புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

21 September 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் செப்டம்பர் 22

 St. Phocas of Sinope


Feastday: September 22

Death: 102


Martyred bishop of Sinope, a diocese on the Black Sea. He was martyred during the reign of Emperor Trajan.




Hieromartyr Phocas was born in the city of Sinope. During his adult years he became Bishop of Sinope. At the time of a persecution against Christians under the emperor Trajan (98–117), the governor demanded that the saint renounce Christ. After fierce torture they enclosed St Phocas in a hot bath, where he died a martyr's death in the year 117.[2]


A homily in his honour was composed by Saint John Chrysostom on the occasion of the translation of his relics to Constantinople. The translation of his holy relics from Pontus to Constantinople about the year 404 A.D. is celebrated on July 23. His primary feast is on September 22, and he is called a wonderworker.[1][2][3]


The Hieromartyr Phocas is especially venerated as a defender against fires, and also as a helper of the drowning.




St. Phocas the Gardener


Feastday: September 22

Patron: of gardeners; sailors; hospitality; agricultural workers; boatmen; farm workers; farmers; fieldhands; gardeners; husbandmen; mariners; market-gardeners; sailors; watermen

Death: ~303



Image of St. Phocas the GardenerPhocas earned his living by cultivating a garden near the city gate of Sinope (now in Turkey). The quiet and beauty of the plot he cultivated proved quite conducive to his exercise of prayer in the course of his labors. He shared with the poor what he earned from his gardening, and opened his home to travelers lacking a place to stay. Phocas' Christian identity became known to the pagan Roman authorities. Soldiers were dispatched to find and arrest him. Upon nearing Sinope, they stopped at Phocas' door and received lodging from him, unaware that their host was the man they were charged to capture. At his table, they spoke openly of their mission before retiring for the night. As the soldiers slept, Phocas kept watch in prayer to prepare himself for martyrdom. The next morning, he revealed to them his identity. In a turn of events similar to the martyrdom of Saint Eudoxius (see September 5), the stunned soldiers were at first reluctant to carry out their orders against their kind host, but in the end they beheaded him. Phocas is venerated as a patron saint of both gardeners and mariners.

For the bishop-saint, see Phocas, Bishop of Sinope.

Saint Phocas, sometimes called Phocas the Gardener (Greek:Φωκᾶς), is venerated as a martyr by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches. His life and legend may have been a fusion of three men with the same name: a Phocas of Antioch, a Phocas the Gardener and Phocas, Bishop of Sinope.[2]



History

Christian tradition states that he was a gardener who lived at Sinope, on the Black Sea, who used his crops to feed the poor and aided persecuted Christians.[3] During the persecutions of Diocletian, he provided hospitality to the soldiers who were sent to execute him. The soldiers, not knowing that their host was their intended victim, agreed to his hospitality. Phocas also offered to help them find the person they were seeking.[4]


As the soldiers slept, Phocas dug his own grave and prayed. He made arrangements for all his possessions to be distributed to the poor after his death.[3] In the morning, when the soldiers awoke, Phocas revealed his identity.


The soldiers hesitated and offered to report to their commander that their search had been fruitless. Phocas refused this offer and bared his neck. He was then decapitated and buried in the grave that he had dug for himself.[3]


Veneration

He is mentioned by Saint Asterius of Amasia (ca. 400). The name Phocas seems to derive from the Greek word for "seal" (phoke/φώκη), which may explain his patronage of sailors and mariners. A sailors' custom was to serve Phocas a portion of every meal; this was called "the portion of St. Phocas." This portion was bought by one of the voyagers and the price was deposited in the hands of the captain. When the ship came into port, the money was distributed among the poor, in thanksgiving to their benefactor for their successful voyage. He is mentioned in the work by Laurentius Surius. This tradition may be connected to a similar practice among sailors in the Baltic Sea of giving food offerings to an invisible sprite known as the Klabautermann.[5]


Other Gardener Saints

Saint Conon the Gardener (or of Pamphylia, Palestine, or Magydos)

Saint Serenus

Saint Fiacre



St. Lioba


Feastday: September 22

Death: 781


Benedictine abbess, a relative of St. Boniface. Born in Wessex, England, she was trained by St. Tetta, and became a nun at Wimboume Monastery in Dorsetshire. Lioba, short for Liobgetha, was sent with twenty-nine companions to become abbess of Bischofheim Monastery in Mainz, Germany She founded other houses as well and served as abbess for twenty-eight years. She was a friend of St. Hildegard, Charlemagne's wife.



St. Digna & Emerita


Feastday: September 22

Death: 259


Roman maidens martyred in the Eternal City. They both died while praying before their judges. Their relics are in St. Marcellus Church in Rome.


