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24 August 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஆகஸ்ட் 25

 St. Maria Michaela Desmaisieres


Feastday: August 25

Birth: 1809



This Spanish Lady was born in Madrid in 1809, lost her mother in childhood, and resisted all attempts to persuade her to marry; she lived with her brother for some years while he was Spanish ambassador at Paris and Brussels. All her interest was given to the religious instruction of the ignorant, the rescue of the unprotected and the fallen, and the relief of sickness and poverty. When she returned to Spain she started more than one organization for work of this kind; her most lasting achievement was the foundation of the congregation of Handmaids of the Blessed Sacrament and of Charity, of which she was elected Mother General in 1859. Its work is for women of the streets. This Institute was approved by the Holy See for five years in the lifetime of its foundress, and shortly after her death it obtained permanent recognition. It had in the meantime spread widely and was full of promise for the future. In 1865 in connection with this final approbation Mother Michaela had set out on her way to Rome, when an epidemic of cholera broke out in Valencia. She hastened to the help of her religious daughters, who were attending the plague-stricken. But though she had more than once in previous outbreaks attended cholera patients, she took the infection herself and died, a victim of charity on August 24th. She was canonized in 1934. Her feast day is August 25th.



Saint Joseph Calasanz

புனிதர் ஜோசஃப் கலசன்ஸ் 

மறைப்பணியாளர், குரு, நிறுவனர்:

(Religious, Priest and Founder)

பிறப்பு: செப்டம்பர் 11, 1557

பெரல்டா டி ல ஸல், அரகன் அரசு

(Peralta de la Sal, Kingdom of Aragon, Crown of Aragon)

இறப்பு: ஆகஸ்ட் 25, 1648 (வயது 90)

ரோம், திருத்தந்தையர் மாநிலம்

(Rome, Papal States).

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: ஆகஸ்ட் 7, 1748

திருத்தந்தை பதினான்காம் பெனடிக்ட்

(Pope Benedict XIV)

புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜூலை 16, 1767

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் கிளமன்ட்

(Pope Clement XIII)

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

புனித பெண்டலோன், ரோம்

(San Pantaleone, Rome)

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஆகஸ்ட் 25

பாதுகாவல்: கத்தோலிக்க பள்ளிகள்

புனிதர் ஜோசஃப் கலசன்ஸ், ஒரு ஸ்பேனிஷ் குருவும், கல்வியாளரும், ஏழைக் குழந்தைகளுக்கு இலவச கல்வியளிக்கும் ஆன்மீக பள்ளிகளின் நிறுவனரும், “பியரிஸ்ட்ஸ்” (Piarists) என்றழைக்கப்படும் (The Order of Poor Clerics Regular of the Mother of God of the Pious Schools) சபையின் நிறுவனருமாவார். “ஜோசஃப் கலசேன்க்ஷியஸ்” மற்றும் ஜோசஃபஸ் அ மாட்ரெடே” (Joseph Calasanctius and Josephus a Matre Dei) ஆகிய பெயர்களாலும் அறியப்படும் இவர், கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையால் புனிதராக போற்றப்படுகின்றார்.

ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டின் “அரகன்” (Kingdom of Aragon) அரசின் “பெரல்டா டி ல ஸல்” (Peralta de la Sal) எனுமிடத்தில், கி.பி. 1557ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதம், 11ம் தேதி பிறந்த இவருடைய தந்தை ஒரு குறுநில பிரபுவும் நகர தலைவருமான “பெட்ரோ டி கலசன்ஸ்” (Pedro de Calasanz y de Mur) என்பவர் ஆவார். இவரது தாயார் பெயர், “மரிய கஸ்டன்” (María Gastón y de Sala) ஆகும்.

ஆரம்பக் கல்வியை வீட்டிலிருந்தும், பின்னர் “பெரல்டா” (Peralta) எனுமிடத்திலுள்ள பள்ளியிலும் கற்ற ஜோசஃப், கி.பி. 1569ம் ஆண்டு, “எஸ்டடில்லா” (Estadilla) எனுமிடத்தில், “திரித்துவ சபையின்” (Trinitarian Order) துறவியர் நடத்தும் கல்லூரியில், பண்டைய கிரேக்க இலத்தீன் கலைக்குரிய கல்வி கற்க அனுப்பப்பட்டார். அங்கே கல்வி கற்கும் காலத்தில், தமது பதினான்கு வயதில், தாம் குருத்துவம் பெறவேண்டுமென முடிவெடுத்தார். எனினும், இந்த இறை அழைப்பு, அவரது பெற்றோரின் ஆதரவைப் பெறவில்லை.

“ல்லேய்டா” பல்கலையில் (University of Lleida) உயர் கல்வி கற்ற ஜோசஃப், அங்கே தத்துவம் மற்றும் சட்டம் பயின்றார். “வாலென்சியா பல்கலைக்கழகம்” மற்றும் “கோம்ப்லுடேன்ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில்” (The University of Valencia and at Complutense University) இறையியல் கற்றார்.

இதற்கிடையே ஜோசஃபின் தாயாரும் சகோதரர் ஒருவரும் மரித்துப் போகவே, அவரது தந்தை ஜோசஃப் திருமணம் செய்துகொண்டு குடும்ப பொறுப்பை ஏற்கவேண்டும் என விரும்பினார். ஆனால், கி.பி. 1582ம் ஆண்டு இவரை தாக்கிய ஒரு நோய், ஜோசஃபை கல்லறையின் விளிம்பு வரை கொண்டுவந்தது. இது, அவரது தந்தையின் கண்டிப்பாய் தணித்தது. நோயிலிருந்து மீண்ட ஜோசஃப், கி.பி. 1583ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 17ம் தேதி, “ஊர்ஜெல்” மறைமாவட்ட ஆயர் (Bishop of Urgel) “ஹுகோ அம்ப்ரோசியோ” (Hugo Ambrosio de Moncada) என்பவரால் குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு செய்விக்கப்பட்டார்.

ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டில் தமது ஆன்மிக பணிக்காலத்தில், ஜோசஃப் பல்வேறு பொறுப்புகளை ஏற்று செய்தார். ஏழைகளுக்கு பல்வேறு சேவையாற்றிய இவர், ஏழைகளுக்கு இலவச உணவளிக்கும் நிறுவனம் ஒன்றினையும் நிறுவி நடத்தினார்.


கி.பி. 1592ம் ஆண்டு, தமது 35 வயதில், தமது ஆன்மிக வாழ்க்கையை மேம்படுத்தும் நம்பிக்கையிலும், சில வகையான நலன்களைப் பாதுகாக்கவும் ஜோசஃப் ரோம் பயணமானார். அவர் தமது வாழ்வின் மீதமுள்ள 56 வருடங்களை அங்கேயே வாழ்ந்தார். முக்கியமாக, பெற்றோர்களை இழந்த அனாதைச் சிறுவர்களுக்கு கல்வி கற்பிக்கும் பணி உள்ளிட்ட தொண்டுப்பணிகளாற்றக்கூடிய அற்புதமான துறையை ரோம் நகரம் இவருக்கு வழங்கியது. ஜோசஃப் “கிறிஸ்தவக் கோட்பாடுகளின் தோழமைக் கூட்டுறவு” (Confraternity of Christian Doctrine) எனும் நிறுவனத்தில் இணைந்தார். தெருக்களில் சுற்றித்திரியும் அனாதைச் சிறார்களை ஒன்றிணைத்து அழைத்து வந்து பள்ளிகளில் சேர்த்தார்.

ரோம் நகரின் “ட்ரஸ்டேவேர்” (Trastevere) பகுதியிலுள்ள (Church of Santa Dorotea) ஆலயத்தின் பங்குத்தந்தையான “அந்தோனி” (Anthony Brendani) இடமும் தந்து, கற்பிக்கும் உதவிகளும் செய்வதாக உறுதியளித்தார். கூடுதலாக இரண்டு குருக்களும் உதவுவதாக வாக்குறுதியளித்தனர். இதனைத் தொடர்ந்து, கி.பி. 1597ம் ஆண்டு, நவம்பர் மாதம், ஐரோப்பாவிலேயே முதல் இலவச பள்ளியை ஜோசஃப் தொடங்கினார்.

கி.பி. 1598ம் ஆண்டு, கிறிஸ்து பிறப்பு பெருநாளன்று, இத்தாலியின் மூன்றாவது நீளமான நதியான “டிபேர்” (Tiber) நதியில் சரித்திரத்திலேயே அதிக அளவான இருபது மீட்டர் உயர (சுமார் 65 அடி) வெள்ளம் பெருக்கெடுத்தோடியது. பேரழிவு பரவலாக இருந்தது. நதியோரம் வசித்த, ஏற்கனவே ஏழைகளான நூற்றுக்கணக்கான குடும்பங்கள் வீடிழந்தன. உணவற்றுப் போயின. வெள்ளத்திற்கு பலியானவர்களின் எண்ணிக்கை 2,000க்கும் மேலானது. ஜோசஃப், “ஆன்மீக சகோதரத்துவம்” (Religious fraternity) எனும் தொண்டு நிறுவனத்துடன் இணைந்து அதிவேகமாக செயலாற்றினார். ஏழை மக்களுக்கு உதவுவதில் தம்மை அர்ப்பணித்துக்கொண்டார். நகரை சுத்தம் செய்வதிலும், மீட்பதிலும் உதவ தொடங்கினார். கி.பி. 1600ம் ஆண்டு, நகரின் மத்தியில் “தெய்வ பக்தியுள்ள” (Pious School) பள்ளியை தொடங்கினார். விரைவிலேயே, அந்த பள்ளி, பல கிளைகளுடன் விரிவடைந்தது.

