு நாட்கள் வரை நீடித்தன. மேலும் அதன் பிறகும் ஒரு வாரம் வரை பாவ மன்னிப்பு கேட்கும் பணிக்காக தங்கி இருப்பார்.


கி.பி. 1720ம் ஆண்டு, “டுஸ்கனி” (Tuscany) எல்லைகளைக் கடந்து மத்திய மற்றும் தென் இத்தாலி பகுதிகளில் மறையுரையாற்றினார். திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் கிளெமென்ட்டும் (Pope Clement XII). திருத்தந்தை பதினான்காம் பெனடிக்ட்டும் (Pope Benedict XIV) அவரை ரோம் வரவழைத்து கௌரவித்தனர். திருத்தந்தை பதினான்காம் பெனடிக்ட் (Pope Benedict XIV), அவரை பல்வேறு சிக்கலான இராஜதந்திர பணிகளில் ஈடுபடுத்தினார். “ஜெனோவா” (Genoa), “கோர்ஸிகா” (Corsica), “லுக்கா” (Lucca) மற்றும் “ஸ்போலெடோ” (Spoleto) ஆகிய நாடுகளின் பிரஜைகள் திருத்தந்தையின் நோக்கங்களை பிரதிநிதித்துவம் செய்ய ஒரு அலங்கார கர்தினாலை எதிர்பார்த்திருந்தனர். ஆனால், அவர்கள் கண்டதோ மிகவும் பணிவான, காலணிகள் கூட இல்லாத, சேரும் சகதியுமான ஒரு துறவியை. அவர்களின் எதிர்பார்ப்புக்கு மாறானவராக அவர் இருந்தார்.


லியோனார்ட், சிறிது காலம் இங்கிலாந்து (England), ஸ்காட்லாந்து (Scotland) மற்றும் அயர்லாந்து (Ireland) நாடுகளின் அரசனான, “ஜேம்ஸ் பிரான்சிஸ் எட்வர்ட்” (James Francis Edward) என்பவரது மனைவியான “மரியா கிளமென்டினா’வின்” (Maria Clementina Sobieska) ஆன்மீக வழிகாட்டியாக பணியமர்த்தப்பட்டிருந்தார்.


லியோனார்ட் பல பக்தி மார்க்க சபைகளை நிறுவினார். இயேசுவின் திருஇருதய (Sacred Heart of Jesus) பக்தியையும் தூய நற்கருணை (Most Blessed Sacrament) ஆராதனையையும் பரப்ப தம்மை அர்ப்பணித்துக்கொண்டார். 


நாற்பத்துமூன்று வருடங்களுக்கும் மேலாக அன்னை மரியாளுக்கு வணக்கத்தையும், சிலுவைப்பாதை வழிபாடுகளையும் போதித்த லியோனார்ட், எளிமையான முறையில் மக்களை வழிநடத்தி இறையுணர்வை கொண்டு வாழ செய்தார். இவர் மருத்துவப்படிப்பையும் தத்துவயியலையும் கற்றிருந்தபோதும் கூட எளிமையாக வாழ்ந்து நற்செய்திக்கு சான்று பகிர்ந்தார்.


மறை பரப்புதல் பணியின் கடின உழைப்பு அவரது ஆரோக்கியத்தை கடுமையாக பாதித்தது. எழுபத்தைந்து வயதான புனித லியோனார்ட் தமது "தூய பொனவெஞ்சுரா” (St. Bonaventura) துறவு இல்லத்தில் மரித்தார்.

Also known as

• Jerome Casanova

• Paul Jerome Casanova



Profile

Son of Domenico Casanova, a sea captain, and Anna Maria Benza. Placed at age thirteen with his uncle Agostino to study for a career as a physician, but the youth decided against medicine, and his uncle disowned him. Studied at the Jesuit College in Rome, Italy. Joined the Riformella, a branch of the Franciscans of the Strict Observance on 2 October 1697, taking the name Brother Leonard. Ordained in Rome in 1703. Taught for a while, and expected to become a missionary to China, but a bleeding ulcer kept him in his native lands for the several years it took to recover and regain his strength.


Sent to Florence, Italy in 1709 where he became a noted preached in the city and nearby region. He was often invited to other areas, and worked for devotion to the Blessed Sacrament, Sacred Heart, Immaculate Conception, and the Stations of the Cross. Established the Way of the Cross in over 500 places, including the Colosseum in Rome. Sent as a missionary by Pope Benedict XIV to the island of Corsica in 1744. There he restored discipline to the holy orders there, but local politics greatly limited his success in preaching. He returned exhausted to Rome where he spent the rest of his days.


Born

20 December 1676 at Porto Maurizio, Italy on the Riviera di Ponente as Paul Jerome Casanova


Died

11:00pm 26 November 1751 at the monastery of Saint Bonaventura, Rome, Italy


Canonized

29 June 1867 by Pope Pius XI


Patronage

• Imperia, Italy

• parish missions




Saint Sylvester Gozzolini


Profile

Born to the Italian nobility. Began the study of civil law in Bologna and Padua in Italy in 1197. Renouncing civil law, he studied theology and was ordained in 1217 in the diocese of Osimo, Italy; his father was so upset with the change that he refused to speak to his son for ten years. Canon in Osimo, Italy; his ministry was so successful that his local bishop became jealous. Hermit at age 50, living on herbs and water, sleeping on the ground, and spending his time in study and prayer; his reputation for learning and holiness attracted many students. He received a vision of Saint Benedict of Nursia in 1231 and understood that he should form his spiritual students into a formal community. Founded a Benedictine community at Monte Fano, Fabriano, Italy, a house devoted to strict adherence to the Benedictine Rule, and built on the site of an old pagan temple that Sylvester destroyed. The Order, known as a the Sylvestrines or Blue Benedictines, was approved by Pope Innocent IV in 1247, Sylvester led them until his death decades later, Sylvester founded eleven houses of them in his time, and they continue their work today.



Born

1177 in Osimo, Marche, Italy


Died

• 26 November 1267 at Monte Fano, Fabriano, Italy

• re-interred in a shrine in the monastery church of Monte Fano c.1280


Canonized

• 1598 by Pope Clement VIII (added to the Martyrology)

• 1890 by Pope Leo XIII (office and Mass added to the General Roman Calendar)



Saint Bellinus of Padua


Also known as

Bellino



Profile

Priest. During a period of turmoil in his diocese, Bellinus stayed loyal to the bishop appointed by the legitimate Pope. Bishop of Padua, Italy. Led a reform of the spiritual lives of the canons in his diocese, and the effort to rebuild the cathedral after its destruction in 1117 by earthquake. Worked to re-build the status and dignity of the Church, defended Church rights and helped build schools. Killed by assassins paid by the Capodivacca family of Padua; Bellinus was becoming very effective in building up the Church at the expense of the noble families. Martyr.


Born

late 11th century in Padua, Italy


Died

• stabbed by assissins 1151 on a forest road while on a trip to Rome, Italy

• buried in the church of San Giacomo in Lugarano, Italy

• the church was destroyed by flood and the relics relocated to the church of San Bellinus in San Martino di Variano, Italy

• relics relocated to a newly built chapel in San Martino di Variano in 1647


Canonized

by Pope Eugene IV


Patronage

• Adria, Italy, city of

• Adria, Italy, diocese of

• against dog bites

• against rabies




Saint Conrad of Constance

#புனித_கொன்ராட் (-975)


நவம்பர் 26


இவர் (#St_ConradOfConstance) ஜெர்மனியை ஆண்டுவந்த ஹென்றி என்ற  பிரபுவின் இரண்டாவது மகன்.


தனது கல்வியைத் தற்போது சுவிட்சர்லாந்தில் உள்ள கான்ஸ்டான்ஸ் என்ற இடத்தில் இருக்கக்கூடிய பள்ளியில் படித்த இவர், அருள்பணியாளராகவும் பின்னர், 934 ஆம் ஆண்டு கொன்ஸ்டான்ஸ் நகரின் ஆயராகவும் உயர்த்தப்பட்டார்.


இவர் ஆயராக உயர்த்தப்பட்ட பிறகு, தனக்குச் சேரவேண்டிய குடும்பச் சொத்து அனைத்தையும் திருஅவைக்கும் ஏழைகளுக்கும் பகிர்ந்து கொடுத்தார். இவ்வாறு இவர் ஏழைகளின்மீது கொண்டிருந்த அன்பை வெளிப்படுத்தினார்.


இவர் மூன்றுமுறை புனித நாடுகளுக்கும், ஒருமுறை உரோமைக்கும் திருப்பயணம் சென்று, ஆண்டவர்மீது கொண்டிருந்த பற்றில் இன்னும் உறுதியடைந்தார்.


ஏறக்குறைய 42 ஆண்டுகள் கான்ஸ்டான்ஸில் ஆயராகப் பணிபுரிந்த இவர், அம்மறைமாவட்டத்தைப் பல நிலைகளிலும் வளர்த்தெடுத்தார்; நிறைய கோயில்களை கட்டியெழுப்பினார். 