For the 9th century St. Digna, see Martyrs of Córdoba.

Saints Digna and Emerita (died 259 AD) are venerated as saints by the Catholic Church. They were martyred at Rome.


Their feast day is celebrated on September 22.


Their relics are said to lie at the church of San Marcello al Corso, in Rome, although it is recorded that on April 5, 838, a monk named Felix appeared at Fulda with the remains of Saints Cornelius, Callistus, Agapitus, Georgius, Vincentius, Maximus, Cecilia, Eugenia, Digna, Emerita, and Columbana




Bl. Carmelo Sastre Sastre


Feastday: September 22

Birth: 1890

Death: 1936

Beatified: 11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Carmelo Sastre Sastre was ordained in 1919 and was a priest in the Archdiocese of Valencia. Carmelo was noted for his ministry to the poor. One of the Spanish Civil War




St. Maurice


மறைசாட்சிகள் மவுரிசியஸ் மற்றும் தோழர்கள்

St. Mauritius and companions



பிறப்பு : 3 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு,எகிப்து


இறப்பு : 302,அகாவ்னும் Agaunum(செயிண்ட் மௌரிஸ் St.Maurice), சுவிட்சர்லாந்து


பாதுகாவல்: போர் வீரர்கள், வியாபாரிகள்,சாயத் தொழிலாளிகள், ஆடை நிறுவனங்கள்,காது, மூட்டு நோய்களிலிருந்து


இவர் எகிப்து நாட்டில் முதன்முதலில் இராணுவப் படையை உருவாக்கினார். இவர், தன் படைவீரர்களுடன் சேர்ந்து சிலுவைப்போரை புரிந்தனர். இவரின் படைவீரர்களை, தன் படைக்கு கொடையாக தருமாறு, எதிர்படையினர்,

மவுரிசியஸிடம் கேட்டனர். அப்படி தந்தால் வெற்றியடைய செய்வோம் என்றும் கூறினர். ஆனால் மவுரிசியஸ் இதனை ஏற்க மறுத்தார். இதனால் மீண்டும் போர் மூண்டது. மவுரிசியசின் படையிலிருந்த படைவீரர்கள் சிலரின் அந்த

செயல்களால், மவுரிசியஸ், அப்படையை விட்டு விலக வேண்டியதாயிற்று. இவர் அப்படையிலிருந்து விலகியப்பின் படைவீரர்கள் மிகக் கடினமான ஒழுங்குகளை கடைபிடிக்க வற்புறுத்தப்பட்டார்கள். இதனை கடைபிடிக்க மறுத்ததால், பலம் வாய்ந்த வீரர்கள் பலர் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். அதன்பிறகு இராணுவவீரர்கள் 6000 பேர், மாக்சிமில்லியனுடன் (Maxmilian)

சேர்ந்து, ஜெனிவா என்ற ஏரியின் அருகே எதிரிகளுடன் போரிட்டனர். இப்போரில் மீண்டும் பலர் இறந்தனர். இதனால் இராணுவத்தில் மிகக்குறைவான பலம் வாய்ந்த வீரர்களே இருந்தனர். இவற்றை கண்ட மவுரிசியஸ், மீண்டும்  ராணுவத்தில் நுழைந்தார். இராணுவ வீரர்களுக்கு சிறப்பான பயிற்சியை கொடுத்தார். வீரர்களை மீண்டும்

திடப்படுத்தி பலமூட்டினார். அத்துடன் அவர்களுக்கு கிறிஸ்துவ நெறியை கற்பித்து நல்ல கிறிஸ்துவர்களாகவும் வாழ வைத்தார். இந்நிலையில் எதிரிகள் மீண்டும் படையெடுத்து வந்து மவுரிசியசையும் அவரின் படைவீரர்களையும் கொன்றார்கள்

Feastday: September 22


Maurice was an officer of the Theban Legion of Emperor Maximian Herculius' army, which was composed of Christians from Upper Egypt. He and his fellow legionnaires refused to sacrifice to the gods as ordered by the Emperor to insure victory over rebelling Bagaudae. When they refused to obey repeated orders to do so and withdrew from the army encamped at Octodurum (Martigny) near Lake Geneva to Agaunum (St. Maurice-en-Valais), Maximian had the entire Legion of over six thousand men put to death. To the end they were encouraged in their constancy by Maurice and two fellow officers, Exuperius and Candidus. Also executed was Victor (October 10th), who refused to accept any of the belongings of the dead soldiers. In a follow-up action, other Christians put to death were Ursus and another Victor at Solothurin (September 30th); Alexander at Bergamo; Octavius, Innocent, Adventor, and Solutar at Turin; and Gereon (October 10th) at Cologne. Their story was told by St. Eucherius, who became Bishop of Lyons about 434, but scholars doubt that an entire Legion was massacred; but there is no doubt that Maurice and some of his comrades did suffer martyrdom at Agaunum. Feast day - September 22nd.