கி.பி. 1602ம் ஆண்டு, “தெய்வ பக்தியுள்ள பள்ளிகளின் சபை” (Order of the Pious Schools or Piarists) எனும் சபைக்கான அடித்தளமிட்டார். 1610ம் ஆண்டு, தமது சபையின் ஆசிரியர் மற்றும் மாணவர்களுக்கான அடிப்படை ஒழுங்குகளை எழுதினர். ஜோசஃப், செப்டம்பர் 15, 1616 அன்று, “ஃப்ரஸ்கடி” (Frascati) நகரில் முதல் பொது இலவச பள்ளியை தொடங்கினார். சரியாக ஒரு வருடத்தின் பின்னர், கற்பித்தல் சேவைகளுக்காக ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்ட முதல் ஆன்மீக நிறுவனமான (Pauline Congregation of the Poor of the Mother of God of the Pious Schools) எனும் சபையை, திருத்தந்தை “ஐந்தாம் பவுல்” (Pope Paul V) அங்கீகரித்தார். மார்ச் 25, 1617 அன்று, அவரும் அவரது பதினான்கு உதவியாளர்களும் இவர்களது புதிய சபையின் முதல் உறுப்பினர்களாகி, சீருடையைப் பெற்றனர். ஆரம்பப்பள்ளியில் கற்பிப்பதை தமது முதன்மை ஊழியமாக செய்த முதல் குருக்கள் இவர்களேயாவர்.

ஆரம்ப காலங்களிலிருந்தே ஒரு குழந்தை ஆன்மீகத்தையும் கல்வியையும் சரியாக போதித்தால், அக்குழந்தையின் வாழ்க்கை மகிழ்ச்சியாக அமையும் என்று நியாயமாக நம்பலாம் என்று எழுதி வைத்த ஜோசஃப், “பயத்தையல்ல – அன்பையே வலியுறுத்துங்கள்” (Emphasizing love, not fear) என்றார்.

புனிதர் ஜோசஃப் கலசன்ஸின் வாழ்க்கையின் இறுதி பத்தாண்டு காலம், மிகவும் சோதனையானதாக இருந்தது. அவரது சபையில் நேர்ந்த சில அவல நிகழ்வுகள் அவருக்கு அவப்பெயரை தேடித்தந்தது. கி.பி. 1642ம் ஆண்டு, அவர் கைது செய்யப்பட்டு விசாரனைக்குள்ளாக்கப்பட்டார். “நேப்பிள்ஸ்” (Naples) நகரின் பள்ளியில் தலைமையாசிரியராக இருந்த அருட்தந்தை “ஸ்டேஃபனோ செருபனி” (Father Stefano Cherubini) என்பவர் பள்ளியின் சிறுவர்களை பாலியல் ரீதியாக வல்லுறவு கொண்டதன் பின்விளைவுகள் இவரையும் பாதித்தன.

தமது மாணவர்கள், அவர்களுடைய குடும்பங்கள், சக தோழர்கள் மற்றும் ரோம் நகர மக்கள் ஆகியோரால் அவரது தூய்மைக்காகவும், தைரியத்துக்காகவும் போற்றப்பட்ட புனிதர் ஜோசஃப் கலசன்ஸ், கி.பி. 1648ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் 25ம் தேதி, தமது 90 வயதில் மரித்தார். “தூய பன்டேலோ” (Church of San Pantale) தேவாலயத்தில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

• Joseph Calasanctius

• Joseph of Our Lady

• Joseph Calsanza



Profile

Youngest of five children born to Don Pedro Calasanz and Donna Maria Gastonia. His mother and a brother died while he was still in school. Studied at Estadilla, at the University of Lereda, at Valencia, and at Alcala de Henares. Obtained degrees in canon law and theology. His father wanted the Joseph to become a soldier, to marry, and to continue the family, but a near fatal illness in 1582 caused the young man to seriously examine his life, and he realized a call to the religious life.


Ordained on 17 December 1583. Parish priest at Albarracin. Secretary and confessor to his bishop, synodal examiner, and procurator. Revived religious zeal among the laity, discipline among the clergy in a section of the Pyrenees. Both his bishop and his father died in 1587.



Vicar-general of Trempe, Spain. Following a vision, he gave away much of his inheritance, renounced most of the rest, and travelled to Rome, Italy in 1592. Worked in the household of Cardinal Ascanio Colonna as thelogical advisor for the cardinal, tutor to the cardinal's nephew. Worked with plague victims in 1595.


Member of the Confraternity for Christian Doctrine. Tried to get poor children, many of them orphans and/or homeless, into school. The teachers, already poorly paid, refused to work with the new students without a raise; in November 1597, Joseph and two fellow priests opened a small, free school for poor children. Pope Clement VIII, and later Pope Paul V, contributed toward their work. He was soon supervising several teachers and hundreds of students.


In 1602 they moved to larger quarters, and reorganized the teaching priests into a community. In 1612 they moved to the Torres palace to have even more room. In 1621 the community was recognized as a religious order called Le Sciole Pie (Religious Schools), also known as the Piarists, or Scolopii or Ordo Clericorum Regularium Pauperum Matris Dei Scholarum Piarum or Order of Poor Clerks Regular of the Mother of God of the Pious Schools; Joseph acted as superior of the Order.


The community encountered many obstacles - Joseph's friendship with the astronomer Galileo Galilei caused a stir with some Church officials. Some of the ruling class objected that to educate the poor would cause social unrest. Other Orders that worked with the poor were afraid they would be absorbed by the Piarists. But they group continued to have papal support, and continued to do good work.


In his old age, Joseph suffered through seeing his Order torn apart. He was accused of incompetence by Father Mario Sozzi, who was chosen as new superior of the Order. Sozzi died in 1643, and was replaced by Father Cherubini who pursued the same course as Sozzi, and nearly destroyed the Order. A papal commission charged with examining the Order acquitted Joseph of all accusations, and in 1645, returned him to superior of the Order, but internal dissent continued, and in 1646 Pope Innocent X dissolved the Order, placing the priests under control of their local bishops.


The Piarists were reorganized in 1656, eight years after Joseph's death. They were restored as a religious order in 1669, and continue their good work today.


Born

11 September 1556 at Peralta, Barbastro, Aragon, Spain in his father's castle


Died

• 25 August 1648 at Rome, Italy of natural causes

• buried at Saint Panteleone, Rome


Canonized

16 July 1767 by Pope Clement XIII


Patronage

• Catholic schools (proclaimed on 13 August 1948 by Pope Pius XII)

• schools, colleges, universities

• students, schoolchildren

• Congregation of Christian Workers of Saint Joseph Calasanz




Saint Louis IX

புனித ஒன்பதாம் லூயிஸ், அரசர் (St. Louis IX / Ludwig IX)

பிறப்பு 

25 ஏப்ரல் 1219, 

பிரான்ஸ்

    இறப்பு 

25 ஆகஸ்டு 1270 

துனிசியா

புனிதர்பட்டம்: 1297, திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் போனிபாஸ்

அரசராக: 1230, 11 வயதில் 

பாதுகாவல்: முயூனிக், சார்ப்ர்யூக்கன், பெர்லின், பிரான்சிஸ்கன் 3 ஆம் சபைக்கு பாதுகாவலர்



லூயிஸ் ஓர் அரசர் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவர் தந்தையின் பெயர் லூயிஸ் டி லையன்(Louid de Lion). இவரின் தாய் ப்லான்சே(Blanche). இவரின் தாத்தா பிரான்சு நாட்டு அரசர் இரண்டாம் பிலிப்பு. புனித லூயிஸ் 9 வயதாக இருக்கும்போதே, இவரின் தாத்தா இறந்துவிட்டார். இதனால் இவரின் தந்தை 8 ஆம் லூயிஸ் அரச பதவியேற்றார். 8 ஆம் லூயிசை பதவியேற்ற 3 ஆண்டுகளில் கொள்ளை நோயால் தாக்கப்பட்டு இறந்துவிட்டார். அதனால் லூயிஸ் தனது 12 வயதிலேயே நாட்டின் அரசராக பதவியேற்றார். ஒன்பதாம் லூயிஸ் என்று பெயர் பெற்றார். லூயிஸ் திருமணம் செய்து, 11 குழந்தைகளை ஆண்டவரின் ஆசீரோடு பெற்றார். தன் குழந்தைகளை தானே சிறந்த முறையில் பேணி வளர்த்து பயிற்றுவித்தார். தவப் பற்றிலும், செப ஆர்வத்திலும், ஏழை எளியவர் மீது கொண்ட அன்பிலும் சிறந்து விளங்கினார். தன் நாட்டு மக்களின் ஆன்மீக நலத்திலும் அவர்களிடையே அமைதியை உருவாக்குவதிலும் அக்கறைகொண்டு, ஆட்சி செய்தார். கிறித்துவின் கல்லறையை விடுவிக்குமாறு சிலுவைப்போர் மேற்கொண்டார். இவர் 1226 ஆம் ஆண்டிலிருந்து, தான் இறக்கும்வரை அரசராக இருந்தார். இவர் 1248 ஆம் ஆண்டு 7 வது சிலுவைப்போரையும், 1270 ஆம் ஆண்டு மீண்டும் 8 வது சிலுவைப்போரையும் நடத்தினார். இவர் அரசர்களிலேயே முதல் புனிதர் என்ற பெயர் பெற்றார்.