ஒருமுறை இவர் திருப்பலி நிறைவேற்றிக் கொண்டிருந்தபோது, பெரிய சிலந்தி ஒன்று இரசக் கிண்ணத்தில் விழுந்துவிட்டது. இது இவருக்குத் தெரியாது. இரசக் கிண்ணத்திலிருந்த இயேசுவின் திருஇரத்தத்தைப் பருகிய பின்னரே இவருக்குத் தெரிந்தது. ஆனாலும் இவர் கடவுளிடத்தில் தனக்கு ஒன்றும் ஆகக்கூடாது என்று வேண்டிக் கொண்டார். இவர் வேண்டிக்கொண்டது போன்றே இவருக்கு எந்தவோர் ஆபத்தும் ஏற்படவில்லை. இதனாலேயே இவருடைய கையில் இரசக் கிண்ணம் உள்ளது.


இவர் எந்தவொரு பதவிக்கும் ஆசைப்படாதவராகவே வாழ்ந்து வந்தார்.


இப்படித் தன் வாழ்வாலும் வார்த்தையாலும் ஆண்டவருக்குச் சான்று பகர்ந்து வாழ்ந்த இவர் 975 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Konrad of Konstanz



Profile

Second son of Count Heinrich von Altdorf, part of the Guelf family. Educated at the cathedral school at Constance, Germany (in modern Switzerland). Priest. Provost of the cathedral. Bishop of Constance from 934 to 975. Made three pilgrimages to the Holy Lands. Accompanied Emperor Otto I to Rome, Italy. Renovated churches in his diocese, and built three new ones on lands he inherited. Known for his charity to the poor, and his lack of concern over the power politics that occupied so many other bishops of the day.


During Mass one day a spider dropped into the chalice of Precious Blood; though Conrad believed all spiders were poisonous, his love of communion overcame his fear, and he drank the Blood, spider and all. He did, of course, survive.


On 14 September 948 Conrad was witness to the miraculous consecration of the Chapel of Mary, Einsiedeln, Switzerland by Christ and some angels.


Died

975 of natural causes


Canonized

1123 by Pope Callistus II


Patronage

• Constance, Germany, diocese of

• Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany, archdiocese of






Blessed Pontius of Faucigny


Also known as

Ponzio



Profile

Born to the nobility of the Savoy region (in modern France). Monk at the Canonici Regolari di Abondance abbey as a young man. Over the years he helped revise the constitutions of the abbot to put them in closer accord to the Augustinian rule. Founded a religious house in Sixt, Savoy in 1144, and served as its first abbot. Abbot of the Abondance abbey in 1172. Late in life he retired from the abbacy to spend his final days as a prayerful simple monk.


Born

c.1100 in Faucigny, Savoy (in modern France)


Died

• 26 November 1179 in Sixt, Savoy (in modern France) of natural causes

• buried in the abbey church

• relics enshrined in the church at an unknown date

• Saint Francis de Sales, having a devotion, took some relics on 14 November 1620


Beatified

15 December 1896 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)



Pope Saint Siricius


Profile

Son of Tiburtius. Lector. Deacon. Friend of Saint Ambrose of Milan. Unanimously elected 38th pope in 384. He was opposed by the anti-pope Ursinus, but the pretender could not get any support, and nothing came of it. Expanded papal power and authority, decreeing that any papal documents should receive widespread distribution. Held a synod at Rome, Italy on 6 January 386 which re-affirmed a variety of canon laws and disciplines for both clergy and laity. A separate synod in 390 to 392 re-affirmed the merits of fasting, good works, and the need for celibate life among the religious and clergy. Opposed the Manicheans. Settled the Meletian schism at Antioch.



Born

c.334 at Rome, Italy


Papal Ascension

December 384


Died

• 26 November 399 of natural causes

• buried in the cemetery of Priscilla on the Via Salaria, Rome, Italy




Blessed Marmaduke Bowes


Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Married layman and father. Fearful of the persecutions of the day, he was a covert Catholic who put in appearances in the Established church to keep the authorities away. He sheltered priests on the run, and had his children raised Catholic. In 1585 his children's tutor was arrested and bribed to apostatize, turn informer, and denounce Bowes for helping priests. Bowes and his wife were arrested and imprisoned in York; she was released, but Marmaduke was convicted on the statements the tutor. First layman executed under the law that made helping priests a felony. Martyr.


Born

Ingram Grange, Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged on 26 November 1585 in York, Yorkshire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Alypius Stylites


Also known as

• Alypius of Adrianople

• Alypius of Adrianoplis

• Alypius of Hadrianople

• Alypius of Hadrianopolis

• Alipio, Stiljanus, Stylianos, Stylianus, Styllianus



Profile

Deacon. Gave away all his possessions to live first as a monk, and then as a cave hermit and finally as one of the early ascetics who would live atop a pillar for long periods.


Born

early 4th-century in Adrianople, Paphlagonia, Asia Minor (modern Edirne, Turkey)


Died

c.390 at Adrianopolis, Paphlagonia, Asia Minor (modern Edirne, Turkey) of natural causes



Blessed Hugh Taylor


Memorial

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

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Studied at Rheims, France. Ordained in 1584. Ministered to covert and oppressed Catholics in England starting in March 1585. He worked for only a few months, being the first person martyred in the persecutions of Queen Elizabeth. One of the Martyrs of England, Scotland and Wales.


Born

c.1559 at Durham, England


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 26 November 1585 at York, Yorkshire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Albert of Haigerloch


Also known as

• Albert of Oberaltaich

• Adalbert of...


Profile

Related to the Counts of Haigerloch, Hohenzollern (Germany). Benedictine monk at Oberaltaich, Bavaria in 1261. Head of the monastery school. Prior of his house, and priest of the surrounding parish. Insured support for the monastery scriptorium, and started care for lepers in the area of the Danube.


Born

1239 in Haigerloch, Hohenzollern (Germany)


Died

26 November 1311 at Oberaltaich, Bavaria, Germany of natural causes



Saint Humilis of Bisignano


Also known as

• Luca Antonio Pirozzo

• Umile of Bisignano



Profile

Franciscan lay-brother. So renowned for his sanctity, he was summoned to Rome to be counselor to Pope Gregory XV and Pope Urban VIII.


Born

26 August 1582 at Bisignano, Cosanza, Italy


Died

26 November 1637 at Bisignano, Cosanza, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

19 May 2002 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Ðaminh Nguyen Van Xuyên


Also known as

Dominic Nguyen Van Xuyen


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Dominican priest. Worked in the Dominican missions in Vietnam. Martyr.


Born

c.1786 in Hung Lap, Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Died

beheaded on 26 November 1839 in Bay Mau, Hanoi, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Tôma Ðinh Viet Du


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Dominican priest. Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Minh Mang.


Born

c.1783 in Phú Nhai, Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Died

beheaded on 26 November 1839 in Bay Mau, Hanoi, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Basolus of Verzy


Also known as

• Basolus of Limoges

• Basle of...


Profile

Benedictine monk at Verzy, France. Lived for 40 years as a hermit on a hill near Rheims, France. Miracle worker.


Born

c.555 in Limoges, France


Died

• 620 of natural causes

• relics enshrined in 879 in the monastery built over his original tomb



Saint Martin of Arades


Also known as

Martin of Corbie


Profile

Monk at Corbie Abbey in France. Priest. Court chaplain and confessor of Charles Martel.


Died

• 726 of natural causes

• buried in St-Priest-sous-Aixe, Haute-Vienne, France


Patronage

• against gout

• against paralysis



Saint James the Hermit


Also known as

• James the Lonely

• James Hypeterius


Profile

Monk. Hermit. Miracle worker. His reputation for wisdom and holiness led the emperor to ask James to attend the Council of Chalcedon in 451.


Born

near Cyrus, Syria


Died

457 of natural causes



Blessed Delphine of Glandèves


Also known as

Delfina



Profile

Married to Saint Elzear of Sabran. Widowed, she spent the rest of her days in prayerful poverty.


Died

c.1359



Saint Ida of Cologne


Profile

Daughter of Matilda and Erenfrid, Count Palatine of Lorraine; her brother was Archbishop Hermann II of Cologne, her sisters were Queen Richeza of Poland and Abbess Theofano in Essen. Nun. Abbess of Saint-Mary-in-Kapitol Abbey in Cologne, Germany.


Died

1060



Saint Egelwine of Athelney


Also known as

Aylwine, Egelwin, Ethelwin, Ethelwine


Profile

Seventh century prince of Wessex, England. Lived as a prayerful hermit at Athelney, Somersetshire, England.


Born

Athelney, Somersetshire, England



Saint Nicon of Sparta


Also known as

Nicon Metanoiete ( = repent)


Profile

Monk. Wandering preacher and evangelist, especially in Greece, calling everyone to repent (metanoete).


Born

Armenia


Died


998 of natural causes



Saint Magnance of Ste-Magnance


Also known as

• Magnance of Auxerre

• Magnentia, Magnantia, Magnence


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Germanus of Auxerre.