This article is about a Roman Legion leader. For other uses, see Saint-Maurice (disambiguation).

Saint Maurice (also Moritz, Morris, or Mauritius; Coptic: Ⲁⲃⲃⲁ Ⲙⲱⲣⲓⲥ) was an Egyptian military leader who headed the legendary Theban Legion of Rome in the 3rd century, and is one of the favorite and most widely venerated saints of that martyred group. He is the patron saint of several professions, locales, and kingdoms.



Biography

Early life

According to the hagiographical material, Maurice was an Egyptian, born in AD 250 in Thebes, an ancient city in Upper Egypt that was the capital of the New Kingdom of Egypt (1575-1069 BC). He was brought up in the region of Thebes (Luxor).


Career

Maurice became a soldier in the Roman army. He was gradually promoted until he became the commander of the Theban legion, thus leading approximately a thousand men. He was an acknowledged Christian at a time when early Christianity was considered to be a threat to the Roman Empire. Yet, he moved easily within the pagan society of his day.


The legion, entirely composed of Christians, had been called from Thebes in Egypt to Gaul to assist Emperor Maximian in defeating a revolt by the bagaudae.[2] The Theban Legion was dispatched with orders to clear the Great St Bernard Pass across the Alps. Before going into battle, they were instructed to offer sacrifices to the pagan gods and pay homage to the emperor. Maurice pledged his men’s military allegiance to Rome. He stated that service to God superseded all else. He said that to engage in wanton slaughter was inconceivable to Christian soldiers. He and his men refused to worship Roman deities.[3]


Martyrdom

However, when Maximian ordered them to harass some local Christians, they refused. Ordering the unit to be punished, Maximian had every tenth soldier killed, a military punishment known as decimation. More orders followed, the men refused compliance as encouraged by Maurice, and a second decimation was ordered. In response to the Theban Christians' refusal to attack fellow Christians, Maximian ordered all the remaining members of his legion to be executed. The place in Switzerland where this occurred, known as Agaunum, is now Saint-Maurice, Switzerland, site of the Abbey of St. Maurice.


So reads the earliest account of their martyrdom, contained in the public letter which Bishop Eucherius of Lyon (c. 434–450), addressed to his fellow bishop, Salvius. Alternative versions[citation needed] have the legion refusing Maximian's orders only after discovering innocent Christians had inhabited a town they had just destroyed, or that the emperor had them executed when they refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods.


Legacy

Veneration

Saint Maurice became a patron saint of the German Holy Roman Emperors. In 926, Henry the Fowler (919–936), even ceded the present Swiss canton of Aargau to the abbey, in return for Maurice's lance, sword and spurs. The sword and spurs of Saint Maurice were part of the regalia used at coronations of the Austro-Hungarian emperors until 1916, and among the most important insignia of the imperial throne. In addition, some of the emperors were anointed before the Altar of Saint Maurice at St. Peter's Basilica.[1] In 929, Henry the Fowler held a royal court gathering (Reichsversammlung) at Magdeburg. At the same time the Mauritius Kloster in honor of Maurice was founded. In 961, Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, was building and enriching Magdeburg Cathedral, which he intended for his own tomb. To that end,


in the year 961 of the Incarnation and in the 25th year of his reign, in the presence of all of the nobility, on the vigil of Christmas, the body of St. Maurice was conveyed to him at Regensburg along with the bodies of some of the saint's companions and portions of other saints. Having been sent to Magdeburg, these relics were received with great honour by a gathering of the entire populace of the city and of their fellow countrymen. They are still venerated there, to the salvation of the homeland.[4]


Maurice is traditionally depicted in full armor, in Italy emblazoned with a red cross. In folk culture he has become connected with the legend of the Holy Lance, which he is supposed to have carried into battle; his name is engraved on the Holy Lance of Vienna, one of several relics claimed as the spear that pierced Jesus' side on the cross. Saint Maurice gives his name to the town St. Moritz as well as to numerous places called Saint-Maurice in French speaking countries. The Indian Ocean island state of Mauritius was named after Maurice, Prince of Orange, and not directly after Maurice himself.