செபம்:

நல்ல ஆயனாம் எம் இறைவா! பிரான்சு நாட்டில் லூயிஸ் என்ற ஓர் நல்ல அரசரைக் கொடுத்து, உம் மக்களை நீர், அவர் வழியாக உம்மால் ஈர்த்துள்ளீர். இன்றும் அரசர்களாக இருந்து ஆட்சி புரிபவர்களை நீர் வழிநடத்தியருளும். மக்களை நீதியோடும் நேர்மையோடும் ஆட்சி செய்திட உம் அருள் தருமாறு தந்தையே உம்மிடம் மன்றாடுகின்றோம்.

Also known as

Louis Capet



Profile

Son of King Louis VIII and Blanche of Castile. King of France and Count of Artois at age eleven; his mother ruled as regent until he reached 22, and then he reigned for 44 years. Louis made numerous judicial and legislative reforms, promoted Christianity in France, established religious foundations, aided mendicant orders, propagated synodal decrees of the Church, built leper hospitals, and collected relics. Married Marguerite of Provence at age 19, and was the father of eleven children. Supported Pope Innocent IV in war against Emperor Frederick II of Germany. Trinitarian tertiary. Led two Crusades and died on one.


Born

25 April 1214 at Poissy, France


Died

• 25 August 1270 at Tunis (in modern Tunisia) of natural causes

• relics in the Basilica of Saint Denis, Paris, France

• relics destroyed in 1793 during the French Revolution


Canonized

1297 by Pope Boniface VIII


Patronage

• against the death of children

• barbers

• bridegrooms

• builders

• button makers

• construction workers

• Crusaders

• difficult marriages

• distillers

• embroiderers

• French monarchs

• grooms

• haberdashers

• hairdressers

• hair stylists

• kings

• masons

• needle workers

• parenthood

• parents of large families

• passementiers

• prisoners

• sculptors

• sick people

• soldiers

• stone masons

• stonecutters

• tertiaries

• trimming makers

• Québec, Québec, archdiocese of

• Saint Louis, Missouri, archdiocese of

• Versailles, France, diocese of

• Blois, France

• Carthage, Tunisia

• La Rochelle, France

• New Orleans, Louisiana

• Oran, Algeria

• Saint-Louis, Haut-Rhin, France

• Saint Louis, Missouri, city of

• Versailles, France

• Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Louis


Representation

• crown

• crown of thorns

• king holding a cross

• king holding a crown of thorns

• nails



Blessed María del Tránsito de Jesús Sacramentado


Also known as

• María Cabanillas

• María del Tránsito Cabanillas

• María del Transito Eugenia de los Dolores Cabanillaswas

• María del Tránsito Of Jesus In The Blessed Sacrament



Profile

Third child born to Felipe Cabanillas and Francisca Antonia Luján Sánchez. Raised in a large, wealthy and pious family; she had ten siblings, three of whom died in childhood, one brother became a priest, three sisters nuns. Educated at home and then at Cordoba, Argentina where she studied and helped care for her seminarian younger brother until his ordination in 1853.


Maria's father died in 1850, and the rest of the family moved to Cordoba, living near the church of San Roque. Maria stayed at home, helping her mother with the children, maintaining a personal piety and devotion to the Eucharist, working as a catechist, and visiting the poor and sick of Cordoba. Maria's mother died on 13 April 1858.


With her family grown or gone, Maria now felt free to pursue her religious vocation, and she entered the Franciscan Third Order at age 37, devoting more of her day to prayer. In 1871 she met Mrs Isidora Ponce de León who was building a Carmelite monastery in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In 1872 Maria moved to Buenos Aries, and entered the monastery on 19 March 1873. For health reasons, she was forced to leave the cloister in April 1874. In September 1874 she entered the convent of the Sisters of the Visitation in Montevideo, Uruguay, but had to leave there in a few months due to her continuing health problems.


During this time of turmoil and rejection of her perceived vocation, Maria began again to ponder an idea that had followed her all her life - an education and assistance foundation to help children. Several Franciscans encouraged her, and Father Agustin Garzón offered her a house and his help and contacts. She obtained approval for the project on 8 December 1878, and with her companions Teresa Fronteras and Brigida Moyano, and Bother Cirlaco Porreca as director, she started the Congregation of the Franciscan Tertiary Missionaries of Argentina, dedicated to helping the poor, orphaned and abandoned. The three women made their religious profession on 2 February 1879, and their institute became offically affiliated with the Franciscans on 28 January 1880.


The new Congregation met with immediate success in vocations - the Argentinian colleges of Saint Margarite of Cortona in San Vicente, El Carmen in Rio Cuarto, and Immaculate Conception in Villa Nueva were founded during Maria's lifetime. The work, however, ruined her already frail health, and she died within six years.


Born

15 August 1821 on the estate of Santa Leocadia, now Carlos Paz, Cordoba, Argentina as Maria Cabanillas


Died

25 August 1885 at San Vicente, Cordoba, Argentina of natural causes


Beatified

14 April 2002 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Ebbe the Elder


Also known as

• Ebbe of Coldingham

• Abbs, Aebbe, Ebba, Tabbs



Profile

Daughter of the pagan King Aethelfrith the Ravager of Bernicia and Princess Aacha of Deira, one of seven children. Sister of Saint Oswald of Northumbria and King Oswiu. Niece of Saint Ethelreda. When her father was killed in battle when Ebbe was about ten years old, her mother fled with the family for the court of King Eochaid Buide at Dunadd in modern Scotland. There she converted to Christianity.


A Scottish prince, Aidan, wished to marry Ebbe, and the family was in favour, but Ebbe was drawn to the religious life. Benedictine nun at the double monastery at Coldingham c.655, taking the veil from Saint Finan of Iona. Aidan, determined to marry her, followed, planning to carry her off. She fled to a high rock. The tide came in, cutting her off from the land and her pursuer. Because of her prayers, the tide remained high for three days, holding off Aidan until he realized the divine nature of her protection, and gave up.


Founded the monastery of Ebchester (i.e., Ebbe's castle or Ebbe's camp) on an old Roman camp on the River Dawent, in County Durham, land given her by her brother Oswiu. Later, during one of the disruptions in the kingdom, Aebbe was captured, but escaped, fleeing in a small boat down the River Humber and out to sea. A supernatural being then sailed the craft safely through dangerous seas till it landed on a spit of land in Berwickshire, defended on three sides by the sea, and on the forth by swampy land. A group of monks, singing in a church that was later renamed for Ebbe, witnessed this, and became some of the first brothers at the large double monastery she founded there. Abbess.


Friend of Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne, who normally avoided women but came to visit Ebbe. Saint Ethelreda stayed at her monastery as a nun in 672. Peacemaker among the local laity. Though she was noted for her own piety, Ebbe had trouble enforcing discipline at the monastery. The monks and nuns became very lax and worldly. One of the brothers, Adomnan, received a vision prophesying that the monastery would burn to the ground; it did, not long after Ebbe's death.


Born

c.615 in Northumbria, England


Died

25 August 683 at Coldingham, Berwickshire, Scotland of natural causes



Saint Thomas of Hereford


Also known as

• Thomas de Cantilupe

• Thomas de Cantelow

• Thomas de Cantelou

• Thomas de Canteloupe

• Thomas de Cantelupo



Additional Memorial

• 25 August (Roman Martyrology)

• 3 October (in England)


Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of Baron William de Cantilupe. Educated in Oxford, England, and in France at Paris and Orléans. Priest. Attended the Council of Lyons in 1245. Papal chaplain. Taught canon law at the University of Oxford, and was chosen the university chancellor in 1262. Diplomat to Saint Louis of France in 1264 during the Barons' War. Appointed Lord Chancellor of England on 25 February 1265. Attended the Second Council of Lyons in 1274. Bishop of Hereford, England, appointed on 14 June 1275 and consecrated on 8 September 1275. Known for his large charity to the poor and his blameless personal life, endlessly involved in both Church and civil matters. Advisor to King Edward I.


Following a series of disputes between Thomas and Archbishop John Peckham of Canterbury, Peckham excommunicated Thomas. Thomas travelled to Rome, Italy to put his case before Pope Martin IV, was absolved of wrong-doing, and died in full communion with the Church while on his way back to England.


Born

c.1218 in Hambledon, Buckinghamshire, England


Died

• 25 August 1282 in Ferento, Montefiascone, Italy of natural causes

• buried in Hereford Cathedral

• his skull was moved to a reliquary at Downside Abbey, Somerset, England in 1881


Canonized

17 April 1320 by Pope John XXII


Representation

bishop with Hereford Cathedral



Saint Genesius of Rome


Also known as

Gelasinus, Gelasius



Profile

Genesius was an actor who worked in a series of plays that mocked Christianity. One day while performing in a work that made fun of Baptism he received sudden wisdom from God, realized the truth of Christianity, and had a conversion experience on stage. He announced his new faith, and refused to renounce it, even when ordered to do so by emperor Diocletian. Martyr.