Died

c.450 of natural causes



Saint Marcellus of Nicomedia


Profile

Priest in Asia Minor. Martyred in the persecutions of the Arian Emperor Constantius.


Died

thrown from a cliff in 349 in Nicomedia, Asia Minor (modern Izmit, Turkey)



Saint Bertger of Herzfeld


Profile

Priest in Herzfeld, Germany. Spiritual director and confessor of Saint Ida of Herzfeld.


Died

c.830 in Herzfeld, Germany of natural causes while celebrating Mass



Saint Amator of Autun


Profile

Bishop of Autun, France c.270. Brought the Gallic Aedui tribe to the faith.


Died

buried in the cemetery of t-Pierre-l'Etrier just outside Autun, France



Saint Sabaudus of Trier


Also known as

Sebaldus, Sebaud


Profile

Bishop of Trier, Germany.


Died

c.614



Saint Vacz


Profile

Eleventh century hermit in Visegrád, Hungary.



Martyrs of Alexandria


Profile

A group of approximately 650 Christian priests, bishops and laity martyred together in the persecution of Maximian Galerius. We have the names and a few details only seven of them - Ammonius, Didius, Faustus, Hesychius, Pachomius, Phileas and Theodore.


Born

Egyptian


Died

c.311 in Alexandria, Egypt



Martyrs of Capua


Profile

A group of seven Christians martyred together. The only details about them to survive are the names - Ammonius, Cassianus, Felicissimus, Nicander, Romana, Saturnin and Serenus.


Died

in Capua, Campania, Italy, date unknown



Martyrs of Nicomedia


Profile

A group of six orthodox Christians martyred by Arians. Few details have survived except their names - Marcellus, Melisus, Numerius, Peter, Serenusa and Victorinus.


Died

349 in Nicomedia, Bithynia, Asia Minor (modern Izmit, Turkey)


24 November 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் நவம்பர் 25

 St. Alnoth

இவர் (#St_Alnoth) இங்கிலாந்து நாட்டைச் சார்ந்தவர்.




புனித வெர்பர்க்கின் துறவு மடத்தில் ஆடு, மாடு மேய்ப்பவராகத் தன் வாழ்க்கையைத் தொடங்கிய இவர், தூய்மைக்கும் பொறுமைக்கும் மிகச் சிறந்த எடுத்துக்காட்டாக விளங்கினார்.


பின்பு இவர் ஸ்டோவ் (Stowe) என்ற இடத்திற்குச் சென்று, ஒரு துறவியைப் போன்று இறைவேண்டலுக்கும் நோன்பிற்கும் ஒறுத்தலுக்கும் மிகுந்த முக்கியத்துவம் கொடுத்து வாழ்ந்தார்.


ஒருமுறை கொள்ளையர்கள் இருவர், இவரிடம் இருப்பதை அபகரித்து விட்டுப் போகலாம் என்று இவரிடம் வந்தனர்; ஆனால் அவர்கள் இருவரும் இவரிடம் எதுவும் இல்லாததைக் கண்டு இவரைக் கொலை செய்தனர்.


இவர் கொல்லப்பட்ட ஆண்டு கி.பி 700 ஆகும்

Feastday: November 25

Death: 700


Herder and hermit, mentioned in the life of St. Werburga. Alnoth tended cows on the lands of St. Werburga's monastery at Weedon, in Northhampton, England. He was badly used by a local official, earning a reputation for holiness and patience. Alnoth retired from active life and became a hermit. Two robbers accosted him in his hermitage, slaying him. He is honored locally as a martyr, and his tomb at Stowe, near Bubrook in Northhampton, became a popular shrine for pilgrims.


Ælfnoth or Alnoth (died 700) was an English hermit and martyr. Little is known of his life, though he is mentioned in Jocelyn's life of Saint Werburgh as a pious neatherd at Weedon, who bore with great patience the ill-treatment of the bailiff placed over him, and who afterwards became a hermit in a very lonely spot, where he was eventually murdered by two robbers. On this ground he was honoured as a martyr; and there was some concourse of pilgrims to his tomb at Stowe near Bugbrooke in Northamptonshire. Ælfnoth is not mentioned in any surviving early calendars; his feast was later kept on 27 February or on 25 November.



St. Mesrop


Feastday: November 25

Patron: of Armenia

Birth: 361

Death: 440





Confessor and disciple of St. Nerses the Great of Armenia, called "the Teacher." Mesrop was born in Taron, Armenia, and became a hermit under St. Nerses the Great. He served as a missionary with St. Isaac the Great and helped compose the Armenian alphabet and translations of the Holy Scriptures. Mesrop, sometimes listed as Mesrob, was proficient in Greek, Syriac, and Persian. He founded schools in Armenia and Georgia, and reportedly succeeded Patriarch Sahak in 440. Mesrop was beloved for his many contributions to Armenian education and died at Valarshapat on February 19 at age eighty.





Saint Catherine of Alexandria

✠ அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியா நகர புனிதர் கேதரின் ✠

(St. Catherine of Alexandria)


கன்னியர்/ இளவரசி/ மறைசாட்சி:

(Virgin, Princess and Martyr)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 287

அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியா, ரோமன் எகிப்து

(Alexandria, Roman Egypt)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 305 (வயது 17–18)

அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியா, எகிப்து

(Alexandria, Egypt)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Orthodox Church)

ஓரியண்ட்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Oriental Orthodoxy)

ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion)

லூதரன் திருச்சபை

(Lutheranism)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

செயின்ட் கேதரின் துறவற மடம்

(Saint Catherine's Monastery)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: நவம்பர் 25


பாதுகாவல்:

திருமணமாகாத பெண்கள், எதிர்த்து வாதிடுபவர்கள், சக்கரத்துடன் வேலை செய்யும் கைவினைஞர்கள் (குயவர்கள், நெசவாளர்கள்), இறக்கும் மக்கள், கல்வியாளர்கள், பெண்கள், நீதிபதிகள், கத்தி தீட்டுபவர்கள், வழக்கறிஞர்கள், நூலகர்கள், நூலகங்கள், பாலிஹோல் கல்லூரி (Balliol College), மாஸ்ஸி கல்லூரி (Massey College), மணமாகாத இளம் பெண், ஆலை உரிமையாளர்கள், தொப்பி தயாரிப்பாளர்கள், செவிலியர், தத்துவவாதிகள், சாமியார்கள், அறிஞர்கள், பள்ளிக் குழந்தைகள், செயலர்கள், தட்டச்சர், மாணவர்கள், இறையியலாளர்கள், ஓவியேடோ பல்கலைக்கழகம் (University of Oviedo), பாரிஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் (University of Paris), செஜ்டன் (Żejtun), மால்ட்டா (Malta), ஸுர்ரியேக் (Żurrieq), பக்பிலாவோ (Pagbilao), கியூசொன் (Quezon), ஃபிலிப்பைன்ஸ் (Philippines), கர்கர் நகரம் (Carcar City), செபு (Cebu), கடேரிணி (Katerini), கிரேக்கம் (Greece)


“அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியா நகர புனிதர் கேதரின்” (Saint Catherine of Alexandria) என்றும், “சக்கரங்களின் புனிதர் கேதரின்” (Saint Catherine of the Wheel) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படும் இப்புனிதர், “மகா மறைசாட்சிப் புனிதர் கேதரின்” (The Great Martyr Saint Catherine) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படுகிறார். மரபுகளின்படி, கிறிஸ்தவ புனிதரும், கன்னியருமான இவர், நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் தொடக்கத்தில் அரசாண்ட ரோம பாகனிய பேரரசரான “மேக்சன்ஷியஸ்” (Pagan Emperor Maxentius) என்பவரது ஆட்சிக்காலத்தில் மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்தவர் ஆவார்.


இவரது சுயசரிதத்தின்படி, இளவரசியும், குறிப்பிடப்படும்படியான அறிஞருமான இவர், தமது பதினான்கு வயதில் கிறிஸ்தவ சமயத்திற்கு மனம் மாறினார். நூற்றுக்கணக்கான பாகன் இன மக்களை கிறிஸ்தவர்களாக மனம் மாற்றிய இவர், தமது பதினெட்டு வயதில் மறைசாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டார். அவரது தியாகத்தை தொடர்ந்து 1,100 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு பின்னர் தோன்றிய புனிதர் “ஜோன் ஆஃப் ஆர்க்” (Saint Joan of Arc), தமக்கு காட்சியளித்ததும், ஆலோசனைகள் கூறியதுவும் புனிதர் கேதரினே என்று அடையாளம் கண்டுகொண்டார்.


கேதரினம், பாரம்பரிய கதைகளின்படி, கி.பி. 286–305 ஆண்டு காலத்தில் ஆண்ட ரோமப் பேரரசர் (Roman Emperor) “மேக்சிமியன்” (Maximian) காலத்தில், எகிப்திய அலெக்சான்றியாவின் (Egyptian Alexandria) ஆளுநராக (Governor) இருந்த “கான்ஸ்டஸ்” (Constus) என்பவரது மகள் ஆவார். சிறு வயதிலிருந்தே கல்வியில் ஆர்வம் காட்டி கற்றுவந்த இவருக்கு காட்சியளித்த, குழந்தை இயேசுவை ஏந்தி வந்த அன்னை கன்னி மரியாள், கேதரினை கிறிஸ்தவராக மனம் மாறுமாறு அறிவுறுத்தினார்.