Over 650 religious foundations dedicated to Saint Maurice can be found in France and other European countries. In Switzerland alone, seven churches or altars in Aargau, six in the Canton of Lucerne, four in the Canton of Solothurn, and one in Appenzell Innerrhoden can be found (in fact, his feast day is a cantonal holiday in Appenzell Innerrhoden).[1] Particularly notable among these are the Church and Abbey of Saint-Maurice-en-Valais, the Church of Saint Moritz in the Engadin, and the Monastery Chapel of Einsiedeln Abbey, where his name continues to be greatly revered. Several orders of chivalry were established in his honor as well, including the Order of the Golden Fleece, Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus, and the Order of Saint Maurice.[1] Additionally, fifty-two towns and villages in France have been named in his honor.[5]


Maurice was also the patron saint of a Catholic parish and church in the 9th Ward of New Orleans and including part of the town of Arabi in St. Bernard Parish. The church was constructed in 1856, but was devastated by the winds and flood waters of Hurricane Katrina on 29 August 2005; the copper-plated steeple was blown off the building. The church was subsequently deconsecrated in 2008, and the local diocese put it up for sale in 2011.[6][7] By 2014, a local attorney had purchased the property for a local arts organization, after which the building served as both an arts venue and the worship space for a Baptist church that had been displaced following the hurricane.[6][8]


On 19 July 1941, Pope Pius XII declared Saint Maurice to be patron Saint of the Italian Army's Alpini (mountain infantry corps).[9] The Alpini have celebrated Maurice's feast every year since then.


The Synaxarium of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria does not mention Saint Maurice, although there are several Coptic churches named for him.[10][11][12]


Apparition

The Our Lady of Laus apparitions included an apparition of Saint Maurice. He appeared in an antique episcopal vestment and told Benoîte Rencurel that he was the one to whom the nearby chapel was dedicated, that he would fetch her some water (before drawing some water out of a well she had not seen), that she should go down to a certain valley to escape the local guard and see Mary, mother of Jesus, and that Mary was both in Heaven and could appear on Earth.[13]





Patronage

Maurice is the patron saint of the Duchy of Savoy (France) and of the Valais (Switzerland) as well as of soldiers, swordsmiths, armies, and infantrymen. In 1591 Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy arranged the triumphant return of part of the relics of Saint Maurice from the monastery of Agaune in Valais.[14]


He is also the patron saint of weavers and dyers. Manresa (Spain), Piedmont (Italy), Montalbano Jonico (Italy), Schiavi di Abruzzo (Italy), Stadtsulza (Germany) and Coburg (Germany) have chosen St. Maurice as their patron saint as well. St Maurice is also the patron saint of the Brotherhood of Blackheads, a historical military order of unmarried merchants in present-day Estonia and Latvia.[15] In September 2008, certain relics of Maurice were transferred to a new reliquary and rededicated in Schiavi di Abruzzo (Italy).


He is also the patron saint of the town of Coburg in Bavaria, Germany. He is shown there as a man of colour especially on manhole covers as well as on the city coat of arms. There he is called "Coburger Mohr" (engl.: "Coburg Moor").[16]


Portrayal

St. Maurice began being portrayed as a dark-complexioned African in the 12th century.[17] The oldest surviving image that depicts Saint Maurice as a black African in knight's armor[18] was sculpted in mid-13th century for Magdeburg Cathedral; there it is displayed next to the grave of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor. Jean Devisse, The Image of the Black in Western Art, laid out the documentary sources for the saint's popularity and documented it with illustrative examples.[19][20]


When the new cathedral was built under Archbishop Albert II of Käfernberg (served 1205-32), a relic said to be the head of Maurice was procured from the Holy Land.


The image of Saint Maurice has been examined in detail by Gude Suckale-Redlefsen,[21] who demonstrated that this image of Maurice has existed since Maurice's first depiction in Germany between the Weser and the Elbe, and spread to Bohemia, where it became associated with the imperial ambitions of the House of Luxembourg. According to Suckale-Redlefsen, the image of Maurice reached its apogee during the years 1490 to 1530.


Images of the saint died out in the mid-sixteenth century, undermined, Suckale-Redlefsen suggests, by the developing Atlantic slave trade. "Once again, as in the early Middle Ages, the color black had become associated with spiritual darkness and cultural 'otherness'".[22] There is an oil on wood painting of Maurice by Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472–1553) in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art.[23]


Historicity

Main article: Theban Legion

There is a difference of opinion among researchers as to whether or not the story of the Theban Legion is based on historical fact, and if so, to what extent. The account by Eucherius of Lyon is classed by Bollandist Hippolyte Delehaye among the historical romances.[24] Donald F. O'Reilly, in Lost Legion Rediscovered, argues that evidence from coins, papyrus, and Roman army lists support the story of the Theban Legion.


Denis Van Berchem, of the University of Geneva, proposed that Eucherius' presentation of the legend of the Theban legion was a literary production, not based on a local tradition.[26] The monastic accounts themselves do not specifically state that all the soldiers were collectively executed; the twelfth century bishop Otto of Freising wrote in his Chronica de duabus civitatibus[27] that many of the legionaries escaped and only some were executed at Agaunum, though the others were later apprehended and put to death at Galliae Bonna and Colonia Aggripina.