Died

beheaded c.303 at Rome, Italy


Patronage

• actors

• against epilepsy, epileptics

• attorneys, barristers, lawyers

• clowns

• comedians, comediennes, comics

• converts

• dancers

• musicians

• printers

• stenographers

• torture victims


Storefront

• medals and pendants, page 1

• medals and pendants, page 2

• medals and pendants, page 3



Saint Genesius of Brescello


Also known as

• Genesius of Brixellum

• Genesio...



Profile

Bishop of Brescello, Italy, possibly the first in this diocese.


Born

latter 4th century


Died

• early 5th century in Brescello, Provincia di Reggio Emilia, Emilia-Romagna, Italy

• relics re-discovered in the walls of an old church during construction of a castle on the land in 968

• a church and monastery in his honour was built on the land, and the relics enshrined in the main altar of the abbey church

• his arm bone was enshrined in a gilded copper sleeve-shaped reliquary in 1408

• relics re-enshrined in the wall of the church of San Mauro which was later renamed the church of Saint Mauro and Genesio

• relics re-enshrined in a silver reliquary in the shape of an arm giving a blessing in 1746

• relics transferred to the Chapel of the Most Blessed Sacrament in the parish Church of Santa Maria Nascente in Brescello in 1797 when the monastic property was seized by the Cisalpine Republic

• relics moved to the nearby Church of the Immaculate Conception in 1830 when the original church was under re-construction

• relics re-enshrined in a gold reliquary in the Chapel of the Most Blessed Sacrament in the parish Church of Santa Maria Nascente in Brescello


Patronage

Brescello, Italy



Blessed Maria Troncatti


Profile

Worked as a Red Cross nurse in an Italian military hospital during World War I. Nun in the Salesian Sisters. In 1922 she left Italy for Ecuador and spent the rest of her life working with the Shuar tribe in the Amazon forest.



Born

16 February 1883 in Corteno Golgi, Brescia, Italy


Died

25 August 1969 in a plane crash in Sucúa, Morona-Santiago, Ecuador


Beatified

• 24 November 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI

• beatification recognition was celebrated at Macas, Morona Santiago, Ecuador, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Blessed Miguel Carvalho

Also known as

Michael Carvalho


Profile

Entered the Jesuits in 1597. Missionary to Goa, India. Priest. Taught theology for 15 years. Missionary to Japan. Arrested in July 1863 for spreading Christianity, he spent several months in prison before being killed. Martyr.


Born

1579 in Braga, Portugal


Died

roasted alive on 25 August 1624 in Omura, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX




Saint Ginés de la Jara


Also known as

• Ginés de la Xara

• Ginés el Franco

• Genesius Sciarensis



Profile

A holy man, and probably a hermit, who lived in the area of modern Cartagena, Spain early in the faith. We know almost nothing about him for sure, but many, many stories and legends have been attached to him, and he has been confused with Saint Genesius of Arles, Saint Genesius of Brescello and/or Saint Genesius of Rome who are remembered on the same day.


Canonized

1541 by Pope Paul III


Patronage

• against hernias

• against storms

• agricultural laborers

• sailors

• vintners

• Cartagena, Spain



Saint Menas of Constantinople


Also known as

Mennas, Mina, Minas


Profile

Superior of the hospice of Saint Samson in Constantinople. Patriarch of Constantinople, ordained and consecrated by Pope Saint Agapetus in 536 to replace Anthimus who had fallen into the monophysite heresy. Led the synod of Constantinople in 536. Consecrated the church of Hagia Sophia. Subscribed to the Edict of the Emperor Justinian condemning the documents known as the “Three Chapters” for which he was excommunicated by Pope Vigilius in 551; he immediately submitted to papal authority.



Born

Alexandria, Egypt


Died

August 552 in Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey) of natural causes



Saint Patricia of Naples

புனித பேட்ரிசியா (-665)

இவர் கான்ஸ்டான்டிநோப்பிளை ஆண்டு வந்த இரண்டாம் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் என்ற மன்னனின் மகள்.

இவர் வளர்ந்து பெரியவளானபோது இவரது தந்தை இவரை ஒருவருக்கு மணம்முடித்துக் கொடுக்க முடிவு செய்தார். அப்பொழுது இவர் தன் தந்தையிடம், "நான் என்னை ஏற்கெனவே கடவுளுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்து விட்டேன்; அதனால் நான் யாரையும் மணப்பதாக இல்லை" என்று சொல்லி எருசலேமிற்கும், அதன் பின்னர் உரோமைக்கும் தப்பியோடினார்.

உரோமையில் திருத்தந்தை லிபேரியுசைத் சந்தித்த இவர், அவரிடம் தன் விருப்பத்தைச் சொன்னபொழுது, அவர் இவருக்குத் துறவிக்கான ஆடையைக் கொடுத்து, இவருக்கு ஆசி வழங்கி அனுப்பி வைத்தார்.

அந்த ஆடையோடு தன் சொந்த நாட்டிற்குத் திரும்பி வந்த இவர் தனக்குச் சேரவேண்டிய உடைமைகளை விற்று ஏழைகளுக்குக் கொடுத்துவிட்டு, இத்தாலியில் உள்ள நோப்பில்ஸ் நகர் நோக்கிக் கப்பலில் வந்தார். 


அவ்வாறு இவர் வரும் வழியில் இவர் பயணம் செய்த கப்பல் புயலில் சிக்கிக் கொள்ள, இவர் கப்பலில் இறந்தார். 

இவர் நோப்பில்ஸ் நகரின் பாதுகாவலியாக இருக்கிறார்.

Also known as

• Patricia of Constantinople

• Patrizia of....



Profile

Born to the nobility, possibly related to the emperor. To escape an arranged marriage, and to give herself to the religious life, she made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and then to Rome, Italy. Nun in Rome. Returned to Constantinople to give away her wealth to the poor. She then returned to Naples, Italy to make pilgrimages to the tombs of martyrs and saints.


Born

at Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey)


Died

• c.665 at Naples, Italy of natural causes

• a vial of her blood reportedly liquifies periodically


Patronage

Naples, Italy



Blessed Andrea Bordino


Also known as

Fratel Luigi of the Consolata



Profile

Drafted into the Italian army, he fought in World War II, was captured by the Soviets, and imprisoned in Siberia. Released after the war, he joined the Brothers of Saint Joseph Benedict Cottolengo, taking the name Luigi of the Consolata and working for 30 years with the sick and the mentally ill.


Born

12 August 1922 in Castellinaldo, Alba, Italy


Died

25 August 1977 in Turin, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 2 May 2015 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at Turin, Italy, Cardinal Angelo Amato, presiding



Blessed Francesc Llach Candell


Profile

Priest. Member of the Sons of the Holy Family. Secretary of his community and science teacher at Saint Peter the Apostle school in Reus, Tarragona, Spain. He was arrested on 25 July 1936 during the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War for the crime of being a priest, imprisoned on the ship Cabo Cullera of Tarragona, and then executed. Martyr.



Born

7 December 1889 in Torelló, Barcelona, Spain


Died

• 25 August 1936 in Vila-rodona, Tarragona, Spain

• buried in the cemetery of Vila-rodana


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Pedro Vázquez


Also known as

Father Pedro of Saint Catherine


Additional Memorial

10 September as one of the 205 Martyrs of Japan



Profile

Dominican, assigned to Madrid, Spain, then Manila in the Philippines. Priest. Missionary to Japan. Arrested on 18 April 1623 for the crime of moving the body of the martyred Blessed Ludovico Flores, he spent 16 months of abuse in prison before being executed for remaining a Christian. Martyr.


Born

1590 in Verín, Orense, Spain


Died

burned alive on 25 August 1624 in Omura, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Blessed Fermí Martorell Vies


Profile

Priest. Member of the Sons of the Holy Family, and the treasurer of his community. Teacher at Saint Peter the Apostle school in Reus, Tarragona, Spain. He was arrested on 27 July 1936 during the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War for the crime of being a priest, imprisoned on the ship Rio Segre of Tarragona, and then executed. Martyr.



Born

3 November 1879 in Margalef, Tarragona, Spain


Died

• about 10am on 25 August 1936 in Vila-rodona, Tarragona, Spain

• buried in the cemetery of Vila-rodona


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Eduard Cabanach Majem


Profile

Raised in a pious family; three of his brothers entered religious life. Had a devotion to Saint John Berchmans. Priest. Member of the Sons of the Holy Family. Director of the Saint Peter the Apostle school in Reus, Spain. Supporter, spiritual and material, of vocations in others. Ministered to prisoners in Reus and on the prison ships of Tarragona, Spain. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.



Born

31 December 1908 in Bellmunt, Tarragona, Spain


Died

25 August 1936 in Vila-rodona, Tarragona, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Saint Gregory of Utrecht


Also known as

Gregory of Pfalzel



Profile

Son of Saint Wastrada, and uncle of Saint Alberic of Utrecht. Spiritual student and Benedictine monk under Saint Boniface whom he had met as a child, and who acted as a mentor. Abbot of Saint Martin's abbey, Utrecht, Netherlands, during which it became a centre for missionaries and the home of many saints. Bishop of Utrecht for 22 years.