பேரரசர் “மேக்சன்ஷியஸ்” (Emperor Maxentius) கிறிஸ்தவர்களை துன்புறுத்த தொடங்கியபோது, கேதரின் பேரரசரை அணுகி, அவரது கொடுமைகளுக்காக அவரைக் கடிந்துகொண்டார். ஐம்பது சிறந்த பாகன் இன தத்துவவாதிகளையும் (Pagan Philosophers), திறமையான பேச்சாளர்களையும் (Orators) அழைத்த பேரரசர், கேதரினுடன் பொது விவாதத்தில் ஈடுபட உத்தரவிட்டார். அவர்கள் கேதரினுடைய கிறிஸ்தவம் சார்பான வாதங்களை தமது திறமையான வாதங்களால் நிராகரிப்பார்கள்; தப்பென்று எடுத்துக்காட்டுவார்கள் என்று எதிர்பார்த்தார். ஆனால், கேதரின் அவரது எதிர்பார்ப்புகளை பொய்யாக்கினார். அவரை எதிர்த்து அவர்களால் ஜெயிக்க இயலவில்லை. கேதரின் தம்மை எதிர்த்தவர்களை தமது சொற்பொழிவால் வெற்றிகொண்டார். அவர்களில் பெரும்பாலானோர் தம்மை கிறிஸ்தவர்களாக சாற்றினர். அவர்களனைவரும் பேரரசனால் கொல்லப்பட்டனர்.


கேதரினை பிடித்து கசையால் அடித்து சிறையிலிட்டனர். குறுகிய கால வேளையில், அவரைக் காண இருநூற்றுக்கும் மேற்பட்டோர் சிறைச் சாலைக்கு வந்தனர். அவர்களை, பேரரசனின் மனைவியும், ரோமப் பேரரசியுமான (Empress of the Romans) “வலேரியா மேக்சிமில்லா” (Valeria Maximilla) ஒருவர். அவர்களனைவரும் கிறிஸ்தவர்களாக மனம் மாறினார்கள். தொடர்ந்து, அவர்களனைவரும் மறைசாட்சியர்களாக கொல்லப்பட்டனர்.



கொடூரமான துன்புறுத்தல்களால் அழகியும் புத்திசாலியுமான இளவரசி கேதரினை வசப்படுத்த இயலாத “பேரரசர் மேக்சன்ஷியஸ்” (Emperor Maxentius) திருமண ஆசை காட்டினான். அவனை புறங்கையால் நிராகரித்த புனிதர், தமது மணவாளன் இயேசுவே என்று சாற்றினார். தமது கன்னிமையை அவருக்கே அர்ப்பணிப்பதாகவும் அறிவித்தார். ஆத்திரமடைந்த பேரரசன், உடைந்த சக்கரத்தின் மீது கேத்தரினை கட்டி கொள்ளுமாறு கட்டளையிட்டான். ஆனால், கேதரின் அச்சக்கரத்தை தொட்டதுமே அது மேலும் உடைந்து தகர்ந்து போனது. இறுதியில், கேதரின் தலை வெட்டப்பட்டு படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

Katherine, Ekaterina, Katharina, Katarina



Profile

Apocryphal. Born to the nobility. Learned in science and oratory. Converted to Christianity after receiving a vision. When she was 18 years old, during the persecution of Maximinus, she offered to debate the pagan philosophers. Many were converted by her arguments, and immediately martyred. Maximinus had her scourged and imprisoned. The empress and the leader of the army of Maximinus were amazed by the stories, went to see Catherine in prison. They converted and were martyred. Maximinus ordered her broken on the wheel, but she touched it and the wheel was destroyed. She was beheaded, and her body whisked away by angels.


Immensely popular during the Middle Ages, there were many chapels and churches devoted to her throughout western Europe, and she was reported as one of the divine advisors to Saint Joan of Arc. Her reputation for learning and wisdom led to her patronage of libaries, librarians, teachers, archivists, and anyone associated with wisdom or teaching. Her debating skill and persuasive language has led to her patronage of lawyers. And her torture on the wheel led to those who work with them asking for her intercession. One of the Fourteen Holy Helpers.



While there may well have been a noble, educated, virginal lady who swayed pagans with her rhetoric during the persecutions, the accretion of legend, romance and poetry has long since buried the real Catherine.


Died

beheaded c.305 in Alexandria, Egypt




Saint Peter of Alexandria


Profile

Suffered in the persecution of Decius, but survived. Renowned for his knowledge of science and the Bible. Head of the catechetical school at Alexandria, Egypt. Bishop of Alexandria in 300. Opposed extreme Origenism. May have been the first to deal with the Arian heresy.



During the Diocletian persecution, Peter fled the area with many of his flock. Criticized by many for being lenient and forgiving to Christians who had renounced their faith during the persecutions. However, when a rogue bishop usurped Peter's position, the Meletian schism broke out in his clergy, and Peter had to return from hiding to deal with it. Peter excommunicated Meletius and convened a synod of bishops to condemn the schism. His writings were used in the Council of Ephesus and the Council of Chalcedon.


Bishop Peter was martyred with Father Dio, Father Ammonius, and Father Faustus, three of his priests, in the persecutions of Gaius Valerius Galerius Maximinus. As he was the last Christian martyred in Alexandria by civil authorities, the Coptic Church calls him "the seal and complement of the martyrs".


Born

at Alexandria, Egypt


Died

• martyred in 311 at Alexandria, Egypt

• initially buried in an Alexandria martyr's cemetery

• most relics later enshrined in a church at Grasse, France




Blessed Beatrice d'Ornacieux


Also known as

• Beatrice di Ornacieu

• Beatrice of Eymeu

• Beatrix...



Additional Memorial

• 27 November (diocese of Grenoble, France)

• 13 February (diocese of Valence, France)


Profile

In 1273, at the age of thirteen, Beatice joined the Carthusians at the Charterhouse of Parménie, France. In 1301, she and two others, Luisa Alleman of Grésivaudan and Margherita di Sassenaye, were sent to found the monastery of Eymeu in the diocese of Valance, France. Noted for her devotion to the Passion of Christ, offering herself to suffer for others and as penance for the world. Said to have driven a nail through her left hand to help realize the sufferings of the Crucifixion.


Born

c.1260 in Ornacieu, Dauphine (in the southeastern area of modern France


Died

• 25 November 1303 at the monastery of Eymeu, Valence (in modern France) of natural causes

• re-interred in Parménie, France

• re-interred in the Olivetan sanctury there in 1901

• relics enshrined in the church of Rancurel


Beatified

15 April 1869 by Pope Pius XI (cultus confirmation)




Blessed Elizabeth Achler


Also known as

• Elizabeth Acheer

• Elizabeth Achlin

• Elizabeth Bona von Reute

• Elizabeth den Gode

• Elizabeth of Reute

• Elizabeth the Good

• Elizabeth the Recluse

• Elizabeth von Reute

• Betha, Elisabeth, Elsbeth



Additional Memorial

9 December (Franciscans)


Profile

Born poor, the daughter of John and Anne Achler. Franciscan tertiary at age 14, but found it hard to lead a religious life while living with her parents. At age 17 she joined four other tertiaries in a community in Reute, Germany; she lived there the rest of her life. For most of her life she was subject to ecstasies, and received visions of heaven, hell and purgatory. Stigmatist whose wounds hurt constantly, but which bled on Fridays and during Lent. Had the gift of inedia, eating nothing but the Eucharist for long periods.


Born

25 November 1386 at Waldsee, Wurttemberg, Swabia, Germany


Died

• 25 November 1420 at Reute, Germany of natural causes

• buried in the church at Reute


Beatified

19 July 1766 by Pope Clement XIII (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

Swabia, Germany



Saint Petrus Yi Ho-yong


Also known as

Peteuro, Pietro, Peter



Additional Memorial

20 September as one of the Martyrs of Korea


Profile

Brother of Saint Agatha Yi So-sa. Layman catechist in the apostolic vicariate of Korea. Imprisoned for four years, regularly beaten, several bones broken, and he eventually died from his mistreatment. One of the earliest of the Martyrs of Korea.


Born

1803 in Icheon, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea


Died

25 November 1838 in Seoul Prison, South Korea of abuse received in prison


Canonized

6 May 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Beatrix of Ornacieux


Also known as

Beatrice


Additional Memorial

27 November in the diocese of Grenoble, France



Profile

Carthusian nun. Founded a Carthusian house at Eymieux, France. Known for her devotion to the Passion of Christ; said to have driven a nail through her left hand to help realize the sufferings of the Crucifixion.