St. Thomas of Villanueva



Feastday: September 22

Birth: 1488

Death: 1555



Augustinian bishop. Born at Fuentellana, Castile, Spain, he was the son of a miller. He studied at the University of Alcala, earned a licentiate in theology, and became a professor there at the age of twenty-six. He declined the chair of philosophy at the university of Salamanca and instead entered the Order of St Augustine at Salamanca in 1516. Ordained in 1520, he served as prior of several houses in Salamanca, Burgos, and Valladolid, as provincial ofAndal usia and Castile, and then court chaplain to Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (r. 1519-1556). During his time as provincial of Castile, he dispatched the first Augustinian missionaries to the New World. They subsequently helped evangelize the area of modern Mexico. He was offered but declined the see of Granada, but accepted appointment as archbishop of Valencia in 1544. As the see had been vacant for nearly a century, Thomas devoted much effort to restoring the spiritual and material life of the archdiocese. He was also deeply committed to the needs of the poor. He held the post of grand almoner of the poor, founded colleges for the children of new converts and the poor, organized priests for service among the Moors, and was renowned for his personal saintliness and austerities. While he did not attend the sessions of the Council of Trent, he was an ardent promoter of the Tridentine reforms throughout Spain.



"St. Thomas of Villanova" redirects here. For other uses, see St. Thomas of Villanova (disambiguation).

Thomas of Villanova (1488 – September 8, 1555), born Tomás García y Martínez, was a Spanish friar of the Order of Saint Augustine who was a noted preacher, ascetic and religious writer of his day. He became an archbishop who was famous for the extent of his care for the poor of his see.



Life

He was born Tomás García y Martínez in Fuenllana, Spain, in 1488.[1] His father was a miller,[2] who regularly distributed food and provisions to the poor, as did his mother.[3] He grew up and was educated in Villanueva de los Infantes, in the Province of Ciudad Real, Spain, therefore the name Thomas of Villanueva. Part of the original house still stands, with a coat of arms in the corner, beside a family chapel. In spite of his family's wealth, as a young boy he often went about naked because he had given his clothing to the poor.


At the age of sixteen years, Thomas entered the University of Alcalá de Henares to study Arts and Theology. He became a professor there, teaching arts, logic, and philosophy, despite a continuing absentmindedness and poor memory.[4] In 1516, he decided to join the Augustinian friars in Salamanca and in 1518 was ordained a priest.


He became renowned for his eloquent and effective preaching in the churches of Salamanca.[3] Thomas composed beautiful sermons, among which stands out the Sermon on the Love of God, one of the great examples of sacred oratory of the 16th century. Charles V, upon hearing him preach, exclaimed, "This monsignor can move even the stones!".[citation needed] Charles named Thomas one of his councilors of state and court preacher in Valladolid, the residence of the Emperor when on his visits to the Low Countries.[1]


His scathing attacks on his fellow bishops earned him the title of reformer.[2] Some of his sermons attacked the cruelty of bullfighting. He also had a great devotion to the Virgin Mary, whose heart he compared to the burning bush of Moses that is never consumed.


Within the Order, he successively held the positions of prior of his local monastery, Visitor General, and Prior Provincial for Andalusia and Castile. In 1533, Thomas sent out the first Augustinian friars to arrive in Mexico.[1] Charles V offered him the post of Archbishop of Granada but he would not accept it.


Bishop


Thomas of Villanova Heals The Sick, Murillo

In 1544 he was nominated as Archbishop of Valencia and he continued to refuse the position until ordered to accept by his superior. Given a donation to decorate his residence, he sent the money to a hospital in need of repair.[3] He began his episcopacy by visiting every parish in the Archdiocese to discover what the needs of the people were.[5] Aided by his assistant bishop, Juan Segriá, he put in order an archdiocese that for a century had not had direct pastoral government. He organized a special college for Moorish converts, and in particular an effective plan for social assistance, welfare, and charity. In 1547 he ordained as a priest Luis Beltrán, a noted missionary in South America. Thomas started Presentation Seminary in 1550.[5]


He was well known for his great personal austerity (he sold the straw mattress on which he slept in order to give money to the poor) and wore the same habit that he had received in the novitiate, mending it himself.[4] Thomas was known as “father of the poor.”[2] His continual charitable efforts were untiring, especially towards orphans, poor women without a dowry, and the sick. He possessed, however, an intelligent notion of charity, so that while he was very charitable, he sought to obtain definitive and structural solutions to the problem of poverty; for example, giving work to the poor, thereby making his charity bear fruit. "Charity is not just giving, rather removing the need of those who receive charity and liberating them from it when possible," he wrote. He established boarding schools and high schools.[6]


Thomas died in Valencia on September 8, 1555 of angina at the age of 67. His remains are preserved at the Cathedral there.[5]


Veneration

He was canonized by Pope Alexander VII on November 1, 1658.[7][4] His feast day is celebrated on September 22.