Born

703 at Trier, Germany


Died

• 776 of natural causes

• buried at Susteren Abbey


Representation

abbot giving alms to the poor



Saint Genesius of Arles


Profile

Soldier. Literate, he was made a notary and secretary to the magistrate of Arles, France. Convert. During the period of his catechumenate, Maximianus issued his decree of persecution against Christians. Outraged, Genesius threw his writing tablets at the feet of his magistrate, denounced the orders, was imprisoned, and executed. Martyr.



Born

at Arles, France


Died

c.305


Patronage

• against chilblains

• against scurf

• notaries

• secretaries



Blessed Paul-Jean Charles


Profile

Trappist monk. 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

29 September 1743 in Millery, Côte-d'Or, France


Died

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


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Hunegund of Homblieres


Profile

Hunegund was drawn to religious life, but was compelled to marry against her wishes. She convinced her future husband to accompany her on a pilgrimage to Rome, Italy, and then got him to agree that she should become a Benedictine nun, receiving the veil from Pope Saint Vitalian. When they returned home, Hunegund entered the convent at Homblieres in northern France ;her ex-future husband became a priest, and served as chaplain to the convent.


Died

c.690



Saint Peregrinus of Rome


Also known as

Pellegrino



Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Commodus.


Died

• stretched on the rack, beaten with clubs, burned, then beaten to death with lead-tipped whips in 192 at Rome, Italy

• buried in the catacombs in Rome

• Pope Saint Nicholas I sent his relics to Vienne, France in 863



Blessed Pedro de Calidis


Profile

Friend of Saint Peter Nolasco, who urged him to join the Mercedarians; Peter did at the convent of Sant Antonio Abate in Tarragona, Spain. Dispatched to Africa in 1236 to ransom a large number of Christians who had been enslaved by Muslims.



Died

1240 in Tarragona, Spain of natural causes



Saint Gennadius of Constantinople


Additional Memorial

17 November (Greek Menae)


Profile

Priest, bishop and Patriarch of Constantinople from 458 to 471. Known for his learning, his biblical scholarship, and as a great speaker. Fought heresies of the period, and simony. Legend says he would not ordain a new priest until the candidate could recite the Psalms by heart.



Blessed Luis Cabrera Sotelo


Additional Memorial

10 September as one of the 205 Martyrs of Japan


Profile

Member of the Franciscan Friars Minor (Observants). Priest. Martyr.


Born

6 September 1574 in Seville, Spain


Died

burned alive on 25 August 1624 in Omura, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Blessed Ludovicus Baba


Additional Memorial

10 September as one of the 205 Martyrs of Japan


Profile

Lifelong layman in the archdiocese of Nagasaki, Japan. Member of the Secular Franciscans. Catechist. Martyr.


Born

Japan


Died

burned alive on 25 August 1624 in Omura, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Saint Aredius of Limoges


Also known as

Aredio, Yrieix, Yriez



Profile

Founded the monastery of Atane in Limousin, France. The village of Saint Yrieux grew up around the monastery, and was named for the founder.


Born

Limoges, France


Died

25 August 591 at Attane, Limoges, France



Saint Eusebius of Rome


Profile

Martyred in the persecution of Emperor Commodus.


Died

• stretched on the rack, beaten with clubs, burned, then beaten to death with lead-tipped whips in 192 at Rome, Italy

• buried in the catacombs in Rome

• relics translated to Vienne, France, in 863 by Pope Saint Nicholas I



Blessed Ludovicus Sasada


Additional Memorial

10 September as one of the 205 Martyrs of Japan


Profile

Member of the Franciscan Friars Minor (Observants). Priest. Martyr.


Born

Tokyo, Japan


Died

burned alive on 25 August 1624 in Omura, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Saint Pontian of Rome


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Commodus.


Died

• stretched on the rack, beaten with clubs, burned, then beaten to death with lead-tipped whips in 192 at Rome, Italy

• buried in the catacombs in Rome

• Pope Saint Nicholas I sent his relics to Vienne, France in 863



Saint Vincent of Rome


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Commodus.


Died

• stretched on the rack, beaten with clubs, burned, then beaten to death with lead-tipped whips in 192 at Rome, Italy

• buried in the catacombs in Rome

• Pope Saint Nicholas I sent his relics to Vienne, France in 863



Saint Nemesius of Rome


Also known as

Nemesio


Profile

Father of Saint Lucilla. Roman military tribune. Convert, brought to Christianity by Pope Saint Stephen I. Deacon in Rome, Italy. Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian.


Born

Roman citizen


Died

beheaded with a sword c.260 in Rome, Italy



Saint Gurloes of Sainte-Croix


Profile

Benedictine monk. Prior of Redon Abbey. Abbot of Sainte-Croix of Quimperle, Brittany (in modern France).



Died

1057 in Brittany, France of natural causes



Saint Maginus


Also known as

Magí



Profile

Evangelized in the area of Tarragona, Spain. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Born

Tarragona, Spain


Died

beheaded c.304 near Tarragona, Spain



Saint Geruntius of Italica


Profile

First century missionary to Spain; legend says he was a spiritual student of the Apostles. Bishop of Talco (Italica), Spain. Martyr.


Died

c.100 in prison



Saint Marcian of Saignon


Profile

Founded the monastery of Saint Eusebius in Apt, France.


Born

Saignon, France


Died

485



Saint Severus of Agde


Profile

Monk. Founded a monastery in Agde, Gaul (in modern France), and served as its first abbot.



Saint Julian of Syria


Profile

Priest.


Born

Syrian



Saint Hermes of Eretum


Also known as

Ermete


Profile

Martyr.



Saint Julius of Eretum


Also known as

Giulio


Profile

Martyr.



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 Prenafeta Soler

• Blessed Antoni Vilamassana Carulla

• Blessed Enric Salvá Ministral

• Blessed Florencio Alonso Ruiz

• Blessed Fortunato Merino Vegas

• Blessed Josep Maria Panadés Terré

• Blessed Juan Pérez Rodríguez

• Blessed Luis Gutiérrez Calvo

• Blessed Luis Urbano Lanaspa

• Blessed Manuel Fernández Ferro

• Blessed Miguel Grau Antolí

• Blessed Pere Farrés Valls

• Blessed Ramon Cabanach Majem

• Blessed Salvi Tolosa Alsina

• Blessed Vicente álvarez Cienfuegos



23 August 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஆகஸ்ட் 24

 St. Massa Candida

Feastday: August 24

Death: 260


A group of martyrs who suffered in Utica, in northern Africa. The name, translated as "the White Mass," was believed to denote the fact that these martyrs were thrown into a lime pit, and their remains became one great white mass. Now it is believed that Massa Candida was an actual site near Utica in modem North Africa. Some 153 martyrs suffered there under Emperors Valerian and Gallienus.


The Massa Candida were 300 early Christian martyrs from Utica who chose death rather than offering incense to Roman Gods, in approximately 253-60 AD.[1] They were put to death by Galerius Maximus, the governor of the province of Africa. The title "Massa Candida" or "White Mass or Lump" refers to their manner of death. The Catholic Encyclopedia reports that they were hurled into a pit of burning lime and thus reduced to a mass of white powder. They are commemorated on August 24.


St. Aurea


Feastday: August 24

Patron: of Ostia, Italy

Death: 270


Martyr, probably at Ostia, in Italy. No reliable details survive of her death, but her shrine at Ostia attests to her martyrdom.


Saint Aurea of Ostia (or Aura; in Greek, Chryse; both names mean “golden girl”) is venerated as the patron saint of Ostia.[3] According to one scholar, “[a]lthough the acta of Saint Aurea are pious fiction, she was a genuine martyr with a very early cultus at Ostia



Saint Emily de Vialar

தூய எமிலி தே வியலர் ( ஆகஸ்ட் 24 , ஜூன் 17)

“ஒவ்வொரு நாளும் நான் ஆயிரமாயிரம் பிரச்சனைகளைச் சந்திக்கின்றேன். அப்படியிருந்தாலும் இறைவனுடைய அருட்கரம் என்னோடு இருப்பதால், நான் எதற்கும் அசையாமல் இருக்கின்றேன்” – எமிலி தே வியலர்.

வாழ்க்கை வரலாறு

இன்று நாம் நினைவுகூரும் எமிலி தே வியலர் 1779 ஆம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் திங்கள் 12 ஆம் நாள், தெற்கு பிரான்சில் உள்ள கெயிலாக் என்ற இடத்தில் பிறந்தார்.

எமிலியின் தாயார் பக்தியுள்ள பெண்மணி. எனவே இவர் தன்னுடைய ஒரே மகளான எமிலிக்கு பக்தி நெறியை ஊட்டி வளர்த்து வந்தார். தாயாரின் வளர்ப்பில் எமிலி நாளொரு மேனியும் பொழுதொரு வண்ணமுமாய் வளர்ந்து வந்தார். இப்படி வாழ்க்கையில் எல்லாமே நன்றாகப் போய்க்கொண்டிருந்த தருணத்தில், எமிலியின் தாயார் திடிரென இறந்துபோனார். அப்போது எமிலிக்கு வயது வெறும் 15 தான். தாயின் இழப்பை அவரால் தாங்கிக்கொள்ளவே முடியவில்லை.