Born

c.1260 in Ornacieu, France


Died

c.1306 at the monastery at Eymieux, France of natural causes


Beatified

15 April 1869 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmed)



Saint Moses of Rome


Profile

May have been of Jewish ancestry. Imperial Roman citizen. Priest. Noted preacher. Adamant opponent of the heresy of Novatianism. Correspondent with Saint Cyprian at the beginning of the persecutions of Decius. After the execution of Pope saint Fabian under Emperor Decius, he administered the Church with the help of the priests and bishops who were in Rome. Helped reconcile repentant apostates who were sick and about to die. Imprisoned for nearly a year for his faith. Martyr.


Born

Rome, Italy


Died

c.251 from terrible conditions in prison



Saint Mercurius of Caesarea


Also known as

Mercury


Profile

Scythian Christian soldier who distinguished himself against the barbarian invaders of the Roman empire, and gained the notice of Decius. However, he refused to sacrifice to the pagan god Artemis, and so was tortured and executed. Some versions of his story include angelic visions and messages received in dreams, but his being a soldier and martyr is all we really know.


Died

• beheaded c.250 Caesarea, Cappadocia

• relics enshrined in several churches in southern Italy



Saint Audentius of Milan


Also known as

Audenzio


Profile

Born to the imperial Roman nobility, and a sentator from Milan. When visited Saint Julius of Novara on the island of Orta he was so taken by Julius' obvious holiness that he gave him moral, spiritual and financial support in his evangelization work.


Died

• c.400 of natural causes

• buried on Isola San Giulio, Italy next to Saint Julius


Patronage

Pettenasco, Italy



Blessed Ekbert of Muensterschwarzach


Also known as

Egbert, Eckbert, Ekkbert



Profile

Monk at Gorze. Abbot of Mönsterschwarzach, Bavaria, Germany.


Born

c.1010


Died

1075 of natural causes



Saint Imina of Würzburg


Also known as

Imma, Immina


Profile

Daughter of Duke Hedan II of Thuringia. Donated Marienburg castle in Würzburg, Germany to Bishop Burkhard, and retired from public life to become a nun. Abbess at Karlburg, Franconia.


Born

c.700 at Würzburg, Germany


Died

752 of natural causes



Blessed Adalbert of Caramaico


Profile

Benedictine monk at Casauria, Abruzzi, Italy. He retired to live as a hermit in the Caramaico mountain area near Chieti, Italy. There he attracted so many would-be spiritual students that he founded the Saint Nicholas monastery for them.


Died

c.1045 of natural causes



Blessed Conrad of Heisterbach


Also known as

Konrad


Profile

Soldier. Ministered to the margraves of Thuringia until he was about 50 years old. He then became a Cistercian monk at Heisterbach Abbey in western Germany.


Died

c.1200 at Heisterbach Abbey, Germany of natural causes



Blessed Jacinto Serrano López


Profile

Dominican priest. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

30 July 1901 in Urrea de Gaén, Teruel, Spain


Died

25 November 1936 in Híjar, Teruel, Spain


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Santiago Meseguer Burillo


Profile

Dominican priest. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

1 May 1885 in Híjar, Teruel, Spain


Died

25 November 1936 in Híjar, Teruel, Spain


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Erasmus of Antioch


Also known as

Elme


Profile

Priest. Bishop in Syria. During a period of persecution of Christians, he fled to Mount Linanus and lived as a hermit for 17 years. Martyred in the persecutions of Licinius.


Born

Antioch, Syria


Died

Antioch, Syria



Saint Alanus of Lavaur


Also known as

Alain, Ala


Profile

Seventh century founder and abbot of the monastery of Lavaur in Gascony (in modern France).


Died

• 7th century of natural causes

• relics preserved in the hospice of the house he founded



Blessed Garcia of Arlanza


Profile

Soldier. Monk. Abbot of Arlanza monastery, Burgos, Spain in 1039. Friend and counsellor of King Ferdinand I of Castile.


Born

at Quintanilla, Old Castile (in modern Spain)


Died

c.1073 of natural causes



Saint Marculo of Numidia


Also known as

Marcolo


Profile

Bishop. Murdered for his faith by a man named Macario in the reign of emperor Constantine. Martyr.


Died

thrown from a rock in 347 in Numidia



Saint Jucunda of Reggio Aemilia


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Prosper of Reggio. Nun.


Born

Reggio Aemilia, Italy


Died

466 of natural causes



Saint Bernold of Ottobeuren


Profile

Benedictine monk and priest of Ottobeuren in Bavaria, Germany. Known in his day as a "wonder worker".


Died

c.1050 of natural causes



Blessed Guido of Casauria


Profile

Benedictine monk at Farfa, Italy. Abbot of the monastery at Casauria, Abruzzi, Italy.


Died

c.1045 of natural causes



Saint Maurino of Agen


Also known as

Maurin, Maurinus


Profile

Sixth century evangelist in the rural areas of Agen, Aquitaine (in modern France). Martyr.



Martyrs of Africa


Profile

A group of 13 Christians murdered together for their faith in Africa, date unknown. The only details to have survived are their names - Claudian, Cyprian, Donatus, Felix, Januarius, Julian, Lucian, Marcian, Martialis, Peter, Quirianus, Victor and Vitalis.



கர்தினால் சார்லஸ் மார்டியல் அல்லெமாண்ட் லவிகேரீ Charles-Martial-Allemand Lavigerie


பிறப்பு 

31 அக்டோபர் 1825, 

பயோன்னே Bayonne, பிரான்சு



இறப்பு 

25 நவம்பர் 1892, 

அல்ஜீரியா


இவர் குருவாக திருநிலைப்படுத்தப்பட்டு பேராசிரியராக பணியாற்றினார். 1863 ஆம் ஆண்டு நான்சி (Nancy) என்ற மறைமாவட்டத்திற்கு ஆயராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். பின்னர் 1867 ல் அல்ஜீரியாவிற்கு பேராயராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். பின்னர் 1882 ல் கர்தினாலாக உயர்த்தப்பட்டார். பின்னர் ஆப்ரிக்காவில் மறைபரப்புப் பணியை ஆற்றச் சென்றார். பின்னர் 1886 ல் "வெள்ளை அருள்தந்தையர்" (Weißen Vater) என்ற பெயரிலும் "வெள்ளை அருள்சகோதரிகள்" (Weißen Schwestern) என்ற பெயரிலும் சபை ஒன்றை நிறுவினார். 



இவர் ஆப்ரிக்காவில் முஸ்லீம் இன மக்களிடையே தன் மறைபரப்பு பணியை ஆற்றினார். ஆப்ரிக்காவின் பல்வேறு நகரங்களில் மறைபரப்பு மையங்களை நிறுவினார். பின்னர் மால்டாவில் Malta மறைக்கல்வி நிறுவனம் ஒன்றையும் நிறுவினார். பின்னர் 12 நவம்பர் 1890 ல் மறைப்பணீயை பரப்புவதற்காக அல்ஜீரியாவிற்கு வரவழைக்கப்பட்டார். அங்கு இவர் கார்த்தாகோவில் Karthago இருந்த பேராலயத்தில் பணிபுரிந்துவந்தார். பல இளைய பெண்களுக்கு வழிகாட்டி துறவியாக்கினார். 

St. Lavigerie, Charles Martial Allemand (1825-1892)


Charles Martial Allemand Lavigerie, Cardinal Archbishop of Algiers and Carthage, Primate of Africa, missionary founder and anti-slavery campaigner, was born near Bayonne in the Basque region of southern France. After his schooling, he studied theology at Saint Sulpice in Paris. In 1854, after priestly ordination and further studies, he was appointed professor of church history in the university of the Sorbonne, Paris. In 1860, as director of the work for oriental schools, he travelled to Lebanon and Syria to administer relief to Christians there, following the massacre by the Druses. During this journey he met the exiled Algerian leader, Abd el Kader, and was impressed by his humanity and Islamic culture. He also developed an interest in churches of the eastern rites and became aware of the twin threats to their existence of Muslim pressure and Catholic Latinization. On his return, he joined the staff of the Vatican as an auditor of the Roman Rota. At this time he also made the acquaintance of Daniel Comboni and his ideas for the regeneration of Africa.


In 1863 he was appointed Bishop of Nancy, France and was placed in line for the important archiepiscopal see of Lyons. However, he declined this prestigious appointment, and asked instead for the colonial see of Algiers, to which he was appointed archbishop in 1867. Algeria had become a French colony in 1830, and under Napoleon III was designated an “Arab Kingdom.” Although the French authorities discouraged proselytism among Muslims, Lavigerie made it clear that he had come to serve the whole population of Algeria and that his ultimate aim was to evangelize the entire continent of Africa. To this end he founded the Society of Missionaries of Africa (White Fathers) in 1868 and the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa (White Sisters) in 1869. After difficult beginnings, these international missionary societies attracted large numbers of recruits in France, Belgium, Holland, Germany and Canada. Lavigerie established orphanages and schools for the child victims of successive famines in Algeria. In 1868 he was appointed Apostolic Delegate to the Sahara and Sudan by Pope Pius IX and ten years later was entrusted by Pope Leo XIII with the evangelization of sub-Saharan Africa. In 1878 he started a seminary in Jerusalem for Catholic students of the Greek Melchite rite, but his ambition to halt Latinization by himself becoming Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem was not realized.