Legacy


Barangay Santo Tomas Lubao, Pampanga (a Kapilya or Church) in Lubao Pampanga, Philippines, dedicated to Saint Thomas of Villanova.

Thomas is the author of various Tracts, among which is included the Soliloquy between God and the soul, on the topic of communion. Francisco de Quevedo wrote his biography. His complete writings were published in six volumes as Opera omnia, in Manila in 1881.


Thomas is the namesake and patron saint of Villanova University, near Philadelphia in the United States, which was founded and is administered by the friars of his Order; Universidad Católica de Santo Tomás de Villanueva in Havana, Cuba; St. Thomas University in Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; and Villanova College, a Catholic school for boys located in Brisbane, Australia. In the Philippines, some churches and towns are dedicated in honor of the saint with grand feast or fiesta celebrations with much food on the table for the guests and visitors. He is the patron saint of the towns of Alimodian and Miag-ao, both in Iloilo. He is also the patron saint of Barangay Santolan and Sto. Tomas in Pasig.


A congregation of sisters is also named after him




Saint Ignatius of Santhia


Also known as

• Ignazio da Santhia

• Lawrence Belvisotti

• Lorenzo Maurizio Belvisotti

• Maurice Belvisotti



Profile

Ordained in 1710 in the diocese of Vercelli, Italy. Parish priest for six years. He was offered a position of authority in the diocese, but declined, and on 24 May 1716 he became a novice in the Capuchins of Turin, Italy, taking the name Ignatius, and beginning 54 years of service in the Order.


He was under the direction of a novice half his age, which Father Ignatius accepted with humility. In 1717 he was assigned to the convent at Saluzzo, Italy, and served as sacristan. Novice master at Chieri, Italy. Sacristan at Capuchin Hill, Turin in 1723, a convent with 87 priests. Novice master at Mondovi from 1731 to 1744. An eye illness forced him to give up the position for nearly two years.


When he recovered he became head chaplain of the armies of the King of Piedmont who were fighting invading Franco-Hispanic forces. He was noted for his work in the field as minister, and with the injured. After the war he returned to life at Capuchin Hill where he served as confessor and religious instructor to lay brothers. In his later years he spent his days visiting the sick and the poor of Turin, and ministering to the thousands that came daily to Capuchin Hill for his blessing.


Born

5 June 1686 in Santhià, Vercelli, Italy as Maurice Belvisotti


Died

22 September 1770 of natural causes in Turin, Italy


Canonized

19 May 2002 by Pope John Paul II at Rome, Italy





Saint Settimio of Jesi


Also known as

Septimus



Profile

Raised in a pagan family, Settimio received a good education and was a professional soldier. While in Italy, he converted to Christianity, and began to preach the faith. He was forced to flee from Milan, Italy in 303 during the persecutions of Diocletian. In Rome he became known for his preaching and bringing converts to the faith, even during a time of persecution. Consecrated as the first bishop of Jesi, Italy by Pope Saint Marcellus I. In Jesi, he built the first cathedral of the diocese, but a judge named Florentius ordered Settimio to sacrifice to pagan gods. Bishop Settimio ignored the order, continued to preach, performed miracles, and converted many in the city. For his refusal, he was executed. Martyr.


Born

Germany


Died

• beheaded in Jesi, Italy

• though his place of burial was lost, by 1208 the cathedral was named for him

• relics re-discovered in 1469 and enshrined in the Jesi cathedral

• relics re-enshrined in a new altar in 1623


Patronage

• Jesi, Italy, city of

• Jesi, Italy, diocese of



Saint Gunthildis of Suffersheim


Also known as

Gunthild



Profile

A pious milk maid and servant, known for her charity to the poor. On two occasions, in response to her prayers, springs of fresh water erupted out of the ground, once from solid rock; the water from the latter was said to cure a leper who washed in it. Once when she was about to give away a bucket of fresh milk to the poor, her employer caught her and asked what she was carrying; she told him it was a bucket of lye, and when he looked, the milk had, indeed, turned to lye.