இந்தச் சூழ்நிலையில் எமிலியின் தந்தை, அவருக்கு மணமுடித்துக் கொடுத்தால், தாயின் இழப்பை மறந்துவிட்டு அவர் சந்தோசமாக இருப்பார் என்று நினைத்துக்கொண்டு ஆடவன் ஒருவனை எமிலிக்கு மணமுடித்துக் கொடுக்க திட்டம் தீட்டினார். இதைக் கேள்விப்பட்ட எமிலி அதிர்ந்து போனார். ஏனென்றால் அவர் ஏற்கனவே தன்னை இறைவனுக்காக அர்ப்பணித்திருந்தார். தந்தை இவ்வாறு திட்டம் தீட்டுவதை அறிந்த எமிலி அவரிடத்தில் சென்று, “நான் ஏற்கனவே என்னை இறைவனுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்துவிட்டேன். அதனால் நான் யாரையும் மணமுடிக்கப் போவதில்லை” என்று மிக உறுதியாகச் சொன்னார். இதனால் எமிலியின் தந்தை மிகுந்த ஏமாற்றத்திற்கும் வருத்தத்திற்கும் உள்ளானார். தன் மகள் இப்படியோர் முடிவை எடுத்துவிட்டாளே என்று ஏமாற்றத்திற்கு உள்ளன எமிலியின் தந்தை அதனாலேயே நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டு படுத்தபடுக்கையானார்.

எமிலியின் கனவு, இலட்சியம் எல்லாம் பிரஞ்சுப் புரட்சியால் நிர்மூலமாகிப் போன கிறிஸ்தவக் கல்வி நிறுவனங்களுக்கு உயிர்கொடுப்பதும் ஏழை எளிய மக்களுக்கு சேவை செய்வதுதான். அதற்காகத்தான் அவர் எந்தவொரு ஆணையும் மணந்துகொள்ளாமல், நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டு கிடந்த தன் தந்தையைக் கவனித்துக்கொண்டு கன்னியாகவே இருந்தார். தந்தை நோய்முற்றி இறந்ததும் இறைப்பணிக்காக தன்னை முற்றிலும் அர்ப்பணிக்கத் தொடங்கினார்.

முதலில் தாய்வழி தாத்தாவின் சொத்துவழியாக ஒரு குறிப்பிட்ட தொகை அவருக்குக் கிடைத்தது. அதைக்கொண்டு அவர் நகரில் ஒரு பெரிய கட்டடத்தைக் கட்டி, கல்விப்பணியையும், சமூகப் பணியையும் ஆன்மீகப் பணியையும் செய்யத் தொடங்கினார். இவர் ஆற்றிவந்த பணிகளைப் பார்த்துவிட்டு, முதலில் மூன்று பெண்களும், அவர்களைத் தொடர்ந்து எட்டுப் பெண்களும் அவரோடு சேர்ந்துகொண்டு பணி செய்யத் தொடங்கினார்கள்.

எமிலி செய்துவந்த சேவைகள் அனைத்தும் மக்களுடைய கவனத்தை ஈர்த்தன. அதனால் மக்கள் மத்தியில் அவருக்கும் அவர் ஏற்படுத்திய ‘The Sisters of St. Joseph of the Apparition’ நல்ல மதிப்பு உண்டானது. கார்டினல் மெர்சியர் என்பவர் எமிலிக்கு ஓர் ஆன்மீக குருவாக இருந்து, எல்லாவிதத்திலும் உறுதுணை புரிந்துவந்தார்.

இப்படி பல்வேறு பணிகளைச் செய்துவந்த எமிலி திடிரென நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டு 1856 ஆம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்டு திங்கள் 24 ஆம் நாள் இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவருக்கு 1951 ஆம் ஆண்டு புனிதர் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

feast day is 24 August in the General Roman Calendar, 

and celebrated on 17 June by the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Apparition

Also known as

• Anne Marguerite Adelaide Emily de Vialar

• Emilie de Vialar

• Emilie de Vialard





Profile

Born to an aristocratic family, the eldest of three children, and only daughter of Baron James Augustine and Antoinette de Vialar. Because of the anti-Church sentiment of the years following the French Revolution, Emily was baptized in secret, and was taught religion at home by her mother. Sent at age 7 to Paris, France for her education. Her mother died when Emily was 15, and the girl returned home. She managed her father's house until she was 35 years old, privately devoting herself to a life of celibacy and prayer, and occasionally arguing with her father over her desire to enter religious life.


Upon receiving a large inheritance from her grandfather, Emily and three other women founded the Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Apparition on Christmas Day in 1832; the Apparition refers to the appearance of Gabriel to Joseph, telling him to flee to Egypt. In 1835, Emily and several of the Sisters arrived in Algeria to help the sick during a cholera epidemic, and begin her dream of missionary work. Beginning in 1840 she tried to obtain papal approval of the Sisters, but secular politics between France and Algeria, and Church politics involving Bishop Dupuch of Alger prevented the recognition until 31 March 1862, several years after Emilie's death.


During the next few years Emily established 14 new houses, travelled extensively, and sent missionaries anywhere that would accept them. This put a heavy strain on her inheritence, which had been mismanaged by her financial advisor. By 1851 she was bankrupt. Because of the money trouble, the reputation of Emily and of the Sisters suffered, and they were so poor that they sometimes ate in soup kitchens run by other Congregations. Emily finally moved them all, establishing the mother-house of the Sisters in Marseilles, France where, with the help of the bishop, Saint Eugene de Mazenod, she began to build up her congregation again. In the years until her death, she established 40 houses in Europe, Africa, and Asia, and the Sisters continue their good work all over the world today.


Born

12 September 1797 at Gaillace, Albi, southern France as Anne Marguerite Adelaide Emily de Vialar


Died

24 August 1856 at Marseilles, Bouches-du-Rhône, France of natural causes


Canonized

24 June 1951 by Pope Pius XII




Saint María Micaela of the Blessed Sacrament


Also known as

• Micaela Desmaisières López de Dicastillo

• Maria Micaela Desmaisieres

• Maria Michela Desmaisières of the Blessed Sacrament

• María de la Soledad, Micaela, Agustina, Antonia, Bibiana, Desmaissières y López de Dicastillo, Vizcondesa de Jorbalán



Profile

The daughter of Miguel Desmaisières y Flores, a high-ranking officer in the Spanish army, and Bernarda López de Dicastillo y Olmeda, a lady-in-waiting to Queen Maria Luisa de Parma of Spain; her mother was known for her charity to the sick and poor. Her mother died when Micaela was a young girl; her brother Diego was a Spanish ambassador, she often travelled with him, and thus she grew up in the circles of the Spanish and French nobility, the courts of the kings of Spain, France and Belgium. She was educated by Uruslines, and served as catechist to younger children. She received the title of Viscountess of Jorbalán. But even in the whirl of worldly life, she felt a pull to religious life, refused all the many offers of marriage, and spent much time in Eucharistic Adoration.


On 6 February 1844 she had experience that help her choose her final vocation. At the Saint John of God Hospital in Madrid, Spain, she met a girl, the daughter of a banker, who had been briefly drawn into prostitution; she had became an outcast and faced a life of poverty. Micaela used her social connections to get the funds to establish a home for women of any station in life who had fallen into prostitution as their only way to survive. More than just a shelter, the women received religious and secular educations. There were so many in need of help that Micaela was soon overwhelmed, and on 1 March 1856 officially founded the an order of sisters, the Handmaids of the Blessed Sacrament and of Charity, to work with the women. Saint Anthony Mary Claret became her confessor in 1857. The Handmaids were approved by Pope Pius IX in 1860. Micaela served as their leader until she contracted a fatal bout of cholera while caring for sick women, including many of her Handmaid sisters.


Born

1 January 1809 in Madrid, Spain


Died

24 August 1865 in Valencia, Spain of cholera


Canonized

4 March 1934 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Bartholomew the Apostle

 புனிதர் பர்த்தலமேயு 

(St. Bartholomew)

திருத்தூதர், மறைசாட்சி:

(Apostle and martyr)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. முதலாம் நூற்றாண்டு

கானா, யூதேயா, ரோமப் பேரரசு

(Cana, Judaea, Roman Empire)

இறப்பு: கி.பி. முதலாம் நூற்றாண்டு

அல்பனோபோலிஸ், ஆர்மேனியா

(Albanopolis, Armenia)

ஆர்மேனியாவில் தோல் உரிக்கப்பட்டு சிலுவையில் அறையப்பட்டார்

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

கிழக்கு அசிரிய திருச்சபை

(Assyrian Church of the East)

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

மரோனைட் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Maronite Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Oriental Orthodoxy)

ஆங்கிலிகன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion)

லூதரன் திருச்சபை

(Lutheran Church)

இஸ்லாமியம்

(Islam)

முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

புனித பர்த்தலமேயு மடம், ஆர்மேனியா

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஆகஸ்டு 24

சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை: 

கத்தி, அவரது உரிக்கப்பட்ட தோல்

பாதுகாவல்: 

இறைச்சி வெட்டுநர், புத்தகம் தைப்பவர்கள், மால்ட்டா, ஆர்மேனியா, நரம்பியல் நோய்கள், செருப்பு தைப்பவர்

புனிதர் பர்த்தலமேயு முதலாம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்தவர் ஆவார். யோவான் எழுதிய நற்செய்தியின் முதலாம் அதிகாரத்திலும், 21ம் அதிகாரத்திலும் நத்தனியேல் (Nathanael) என்று அடையாளம் காணப்படும் இவர், பிலிப்புவால் கிறிஸ்து இயேசுவுக்கு அறிமுகம் செய்விக்கப்படுகிறார். இவர், இயேசுவின் பன்னிரு திருத்தூதர்களுள் (அப்போஸ்தலர்களுள்) ஒருவர் ஆவார். இவரின் பெயர் "டாலமியின் (Ptolemy) மகன்" எனவும், "உழுசால் மகன்" எனவும் பொருள்படும். எனவே இது குடும்பப் பெயர் என்பர்.