From 1878 his missionaries established themselves in the Great Lakes region of Eastern Africa and, after his death, in the French territories of West Africa. Created a Cardinal in 1882, Lavigerie revived the ancient see of Carthage, with the title Primate of Africa, when the French annexed Tunisia. Throughout 1888 Lavigerie conducted a personal campaign against slavery in the capitals of Europe. In this campaign he made known the heart-rending experiences of slavery witnessed by his missionaries in equatorial Africa. The campaign resulted in the anti-slavery conferences of Brussels and Paris. At the request of Pope Leo XIII, Lavigerie pronounced the celebrated “Toast of Algiers” in 1890 in order to rally support for the French republican government. In doing this he forfeited the considerable support he was receiving from traditional French Catholics. Lavigerie was a passionate and far-sighted humanitarian, never far from controversy, but possessing a strong faith in the ability of African Christians to carry out the effective evangelization of their continent.

23 November 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் நவம்பர் 24

 Martyrs of Vietnam

 புனித ஆண்ட்ரூ, டங்-லாக் மற்றும் குழுவினர் 

(St. Andrew Dung-Lac and Companions)

நினைவுத் திருநாள் : நவம்பர் 24

கம்யூனிச அடக்குமுறையிலும் தழைத்து வளர்ந்த கிறிஸ்தவம்!

வியட்னாமை, டான்கின், அன்னாம், கோகின் சினா ஆகிய மூன்று அரசுகள் ஆட்சி செய்துவந்த காலத்தில் போர்த்துக்கீசியர்கள் வழியாக அந்நாட்டில் கிறிஸ்தவம் பரவியது. 

1615ம் ஆண்டில் Da Nang என்ற இடத்தில் இயேசு சபையினர் மறைப்பணித்தளத்தை ஆரம்பிதனர். ஜப்பானில் கிறிஸ்தவத்துக்கு எதிராக நடந்த அடக்குமுறைகளுக்குத் தப்பிவந்த ஜப்பானியர்களுக்கு இவர்கள் மறைப் பணியாற்றினார்கள். ஆனால் வியட்நாமை ஆட்சி செய்த அரசர்களில் ஒருவர் அனைத்து வெளிநாட்டு மறைபோதகர்களையும் தடை செய்தார். 

கிறிஸ்தவத்தை ஏற்றுக்கொண்ட வியட்நாம் நாட்டினர் அனைவரையும் விசுவாசத்தை மறுதலிக்குமாறு சிலுவையில் அறைந்து துன்புறுத்தினார். 

1820ம் ஆண்டுக்குப் பின்னர் அறுபது ஆண்டுகளுக்கு இக்கொடுமைகள் அதிகரித்தன. அச்சமயத்தில் ஒரு இலட்சம் முதல் மூன்று இலட்சம் கத்தோலிக்கர் வரை கொல்லப்பட்டனர் மற்றும் மிகவும் கடினமான வேலைகள் கொடுக்கப்பட்டனர். இதில் பல வெளிநாட்டவரும் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். வியட்நாம் பேரரசர் மின்ங் மான்ங் என்பவரின் மகன்களில் ஒருவரால் வழிநடத்தப்பட்ட கிளர்ச்சிக்கு வியட்னாம் கிறிஸ்தவர்களும் வெளிநாட்டு மறைப்பணியாளர்களும் ஆதரவு தருகின்றார்கள் என்று சந்தேகப்பட்டு 1847ல் அடக்குமுறைகள் அதிகமாயின. 

1862ம் ஆண்டில் ஒன்பது வயது சிறுவன் உட்பட 17 பொதுநிலையினர் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். 1839ம் ஆண்டு டிசம்பர் 21ம் தேதி ஹனோய்ப் பகுதியில் 117 பேர் தலைவெட்டி கொலை செய்யப்பட்டனர். அவர்களில் ஒருவர் ஆன்ட்ரூ டுங் லாக். வியட்னாமின் வட பகுதியில் வாழ்ந்த இவரது ஏழைக் குடும்பம், பிழைப்பு தேடி ஹனோய்ப் பகுதிக்குச் சென்றது. அப்போது இவர் கிறிஸ்தவம் பற்றி அறிந்து அதை ஏற்றார். 1823ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் 15ம் தேதி குருத்துவ அருள்பொழிவும் பெற்றார் ஆன்ட்ரூ. இவரது வாழ்வுமுறை மற்றும் போதனையினால் மக்கள் பெருமளவில் திருமுழுக்குப் பெற்றனர். 

கிறிஸ்தவர்களை வெறித்தனத்தோடு கொலைசெய்துவந்த பேரரசர், ஆன்ட்ரூவைக் கைது செய்தார். ஆயினும் துறவற சபை அருட்பணியாளர்கள் பணம் கொடுத்து இவரை மீட்டனர். இப்படி மீண்டும் மீண்டும் கைது செய்யப்பட்டார் ஆன்ட்ரூ. இறுதியில் கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

• Martyrs of Tonkin

• Martyrs of Annam

• Martyrs of IndoChina




Profile

Between the arrival of the first Portuguese missionary in 1533, through the Dominicans and then the Jesuit missions of the 17th century, the politically inspired persecutions of the 19th century, and the Communist-led terrors of the twentieth, there have been many thousands of Catholics and other Christians murdered for their faith in Vietnam. Some were priests, some nuns or brothers, some lay people; some were foreign missionaries, but most were native Vietnamese killed by their own government and countrymen.



Record keeping being what it was, and because the government did not care to keep track of the people it murdered, we have no information on the vast bulk of the victims. In 1988, Pope John Paul II recognized over a hundred of them, including some whose Causes we do have, and in commemoration of those we do not. They are collectively known as the Martyrs of Vietnam (or Tonkin or Annam or the other older names of that country).

Through the missionary efforts of various religious families beginning in the sixteenth century and continuing until 1866, the Vietnamese people heard the message of the gospel, and many accepted it despite persecution and even death. On June 19, 1988, Pope John Paul II canonized 117 persons martyred in the eighteenth century. Among these were ninety-six Vietnamese, eleven missionaries born in Spain and belonging to the Order of Preachers, and ten French missionaries belonging to the Paris Foreign Mission Society. Among these saints are eight Spanish and French bishops, fifty priests (thirteen European and thirty-seven Vietnamese), and fifty-nine lay people. These martyrs gave their lives not only for the Church but for their country as well. They showed that they wanted the gospel of Christ to take root in their people and contribute to the good of their homeland. On June 1, 1989, these holy martyrs were inscribed in the liturgical calendar of the Universal Church on November 24th.

They include -



• Blessed Andrew the Catechist • Saint Agnes De • Saint Anrê Tran An Dung • Saint Anrê Tran Van Trông • Saint Anrê Tuong • Saint Antôn Nguyen Ðích • Saint Antôn Nguyen Huu Quynh • Saint Augustine Moi Van Nguyen • Saint Augustine Schoffler • Saint Augustinô Nguyen Van Moi • Saint Augustinô Phan Viet Huy • Saint Bênadô Võ Van Duê • Saint Clemente Ignacio Delgado Cebrián • Saint Daminh Ninh • Saint Domingo Henares de Zafra Cubero • Saint Dominic Uy Van Bui • Saint Ðaminh Bùi Van Úy • Saint Ðaminh Ðinh Ðat • Saint Ðaminh Huyen • Saint Ðaminh Mau • Saint Ðaminh Nguyen • Saint Ðaminh Nguyen Ðuc Mao • Saint Ðaminh Nguyen Van Hanh • Saint Ðaminh Nguyen Van Xuyên • Saint Ðaminh Pham Trong Kham • Saint Ðaminh Toai • Saint Ðaminh Trach Ðoài • Saint Ðaminh Tuoc • Saint Emanuele Lê Van Phung • Saint Emmanuel Nguyen Van Trieu • Saint Etienne-Théodore Cuenot • Saint Francesc Gil de Federich de Sans • Saint Francis Trung Von Tran • Saint Francis Xavier Can Nguyen • Saint François Jaccard • Saint François-Isidore Gagelin • Saint Giacôbê Ðo Mai Nam • Saint Gioan Ðat • Saint Gioan Ðoàn Trinh Hoan • Saint Giuse Ðang Van Viên • Saint Giuse Hoàng Luong Canh • Saint Giuse Nguyen Duy Khang • Saint Giuse Nguyen Ðình Nghi • Saint Giuse Nguyen Ðình Uyen • Saint Giuse Pham Trong Ta • Saint Jacinto Castañeda Puchasóns • Saint Jean-Charles Cornay • Saint Jean-Théophane Vénard • Saint John Baptist Con • Saint John-Louis Bonnard • Saint José Fernández de Ventosa • Saint José María Díaz Sanjurjo • Saint José Melchór García-Sampedro Suárez • Saint Joseph Marchand • Saint Luca Pham Trong Thìn • Saint Martinô Ta Ðuc Thinh • Saint Martinô Tho • Saint Mateo Alonso de Leciñana • Saint Matthêô Nguyen Van Ðac Phuong • Saint Micae Nguyen Huy My • Saint Nicolas Bùi Ðuc The • Saint Nicolas Bùi Ðuc The • Saint Pere Josep Almató Ribera Auras • Saint Phanxicô Ðo Van Chieu • Saint Phanxicô Xaviê Can • Saint Phanxicô Xaviê Hà Trong Mau • Saint Phaolô Hanh • Saint Phaolô Lê Bao Tinh • Saint Phaolô Nguyen Ngân • Saint Phaolô Nguyen Van My • Saint Phaolô Vu Van Duong • Saint Phêrô Dung • Saint Phêrô Ða • Saint Pherô Ðoàn Van Vân • Saint Phêrô Khan • Saint Phêrô Lê Tùy • Saint Phêrô Nguyen Bá Tuan • Saint Phêrô Nguyen Khac Tu • Saint Phêrô Nguyen Van Luu • Saint Phêrô Nguyen Van Tu • Saint Phêrô Thuan • Saint Phêrô Truong Van Ðuong • Saint Phêrô Truong Van Thi • Saint Phêrô Võ Ðang Khoa • Saint Phêrô Võ Ðang Khoa • Saint Phêrô Vu Van Truat • Saint Pierre Rose Ursule Dumoulin Borie • Saint Pierre-François Néron • Saint Stêphanô Nguyen Van Vinh • Saint Tôma Ðinh Viet Du • Saint Tôma Nguyen Van Ðe • Saint Tôma Toán • Saint Tôma Tran Van Thien • Saint Valentin Faustino Berri Ochoa • Saint Vihn Son Ðo Yen • Saint Vincent Liêm • Saint Vinh Son Nguyen The Ðiem • Saint Vinh Son Tuong • Saint Vinh-Son Duong •