Died

• c.1057 in Suffersheim, Bavaria, Germany of natural causes

• her burial site was chosen by the oxen that were pulling the wagon as they stopped at a particular spot and would go no further

• after miracles were reported at her grave, a chapel was built over it


Representation

• woman with a bucket of milk and/or a block of cheese, and a cow

• woman with a pitcher of milk




Saint Lauto of Coutances


Also known as

Laud, Laudo, Laudus, Launus, Lô



Profile

Bishop of Coutances, France in 528; he served for 40 years. Participated in the conclave of bishops in Angers, France c.529. Noted for his healing miracles, especially of eye problems. The town of Briovere and Lauto's estate became the modern city of Saint-Lô in northern France, and a healing spring at Courcy, France dedicated to him is a pilgrimage site.


Born

Courcy, France


Died

c.568 of natural causes


Patronage

• blind people; against blindness

• eyes

• Coutances, France, diocese of



Saint Sadalberga


Also known as

Salaberga



Profile

Born to the nobility, the daughter of Duke Gundoin of Alsace; sister of Saint Bodo. She went blind as a child, but was healed by Saint Eustace of Luxeuil. Married, but widowed after two months. Married to Saint Blandinus of Laon. Mother of five, including Saint Baldwin and Saint Anstrudis of Laon. Their children grown, Sadalberga and Blandinus separated, each to enter religious life. Nun at Poulangey. Worked with Saint Waldebert of Luxeuil to found the convent of Saint John the Baptist in Laon, France, and served as its abbess.


Born

Toul, France


Died

c.665 in Laon, France



Blessed Giovanni Battista Bonetti


Also known as

Giovanni Battista Bonetto


Profile

A physically small and very humble man, Giovanni joined the Franciscan friars in Turin, Italy in 1635, and was assigned to the house in Piobesi Torinese. Priest. Sent to north Africa as a missionary to the Muslim Moors, his public preaching of Christianity led to him being arrested, tortured, dragged through the street by horses and excuted. Martyr.


Born

early 17th century in Pont Canavese, Turin, Italy


Died

• burned to death on 22 September 1654 in Tripoli, Libya

• a knight of Malta who witnessed the execution later had a vision of Giovanni in heaven



Saint Emmeramus of Regensburg


Also known as

Emmeran, Haimhramm



Profile

Priest and noted preacher in Bavaria, Germany. Abbot of a monastery in Regensburg, Germany. Bishop of Regensburg. Murdered on the road on his way to Rome, Italy. He is honoured as a martyr in some areas, but his killers may have just been highway robbers.


Born

Poitiers, France


Died

• killed c.690

• relics in the monastery in Regensburg, Germany


Patronage

Regensburg, Germany




Saint Augustinus Yu Chin-Kil


Also known as

• Augustinus Yu Jin-Gil

• Augustinus Yu Chin-gil

• Auguseutino, Augustine



Profile

Married layman catechist in the apstolic vicariate of Korea. Wrote to Pope Gregory XVI, asking for missionaries and priests to Korea. Imprisoned, tortured and martyred for his faith.


Born

1791 in Jo Dong, Seoul, South Korea


Died

beheaded on 22 September 1839 in Seoul, Korea


Canonized

6 May 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Joseph Marchandon


Profile

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



Born

21 August 1745 in Bénévent, Creuse, France


Died

22 September 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Florentius the Venerable

புனித ப்ளாரன்டியுஸ் (ஐந்தாம் நூற்றாண்டு)


செப்டம்பர் 22



இவர் பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டைச் சார்ந்த, தூர்ஸ் நகர்ப் புனித மார்ட்டினின் மாணவர். அவரிடம் பாடம் கற்று வந்த இவர், அவராலேயே அருள் பணியாளராக அருள்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார்.



இதன் பிறகு இவர் பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டில் உள்ள போய்டோவு (Poitou) என்ற இடத்திற்கு நற்செய்தி அறிவிக்க அனுப்பி வைக்கப்பட்டார். 


அங்குச் சென்றதும், க்ளோன்னி மலையில் ஒரு துறவு மடம் அமைத்துத் துறவியாக வாழத் தொடங்கினார். இதைச் சுற்றிலும் இருந்த இளைஞர்கள் பார்த்துவிட்டு, இவருடைய சீடராக வந்து சேர்ந்தார்கள்.

இவரோ, தான் இறக்கும்வரை தனக்குக் கீழ் இருந்த துறவிகளுக்கு முன் மாதிரியான வாழ்க்கையை வாழ்ந்து காட்டினார்.

Also known as

Fiorenzo, Florence, Florent-le-Vieux



Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Martin of Tours who ordained him and sent him to evangelize in Poitou, France. Hermit at Mount Glonne in Anjou, France. His reputation for holiness spread and he attracted so many spiritual students that he built a monastery for them; it was later known as Saint-Florent-le-Vieux.