இவரது நினைவுத் திருவிழா நாள் ஆகஸ்டு 24.

யோவான் நற்செய்தியின் முதல் அதிகாரத்தில் இவர் நத்தனியேல் என அழைக்கப்படுகிறார். அந்நற்செய்தியில் நத்தனியேல் தம்மிடம் வருவதை இயேசு கண்டு, 'இவர் உண்மையான இஸ்ரயேலர், கபடற்றவர்' என்று இவரைக் குறித்துக் கூறினார்.

மேலும் மத்தேயு, மாற்கு, லூக்கா நற்செய்திகளில் திருத்தூதர்கள் பட்டியலில் இவர் இடம் பெறுகிறார். திருத்தூதர் பணிகள் நூலில் இயேசுவின் விண்ணேற்பைக் கண்டவர்களுள் இவரும் ஒருவர்.

தூய ஆவியின் வருகைக்குப் பிறகு ஆர்மீனியா, இந்தியா மற்றும் பல இடங்களில் மறைப்பணி புரிந்தார் என்பது மரபுச் செய்தி. இந்தியாவில் இவர் மறைப்பணியாற்றினார் என்பதற்கான இரண்டு பண்டைய சாட்சியங்கள் உள்ளன. நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் தொடக்க காலத்திலிருந்த சரித்திர ஆசிரியரும், ஆயரும், இறையியலாளருமான “யூசேபியஸ்” (Eusebius of Caesarea) ஒருவர் ஆவார். அதன்பின்னர், நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் இறுதியில், துறவியும், திருச்சபையின் மறை வல்லுனருமான புனிதர் “ஜெரோம்” (Saint Jerome) ஆவார்.

பண்டைய நகரமான கல்யாண் (Kalyan) என்று அறியப்பட்ட கொங்கன் கடலோரப் (Konkan coast) பகுதியில் உள்ள பம்பாய் (Bombay) பகுதியே புனிதர் பர்த்தலோமின் மறைப்பணிக்கான துறை என்று அருட்தந்தை: (பெருமலில்” (Fr.C. Perumalil SJ) மற்றும் “மோராசெஸ்” (Moraes) கூறுகிறார்கள்.

பாரம்பரியபடி, இவர் ஆர்மேனியாவில் (Armenia) உள்ள “அல்பநோபிளிஸ்” (Albanopolis) எனுமிடத்தில் உயிரோடு தோலுரிக்கப்பட்டு, தலைகீழாக சிலுவையில் அறையப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டதாக கூறப்படுகிறது. இவர், ஆர்மேனிய அரசனான “போலிமியஸ்” (Polymius) என்பவனை கிறிஸ்தவ மறைக்கு மனம் மாற்றியதாகவும், இதனால் ஆத்திரமடைந்த அரசனது சகோதரனான “அஸ்ட்யாஜெஸ்” (Astyages) பர்த்தலமேயுவின் மரண தண்டனைக்கு உத்தரவிட்டதாகவும் கூறப்படுகிறது.

பதின்மூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டில், இவர் மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்த இடத்தில், பெரிய ஆர்மேனியாவின் “வஸ்புரகன்” (Vaspurakan Province) பிராந்தியத்தில் புனித பர்த்தலமேயு (Saint Bartholomew Monastery) துறவு மடம் கட்டப்பட்டது. இது தற்போது தென்கிழக்கு துருக்கியில் (Southeastern Turkey) உள்ளது.

Also known as

Bartolomé, Bartolomeo, Nathanael bar Tolomai



Additional Memorial

11 June (Orthodox calendar)


Profile

One of the Twelves Apostles. Probably a close friend of Saint Philip; Bartholomew's name is always mentioned in the Gospels in connection with Philip, and it was Philip who brought Bartholomew to Jesus. May have written a gospel, now lost; it is mentioned in other writings of the time. May have preached in Asia Minor, Ethiopia, India and Armenia; some one did, leaving behind assorted writings, and local tradition says it was Bartholomew. Martyr.


Born

Galilee


Died

• flayed alive at Albanopolis, Armenia

• relics at Saint Bartholomew-on-the-Tiber Church, Rome, Italy, and in the cathedral in Canterbury, England


Patronage

• against nervous diseases

• against neurological diseases

• against twitching

• bookbinders

• butchers

• cobblers

• Florentine cheese merchants

• Florentine salt merchants

• leather workers

• plasterers

• shoemakers

• tanners

• trappers

• whiteners

• Armenia

• 16 cities in various countries




Saint Jane Antide Thouret


Also known as

• Joan Antide Thouret

• Jeanne Antide Thouret



Profile

Daughter of a tanner. Her mother died when Jane was 16 years old, leaving the girl to manage the family and help her father raise her younger siblings. Joined the Sisters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul in 1787 at Paris, France, and worked in various hospitals over the next five years. During the suppression of religious orders in the French Revolution, she was ordered to return home to a secular life. Jane refused, and tried to escape the authorities; she was beaten so badly that it took months to recover.


She finally returned on foot to Sancey-de-Long where she cared for the sick, and opened a small school for girls. In the late 1790's the government repression forced her to flee to Switzerland. There she teamed up with other exiled religious and clergy to minister to the sick. However, due to anti-Catholic prejudice in the area, the group was forced to move on to Germany.


Jane later returned to Landeron, Switzerland where she met with her order's Vicar-General of Besançon. He asked her to found a school and hospital for her Order, and in 1799 the school opened in Besançon, France. The congregation Jane founded to run these institutions was the Institute of the Daughters of Saint Vincent de Paul. The group soon began to expand, to operate other schools and hospitals in France, Switzerland, and Italy, and moved into prison ministry. The Institute received papal approval in 1819.


Born

27 November 1765 at Sancy-le-Long, diocese of Besançon, France


Died

24 August 1826 at Naples, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

14 January 1934 by Pope Pius XI



Blessed Veronica Antal


Profile

The eldest of four children in her family, Veronica was taught Christianity by her pious grandmother. When she was old enough, the girl would walk five miles each day to Halaucesti, Romania for daily Mass at the closest church to her home. Veronica was drawn to religious life, but all religious orders had been outlawed by the Communist government, so she joined the lay Franciscan at age 17. She helped care for the local sick and poor, taught catechism to children, and prayed in a cell she constructed in her parent’s house. On the evening of 24 August 1958, Veronica stayed after Mass to clean up the church, then began praying the rosary as she walked home. On the road she was attacked by a neighbor who demanded sex, and when she refused, stabbed her to death. Considered a Martyr of Chastity.



Born

7 December 1935 in Nisiporesti, Botesti, Neamt, Romania


Died

stabbed 42 times and left to bleed out on the evening of 24 August 1958 in a cornfield near Halaucesti, Iasi, Romania


Beatified

• 22 September 2018 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated at the Church of Adormirea Maicii Domnului, Nisiporesti, Romania, presided by Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu

• Franciscan Father Anton Demeter had hidden materials about her life and death, and was only able to start the beatification process after the end of Communist rule in 1989

• first Romanian woman to be beatified

• first Romanian lay person formally honoured as a martyr from the period of Communist rule



Saint Ouen of Rouen


Also known as

Aldwin, Audaenus, Audeon, Audoeno, Audoen, Audoenus, Audoin, Dado, Dadon, Owen



Profile

Son of Aiga Saint Authaire of La-Ferté. Acquainted with Saint Columbanus, Saint Faro of Meaux, and Saint Aile. Educated at Saint Medard abbey. Served in the courts of King Clotaire II, King Dagobert I, and King Clovis II. Chancellor to Dagobert and Clovis. Friend of Saint Wandrille, Saint Romanus of Rouen, Saint Didier, and Saint Sulpicius Pius; teacher of Saint Philibert of Jumièges. Though a layman, he founded a monastery at Rebaisin the forest of Brie in 636 on land donated by Dagobert; he wanted to retire to it, but Dagobert would not relieve him on his responsibilities. Priest. Archbishop of Rouen, France in 641. Convoked the Synod of Chalons in 644 to fight against simony, a battle he had started as a layman. Friend, confrere, and biographer of Saint Eligius. Advisor to Queen Saint Bathild. Brokered a peace between Neustria and Austrasia for King Thierry III. Known for his personal austerities and support of many charities, he founded several monasteries in his diocese, and sent missionaries to the pagans in his see.