Died

martyred in various ways and in various locations in Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Albert of Louvain


Also known as

• Albert of Leuven

• Albert of Liege

• Alberto di Lovanio

• Albrecht of...


Additional Memorial

27 November (Belgium)



Profile

Son of Duke Godfrey III of Brabant. Made a canon of Liege, Belgium at age 12, a political appointment for guaranteed income rather than a religious vocation. He gave up the position at age 21 to become a knight under Count Baldwin V of Hainault, a bitter enemy of his native Brabant. He talked of going on Crusade, but never did, and eventually realized that religious life was calling him. He became a canon of Liege again, this time as a true vocation.


Archdeacon and provost of Brabant. Bishop of Liege in 1191. Albert of Rethel, cousin of Count Baldwin and uncle of the Empress Constance, wife of Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI, had sought the episcopacy. He appealed to the emperor for help; Henry removed Albert from the position and made a third candidate, Lothaire, who was the provost of Bonn, Germany, the new bishop of Liege. Albert then appealed to the Vatican, both for himself and to help clearly establish the Pope's supremacy in the matter. Celestine III declared Albert's election valid, and returned him to Liege. Lothair refused to surrender the see; Henry backed him, and forced the priests in the diocese to submit to Lothair.


Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, Germany was supposed to ordain Albert, but refused, fearing the emperor. William, archbishop of Rheims, France, ordained Albert as priest, and then as bishop. In an attempt to end the matter in the emperor's favour, a group of Henry's knights ambushed and murdered Albert on the road outside Rheims. The plan backfired, however, as Lothair was excommunicated and exiled, and Henry was forced to submit to Rome and do penance; lay investiture (civil control over ordinations) took another serious blow.


Born

c.1166 in Brabant (in modern Belgium)


Died

• stabbed on 21 November 1192 on the road outside Rheims, France

• buried in Rheims

• relics transferred to a Carmelite convent in Brussels, Belgium in 1612

• some relics re-located to the cathedral in Liege, Belgium in 1822


Canonized

1621 by Pope Paul V




Saint Romanus of Le Mans


Also known as

• Romanus of Blaye

• Romanus of Bordeaux

• Romanus of the Garonne

• Romanus of Tours


Profile

Summoned across the Alps to LeMans by his uncle, Saint Julian, missionary bishop of the area, who ordained him. Missionary to the area around the river Gironde. Noted for being backward, shy, introverted, and a lousy preacher, he still made converts one after another, healing, exorcising demons, and quietly bringing the Gospel to the pagans. Worked especially with the sailors of the area.


When Julian died, Romanus returned to LeMans to mourn and to care for his uncle's tomb. Other people were buried nearby in order to be near a saint, and a group of monks dedicated to caring for the graves, and who called themselves the Grave-Diggers grew up around the churchyard. Romanus joined them, and spent the rest of his days caring for the tombs, bringing the faithful to their final resting place, and bringing the comfort of the faith to the mourners.


Born

Rome, Italy


Died

• November 385 of natural causes at Blaye, France

• interred next to Saint Julian of Le Mans


Patronage

against shipwreck



Blessed Maria Anna Sala


Profile

Daughter of Giovanni and Giovannina Sala; fifth of eight children in a pious family. Educated in the convent school by the Sisters of Saint Marcellina in Vimercate, Italy. She wanted to join the Sisters, but her family needed her help, and Maria returned home. In 1848, her family obligations fulfilled, she returned to the Sisters, and made her profession on 13 September 1852. Over the next four decades she taught at the Marcellina schools in Cernusco, Chambery, Genoa, and Milan. Diagnosed with throat cancer in 1883, she kept the matter to herself and continued to work for another eight years. Throughout the beatification investigation and recognition everyone involved stressed Maria's quiet dignity and her unwavering devotion to Christ no matter how severe her pain or trying her circumstances.



Born

21 April 1829 at Brivio, Italy


Died

• 24 November 1891 at Milan, Italy of throat cancer

• remains found to be incorrupt when her Cause was introduced in 1920


Beatified

26 October 1980 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Flora of Cordoba


Profile

Born to Muslim parents. She and her mother converted to Christianity - Flora was raised Christian, her brother Muslim. She was often abused at home for her faith. She took a private vow of chastity, and ministered to Christian prisoners. When her parents announced an arranged marriage to an Islamic man, Flora and her Christian friend Mary ran away, briefly hiding with the home of Flora's sister. The sister, however, feared being accused of harboring Christians, and threw the two out. Her brother publicly betrayed her to the Islamic authorities. She was imprisoned and scourged, escaped, was recaptured, and martyred as part of the persecutions of Abderrahman II.



Born

Cordoba, Spain


Died

tortured and beheaded by Moors in 851 or 856 (sources vary on the year) in Cordoba, Spain


Patronage

• abandoned people

• betrayal victims

• converts

• martyrs

• single laywomen



Saint Bieuzy of Brittany


Also known as

Beuzi, Beuzit, Bieuzi, Bihi, Bihui, Bihuy, Bihy, Bilhwi, Bili, Bilicus, Bizuy, Budoc



Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Gildas the Wise. Followed Gildas in his work in Brittany (part of modern France). Monk. Known for his gift healing men and animals. Murdered by a nobleman refusing the man's summons to heal some rabid dogs; Bieuzy stayed at the monastery for religious services. Martyr.


Born

6th century in Anglo-Saxon Britain


Died

• stabbed in the head with a sword in the 7th century

• a healing spring of water appeared on the place he died in Pluvigner, France; it's supposed to extremely effective against toothache, rabies, headaches and dog bites

• relics enshrined in the church in Pluvigner


Patronage

• against madness

• against rabies



Saint Pierre Rose Ursule Dumoulin Borie


Also known as

• Peter Dumoulin

• Peter Dumoulin-Borie



Profile

Studied at the seminary of the Paris Foreign Missions Society, beginning in 1829. Ordained in 1832. Missionary to Tonkin (modern Vietnam). Arrested for his faith in 1836. During his two years in prison, where he was regularly beaten and tortured, he was appointed titular bishop and vicar apostolic of western Tonkin.


Born

20 February 1808 in Beynat, Corrèze, diocese of Tulle, France


Died

• beheaded on 24 November 1838 at Ðong Hoi, Quang Bình, Vietnam

• relics transferred to Paris, France in 1843


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Colman of Cloyne


Also known as

• Colman MacLenini

• Colman Mac Lenine

• Colman MacLenine



Profile

Son of Lenin. Poet. Royal bard, poet, musician, court historian, and genealogist at Cashel, Ireland. Adult convert at age fifty, being baptized by Saint Brendan the Navigator; he had become involved with Brendan and Christianity while helping recover the stolen shrine of Saint Ailbhe from a lake. Priest. Evangelist in Limerick and Cork. Teacher of Saint Columba. Bishop of Cloyne, county Cork, Ireland.


Born

530 in Munster, Ireland


Died

c.600 of natural causes


Canonized

1903 (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

diocese of Cloyne, Ireland



Saint Protasius of Milan


Also known as

• Protasius Algisi

• Protasio...