Born

Bavaria, Germany


Died

5th century





Blessed Otto of Freising


Profile

Cistercian monk. Priest. Bishop of Freising, Germany. Adopted the Gregorian reforms for his diocese. Throughout his episcopacy, he wore the Cistercian habit and attended to all his duties as a monk as well as bishop.


Died

1158 at the Cistercian monastery of Morimond, France of natural causes



Blessed Alfonso da Cusco



Profile

Mercedarian lay brother at the convent of San Giovanni Laterano in Arequipa, Peru. Known for his piety and as a miracle worker.



Saint Basilia


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

• beheaded c.300 on the Via Salaria, Rome, Italy

• legend says that seven healing springs appeared at the place of execution - one from every point the severed head touched



Saint Jonas


Also known as

Yon


Profile

Disciple of Saint Dionysius of Paris. Priest. Evangelized near Paris, France. Marytred by order of the Roman prefect Julian.


Died

flogged and stabbed with a sword c.3rd century at Paris, France



Saint Sanctinus of Meaux


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Denis of Paris. First bishop of Meaux, France.


Died

c.300



Saint Irais


Also known as

Herais, Rhais


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Born

Egyptian


Died

beheaded c.300



Saint Silvanus of Levroux


Also known as

Silouan, Silvano


Profile

Early saint long venerated in Levroux, France.



Saint Lindru of Partois


Profile

Nun in Partois, France.



Martyrs of the Theban Legion


Profile

A Roman imperial legion of 6,600 soldiers, all of whom were Christians; they had been recruited from the area around Thebes in Upper Egypt, were led by Saint Maurice, and served under Emperor Maximian Herculeus. Around the year 287, Maximian led the army across the Alps to Agaunum, an area in modern Switzerland, in order to suppress a revolt by the Bagandre in Gaul. In connection with battle, the army offered public sacrifices to the Roman gods; the Theban Legion refused to participate. For refusing orders, the Legion was decimated - one tenth of them were executed. When the remainder refused to sacrifice to the gods, they were decimated again. When the survivors still refused to sacrifice, Maximinian ordered them all killed. Martyrs.



Known members of the Legion include


• Alexander of Bergamo

• Alverius of Agaunum

• Candidus the Theban

• Chiaffredo of Saluzzo

• Exuperius

• Fortunato

• Innocent of Agaunum

• Martiniano of Pecco

• Maurice

• Sebastian of Agaunum

• Secundus the Theban

• Ursus the Theban

• Victor of Agaunum

• Victor of Cologne

• Victor of Xanten

• Victor the Theban

• Vitalis of Agaunum


Other profiled saints associated with the Legion include


• Antoninus of Piacenza (martyred soldier; associated by later story tellers)

• Adventor of Turin (not a member; associated by later story tellers)

• Attilio of Trino (martyred soldier; associated by some, but not all, later lists)

• Bessus

• Cassius (may have been a member)

• Florentius the Martyr (may have been a member)

• George of San Giorio (not a member; associated by later story tellers)

• Gereon (not a member, but another soldier who was martyred for refusing to make a sacrifice to Roman gods)

• Gusmeo of Gravedona sul Lario (may have been a member)

• Matthew of Gravedona sul Lario (may have been a member)

• Octavius of Turin (not a member; associated by later story tellers)

• Pons of Pradleves (escaped the massacre to become an evangelists in northern Italy)

• Secundus of Asti (not a member, but linked due to art work)

• Solutor of Turin (not a member; associated by later story tellers)

• Tiberio of Pinerolo (may have been a member)

• Verena (wife of a member of the Legion)


Died

• martyred c.287 in Agaunum (modern Saint-Maurice-en-Valais, Switzerland

• a basilica was built in Agaunum to enshrine the relics of the Legion




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 Alfonso Lopez

• Blessed Antonio Gil-Monforte

• Blessed Antonio Sáez de Ibarra López

• Blessed Carlos Navarro Miquel

• Blessed Diego Morata Cano

• Blessed Enrique Pedro Gonzálvez Andreu

• Blessed Esteban Cobo-Sanz

• Blessed Federico Cobo-Sanz

• Blessed Félix Echevarría Gorostiaga

• Blessed Francisco Carlés González

• Blessed Francisco Vicente Edo

• Blessed Germán Gozalvo Andreu

• Blessed José Ardil Lázaro

• Blessed Josefina Moscardó Montalvá

• Blessed Juan García Cervantes

• Blessed Luis Echevarría Gorostiaga

• Blessed María Purificación Vidal Pastor

• Blessed Miguel Zarragua Iturrízaga

• Blessed Modesto Allepuz Vera

• Blessed Ramon Rius Camps<

• Blessed Simón Miguel Rodríguez

• Blessed Vicente Sicluna Hernández