Born

c.605 at Sancy, Soissons, France


Died

• 24 August 684 at Clichy, France of natural causes

• buried at Saint Ouen's cathedral, Rouen, France

• relics reported to heal deafness


Patronage

• against deafness

• deaf people



Blessed Luis Almécija Lázaro


Profile

Born to a pious farming family, Luis was baptized at the age of three days; his sister became a Poor Clare prioress, and two nephews were priests. Luis studied in seminaries in Almería and Granada, Spain, and was ordained a priest in the archdiocese of Granada on 18 May 1906. He served as a parish priest in several locations, and in 1911 was assigned to Alicún, Spain where there were only the ruins of a church and he had to start the parish from scratch. In 1913 he was sent to Huécija, Spain where he became a much-loved pastor for many years.


On 19 August 1936, he was seized by anti–Catholic forces in the Spanish Civil War, and imprisoned in Alhama de Almería. His family paid a bribe to get him released, but Father Luis was seized again and imprisoned in Huécija. The guards offered to release him if he would spit on the cross that he carried; in response, he kissed the cross. Martyr.



Born

23 April 1883 in Illar, Almería, Spain


Died

24 August 1936 in Puente de los Calvos, Ráglos, Almería, 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 Miroslav Bulesic


Profile

Studied at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Italy, but recalled to Croatia at the start of World War II. Priest in the diocese of Porec i Pula, Croatia, ordained in April 1943. Assigned to Baderna, the scene of armed conflict between Communist and Fascist forces. Parish priest in Kanfanar in 1945. Secretary of the local priests's association. Outspoken opponent of the abuses of local people by Communist forces. Martyr.



Born

13 May 1920 in Cabrunici, Svetvincenat, Istarska, Croatia


Died

stabbed in the neck on 24 August 1947 in Lanisce, Istarska, Croatia by a group of Communist sympathizers


Beatified

• 28 September 2013 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Blessed Maksymilian Binkiewicz


Also known as

Maximilian


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Maksymilian studied at the seminary in Czestochowa, Krakow, Poland, and then at the Jagiellonian University. He was ordained a priest in the archdiocese of Czestochowa in 1931. Prefect of a diocesan school in Wielun. Known as extremely intelligent, pious and comfortable in social situations. Arrested on 6 October 1941 and deported from occupied Poland to the Dachau concentration camp where he was imprisoned and tortured to death for his faith.


Born

21 February 1908 in Zarnowiec, Slaskie, Poland


Died

died from torture on 24 June 1942 in the prison camp at Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Eutychius of Troas

Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Paul the Apostle. May have been the young man raised from the dead by Paul at Troas in Acts 20. Worked with Saint John the Evangelist on Patmos. Imprisoned and tortured for his faith, but he avoided martyrdom.


Born

1st century Phrygia


Readings

On the first day of the week when we gathered to break bread, Paul spoke to them because he was going to leave on the next day, and he kept on speaking until midnight. There were many lamps in the upstairs room where we were gathered, and a young man named Eutychus who was sitting on the window sill was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. Once overcome by sleep, he fell down from the third story and when he was picked up, he was dead. Paul went down, threw himself upon him, and said as he embraced him, "Don't be alarmed; there is life in him." Then he returned upstairs, broke the bread, and ate; after a long conversation that lasted until daybreak, he departed. And they took the boy away alive and were immeasurably comforted. - Acts 20:7-12



Blessed Lorenzo Lizasoáin Lizaso


Also known as

• Jorge Luis

• Aniceto Lizasoáin Lizaso

• Aniceto María Miguel



Profile

The son of Miguel Ángel Lizasoain and Francisca Lizaso; he was baptized at the age of one day, and grew up speaking the Basque language. He was known as a good student, a great team mate in sports, and for an early call to religious life. He had some trouble in seminary as Spanish was his second language, and difficult for him. He joined the Redemptorists on 15 October 1895, making his profession on 15 October 1896, and taking the name Aniceto María Miguel. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

8pm on 4 September 1886 at 17 Calle de San Juan, Irañeta, Navarra, Spain


Died

24 August 1936 in Toledo, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Edward Kazmierski


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Son of a poor cobbler in the archdiocese of Poznan, Poland. He managed to finish elementary school, but had to leave to work to help the family. A pious boy, he joined the Salesian youth oratory and spent his free time there in Eucharistic adoration, singing in the choir and as a soloist, and writing music. Made the pilgrimage to Czestokowa, walking over 300 miles to the shrine. Martyred in the Nazi persecutions of World War II.


Born

1 October 1919 Poznan, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

guillotined on 24 August 1942 in Dresden, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Jarogniew Wojciechowski


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Young layman in the archdiocese of Poznan, Poland, the son of an alcoholic manager of a cosmetics shop who eventually abandoned the family. Jarogniew found the Saleisan oratory and it became a second home. Played piano. He became a pious young man who thought deeply, worked for a thorough understanding of events, and became a natural leader. Martyred in the Nazi persecutions of World War II.


Born

5 November 1922 Poznan, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

guillotined on 24 August 1942 in Dresden, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Franciszek Kesy


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Young layman in the archdiocese of Poznan, Poland, the son of a carpenter who moved to Poznan for work. Franciszek planned to enter the Salesian novitiate, but the German invasion of Poland in 1939 intervened. He worked in a factory, spent his free time at the Salesian oratory, went to Mass every morning, prayed a rosary every night, helped anyone in any way that he could, and was martyred in the Nazi persecutions.


Born

13 November 1920 in Berlin, Germany


Died

guillotined on 24 August 1942 in Dresden, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Edward Klinik


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Young layman in the archdiocese of Poznan, Poland; his sister became an Ursuline nun. Educated by Salesians in Oswiecim, Poland. Construction worker. A serious and mature young man, he had a great devotion to Eucharistic adoration and the teachings of Saint John Bosco. Martyred in the Nazi persecutions of World War II.


Born

21 July 1919 in Bochum, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

guillotined on 24 August 1942 in Dresden, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Czeslaw Jozwiak


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Son of a police officer in the archdiocese of Poznan, Poland, Czeslaw was educated by the Salesians. Member of the Salesian youth oratory. When the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939, he was forced to leave school and found work in a cosmetics shop. Martyred in the Nazi persecutions.


Born

7 September 1919 in Lazyn, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland


Died

guillotined on 24 August 1942 in Dresden, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Félix González Tejedor


Profile

Joined the Salesians at Carabanchel Alto, Madrid, Spain, making his vows on 13 September 1907. Priest, ordained in Campello, Spain on 18 July 1915. Arrested with his entire community on 20 July 1936. Released, he immediately resumed his ministry, which led to his re-arrest. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.



Born

17 April 1888 in Ledesma, Salamanca, Spain


Died

shot on 24 August 1936 in Madrid, Spain


Beatified

28 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI



Blessed André Fardeau


Additional Memorial

2 January as one of the Martyrs of Anjou


Profile

Priest of the diocese of Angers, France. Martyred in the persecutions of the French Revolution for refusing to take the oath of allegience to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, which would have put his vocation under government control.


Born

19 November 1761 in Soucelles, Maine-et-Loire, France


Died

beheaded on 24 August 1794 at Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France


Beatified

19 February 1984 by Pope John Paul II at Rome, Italy



Saint George Limniotes


Profile

Hermit at Mount Olympus, Bithynia, Asia Minor. Martyred at age 95 under Leo the Isaurian for opposing the iconoclasts.



Born

c.635


Died

mutilated and burned to death c.730



Saint Irchard


Also known as

• Apostle of the Picts

• Erthad, Merchard, Yarcard, Yrchard


Profile

Seventh century spiritual student of Saint Ternan of Culross. Bishop, consecrated in Rome, Italy by Pope Gregory the Great.


Born

at Kincardineshire, Scotland



Saint Ptolemy of Nepi


Profile

Tradition says he was a spiritual student of Saint Peter the Apostle. Bishop of Nepi, Italy. Spiritual teacher of Saint Romanus of Nepi. Martyr.


Died

martyred in the 1st century in Nepi, Italy


Patronage

Nepi, Italy



Blessed Antonio de Blanes


Profile

Mercedarian who freed 208 Christians who had been enslaved in northern Africa by Muslims.



Died

1415



Saint Sandratus


Also known as

Sandradus


Profile

Monk in Trier, Germany. Sent by Emperor Otto I to restore the monastery of Saint Gall in 972. Abbot of Gladbach Abbey. Abbot of Weissenburg Abbey in 981.


Died

986



Saint Romanus of Nepi


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Ptolemy of Nepi. Bishop of Nepi, Italy. Martyr.


Died

martyred in the 1st century in Nepi, Italy


Patronage

Nepi, Italy



Saint Taziano of Claudiopolis


Also known as

Tatian, Tatio, Tazione


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Claudiopolis, Asia Minor (in modern Turkey)



Saint Agofridus of Lacroix


Also known as

Agofroi


Profile

Brother of Saint Leofridus. Benedictine monk. Abbot of Lacroix Abbey in Normandy, France in 738.



Saint Patrick the Elder


Profile

Bishop in Ireland.


Died

• c.450 of natural causes

• relics later enshrined at Glastonbury, England



Saint Abban


Profile

No information has survived.


Born

Irish



Saint Abyce


Also known as

Abycia


Profile

Nun in England. Prioress.



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:


• Félix González Tejedor

• Fortunato Velasco Tobar

• Isidre Torres Balsells

• Rigoberto Aquilino de Anta Barrio

Also celebrated but no entry yet

• Maria Encarnaciòn Rosal