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility. Priest. Bishop of Milan, Italy c.330, serving the rest of his life over 20 years later. Supported Saint Athanasius of Alexandria against the Arians. Attended the synod of Sardica in 343, and used it as a platform against Arianism.


Died

• 352 in Milan, Italy of natural causes

• interred of the church of San Vittore in Milan

• tomb reported to be the site of miraculous cures, including that of a blind child, a miracle witnessed by Saint Augustine of Hippo



Saint Portianus of Miranda


Also known as

Porciano, Pourçain



Profile

Slave. He ran from his masters, and sought refuge in Miaranda monastery, Auvergne, France. He became a monk there, and later abbot. At one point he demanded that the Merovingian king, Thierry of Austrasia, release his Auvergnate prisoners; Portianus was so influential, the king agreed.


Died

533 of natural causes




Saint Chrysogonus


Also known as

Crisogono, Grisogono


Additional Memorial

16 April (Greek calendar)



Profile

Priest. Functionary of the vicarius Urbis. Christian teacher of Saint Anastasia of Sirmium, the daughter of the Roman noble Praetextatus. Thrown into prison during the persecution of Diocletian, he comforted Anastasia by his letters. Martyred under Diocletian.


Died

• beheaded on 23 November 304 at Aquileia, Italy

• his corpse was thrown into the sea, washed ashore, and was buried by the aged priest, Zoilus, at Venice, Italy

• his head is in the Church of Saint Chrysogonus, Rome, Italy



Saint Kenan of Damleag


Also known as

Cianan, Kay, Kea, Quay


Profile

Descended from the royalty of Munster. In his youth, Kenan was one of fifty hostages given to King Leogair by the Irish princes as a guarantee of peace. Freed by the intercession of bishop Kiaran. Spiritual student of Saint Martin of Tours in France. Knew Saint Patrick who admired him and his writing skills. Bishop of Duleek, Ireland. First in Ireland to build his cathedral in stone; it was built on the site of a pagan altar he destroyed when he converted the people.


Born

Irish


Died

24 November 489 of natural causes



Saint Eanfleda of Whitby


Also known as

Eanflaed


Profile

Princess, the daughter of King Saint Edwin of Northumbria and Saint Ethelburga of Kent. Cousin of Saint Hilda of Whitby. Baptized by Saint Paulinus of York. Great supporter and patron of Saint Wilfrid of York. Married to King Oswy of Northumbria, and mother of Saint Elfleda. Widowed. Benedictine nun at Whitby, which was then under the leadership of her daughter Elfleda.


Born

7th century Northumbria, England


Died

c.700 in Whitby, England of natural causes



Saint Mary of Cordoba


Also known as

Maria


Profile

Friend of Saint Flora, and ran away with her, briefly hiding in the home of Flora's sister. The sister, however, feared being accused of harboring Christians, and threw the two out. Betrayed to the Islamic authorities by Flora's brother, she was imprisoned and scourged for her faith, escaped, was recaptured, and executed. Martyr.


Died

tortured and beheaded by Moors in 851 or 856 (sources vary on the year)


Patronage

martyrs



Saint Vinh Son Nguyen The Ðiem


Also known as

Vincent Diem


Profile

Priest in the apostolic vicariate of West Tonkin. Worked with bishop Saint Peter Dumoulin. One of the Martyrs of Vietnam.


Born

c.1761 in An Dó, Quang Tri, Vietnam


Died

martyred on 24 November 1838 in Ðong Hoi, Quang Bình, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Firmina of Amelia

இன்றைய புனிதர் 


(நவம்பர் 24) 


✠ புனிதர் ஃபிர்மினா ✠

(St. Firmina) 


மறைசாட்சி: 


(Martyr) 


பிறப்பு: ---- 


இறப்பு: கி.பி. மூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டு 


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 


ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church) 


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்: 


அமெலியா பேராலயம்

(Amelia Cathedral) 


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: நவம்பர் 24 


பாதுகாவல்: 


அமெலியா (Amelia), இத்தாலி (Italy), சிவிடவெச்சியா Civitavecchia



புனிதர் ஃபிர்மினா, இத்தாலியின் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க புனிதரும், கன்னியரும், மறைசாட்சியுமாவார்.



மூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்ததாக கூறப்படும் இவர், “டயக்லேஷியன்” (Diocletian) எனும் ரோமப் பேரரசனின் (Roman emperor) காலத்தில் துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு மறைசாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டார். ஆனால் அவரைப் பற்றிய அனைத்து தகவல்களும் 6வது நூற்றாண்டுக்கு முன்பே எழுதப்பட்ட ஒரு வரலாற்றுக் குறிப்பிலிருந்து வந்திருக்கின்றன. பின்னர் சில நேரங்களில் முரண்பாடான விவரங்களுடன் வாய்வழி பாரம்பரியம் இதைப் பயன்படுத்துகிறது.



ஃபிர்மினா ஒரு உயர் குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த பெண்ணாவார். அவரது தந்தை “கல்பர்னியஸ்” (Calpurnius) ரோம அரசின் ஒரு உயர் அதிகாரியாவார். “ஒலிம்பியாடிஸ்” (Olympiadis) எனும் ஒரு ரோம உயர் அதிகாரி, ஃபிர்மினாவை அடைய முயற்ச்சித்தார். ஆனால், ஃபிர்மினா அவரை கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்திற்கு மனம் மாற வைத்தார். இதன் காரணமாக, பிறகு “ஒலிம்பியாடிஸ்” மறைசாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டார்.



பின்னர், மத்திய இத்தாலியின் பிராந்தியமான “நார்தும்ப்ரியா” (Umbria) எனுமிடத்தினருகேயுள்ள “அமேலியா” (Amelia) எனும் நகரில் தனிமையில் செப வாழ்வு வாழ ஃபிர்மினா சென்றார். அங்கே, அவர் “டயக்லேஷியனால்” (Diocletian) துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு கொலை செய்யப்பட்டு புதைக்கப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

Fermina



Profile

Maiden martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Born

Roman citizen


Died

tortured to death c.303 at Amelia, Umbria, Italy


Patronage

• Amelia, Italy

• Civitavecchia, Italy

• Terni-Narni-Amelia, Italy, diocese of



Blessed Balsamus of Cava


Also known as

• Belsamus of Cava

• Balsam of...


Profile

Benedictine monk. Abbot of Cava, Italy from 1208 to 1232.


Died

24 November 1232 at Cava, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

16 May 1928 by Pope Pius XI (cultus confirmed)




Saint Phêrô Võ Ðang Khoa


Also known as

• Peter Choa

• Peter Khoa


Profile

Priest. Worked with bishop Saint Peter Dumoulin. Martyr.


Born

c.1790 in Thuan Nghia, Nghe An, Vietnam


Died

strangled to death on 24 November 1838 in Ðong Hoi, Quang Bính, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Conrad of Frisach


Also known as

Konrad


Profile

Doctor at the university of Bologna, Italy. Dominican, received into the Order by Saint Dominic himself. Missionary to Germany. Died while singing the Psalm, Cantate Domino canticum novum (Sing a new song unto the Lord).


Died

1239 in Magdeburg, Germany of natural causes



Blessed Archangel of Anspagh


Profile

Franciscan friar and confessor known for his zeal for the faith and his simple, ascetic life.


Born

15th century Anspagh, Austria


Died

1496 in Camerino, Italy of natural causes



Saint Crescentian of Rome


Also known as

Crescentianus


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Maxentius.


Died

• tortured to death on the rack in 309 at Rome, Italy

• relics re-enshrined in the 9th century



Saint Hitto of Saint-Gall


Also known as

Hatto, Hildo


Profile

Born to the Swabian nobility in the 10th century; brother of Saint Wiborada of Gall. Priest. Provost of Saint Magnus church. Monk at Saint-Gall, Switzerland.



Saint Marinus of Maurienne


Profile

Benedictine monk at Maurienne in Savoy (part of modern France). Hermit near Chandor Abbey. Martyred by Saracens.


Born

Italy


Died

731 at Chandor Abbey



Saint Felicissimus of Perugia


Profile

Martyred under Diocletian.


Died

c.303 in Perugia, Italy




Saint Leopardinus of Vivaris


Profile

Seventh century monk and abbot of the monastery of Saint Symphorian in Vivaris, province of Berry, France.



Saint Alexander of Corinth


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Julian the Apostate.


Died

martyred in 361 in Corinth, Greece



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 Antonia Gosens Sáez De Ibarra

• Blessed Cándida Cayuso González

• Blessed Clara Ezcurra Urrutia

• Blessed Concepción Rodríguez Fernández

• Blessed Daría Campillo Paniagua

• Blessed Erundina Colino Vega

• Blessed Feliciana de Uribe Orbe

• Blessed Félix Alonso Muñiz

• Blessed Francisco Borrás Román

• Blessed Justa Maiza Goicoechea

• Blessed María Concepción Odriozola Zabalía

• Blessed María Consuelo Cuñado González

• Blessed Niceta Plaja Xifra

• Blessed Paula Isla Alonso