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22 November 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் நவம்பர் 23

  Saint Columbanus

துறவி கொலும்பான் Kolumban




பிறப்பு 


542, 


லைன்ஸ்டர் Leinster, அயர்லாந்து


இறப்பு 


23 நவம்பர் 615, 


போபியோ Bobbio, இத்தாலி


பாதுகாவல்: அயர்லாந்து, போப்பியோ, தீய ஆவியிடமிருந்து





இவர் தன் வயதில் துறவற மடத்தில் சேர்ந்து துறவு வாழ்வை மேற்கொண்டார். 560 ஆம் ஆண்டில் பாங்கோர் (Bangor) என்ற நகரில் துறவற சபை ஒன்றை நிறுவினார். பின்னர் இச்சபையை கொலும்பான் சிறந்த முறையில் வளர்த்தெடுத்தார். ஏறக்குறைய 30 ஆண்டுகள் இவர் பல்வேறு துறையில் பணியாற்றினார். நீண்ட காலம் ஆசிரியராகவும் இருந்தார். இவர் 590 ஆம் ஆண்டு தன்னுடன் 30 ஆண் துறவிகளை அழைத்துக்கொண்டு பாங்கோர் விட்டு வெளியேறி இங்கிலாந்திற்கு சென்றார். அங்கு போர்களில் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட மக்களுக்கென்று மீண்டும் துறவற சபை ஒன்றை நிறுவினார். 




இங்கிலாந்தில் புதிய சபைக்காக துன்பங்கள் பலவற்றை சுமந்தார். இருப்பினும் மனந்தளராமல் சிறந்த மறையுரையை ஆற்றி, பல இளைஞர்களை இறைவன்பால் ஈர்த்தார். அதன்பிறகு லுக்செயுல் (Luxeuil) என்ற இடத்தில் பல இளைஞர்களைக் கொண்டு மீண்டுமோர் துறவற சபையை தொடங்கினார். இவர் தான் சென்ற இடமெல்லாம் அந்நகரின் கலாச்சாரத்திற்கேற்றவாறு துறவற சபைகளின் ஒழுங்குகளை அமைத்துக்கொடுத்தார். மிக குறைந்த ஆண்டுகள் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான இளைஞர்கள் இவரின் சபையில் சேர்ந்து இறைப்பணியாற்றினர். 






இவர் தொடங்கிய சபைகள் நன்கு வளர்ச்சியடைந்தபின் புனித பெனடிக்ட் துறவற  ஒழுங்குகளை தான் தொடங்கிய அனைத்து சபைகளிலும் கடைபிடித்து வாழ வழிவகுத்துக் கொடுத்தார். தான் நிறுவிய துறவற சபைகளுக்காக கொலும்பான் அயராது உழைத்தார். அதன்பிறகு 613 ஆம் ஆண்டு நோயால் தாக்கப்பட்டார். இருப்பினும் தன் உடல் நோயைப்பற்றி கவலை கொள்ளாமல் ஜெர்மனியிலுள்ள போடன் சே (Boden See) வந்தடைந்தார். அங்கு சில காலம் மறைப்பணியாற்றியபின் தன்னுடன் அவரின் சபை சகோதரர் ஒருவரை அழைத்துக்கொண்டு இத்தாலி நாட்டிற்கு சென்று போபியோவில் மீண்டும் சபையை தொடங்கினார். இத்துறவற சபையே இவர் நிறுவிய கடைசி சபையானது. ஏறக்குறைய இரண்டு ஆண்டுகள் அங்கு வாழ்ந்தபின் காலமானார். மறைநூல்களையும் பண்டைய இலக்கியங்களையும் கற்றுத்தேர்ந்த இவர் தான் நிறுவிய சபைகளை இறைவனின் மகிமைக்காக அயராது உழைத்து உயர்த்தினார். கிறிஸ்துவ வாழ்விக்கும், துறவற வாழ்வுக்கும் மிகவும் பாராட்டபெற்றவராய் திகழ்ந்தார். 

Also known as 

• Columbanus of Luxeuil

• Columbanus of Bobbio

• Columba of...

• Columban of...



Additional Memorial

24 November (Benedictines and Ireland)


Profile

Well-born, handsome and educated, Columbanus was torn between a desire for God and easy access to the pleasures of the world. Acting on advice of a holy anchoress, he decided to withdraw from the world. His family opposed the choice, his mother going so far as to block the door. Monk at Lough Erne. He studied Scripture extensively, and wrote a commentary on the Psalms. Monk at Bangor under abbot Saint Comgall.


In middle age, Columbanus felt a call to missionary life. With twelve companions (Saint Attala, Columbanus the Younger, Cummain, Domgal, Eogain, Eunan, Saint Gall, Gurgano, Libran, Lua, Sigisbert and Waldoleno) he travelled to Scotland, England, and then to France in 585. The area, though nominally Christian, had fallen far from the faith, but were ready for missionaries, and they had some success. They were warmly greeted at the court of Gontram, and king of Burgundy invited the band to stay. They chose the half-ruined Roman fortress of Annegray in the Vosges Mountains for their new home with Columbanus as their abbot.


The simple lives and obvious holiness of the group drew disciples to join them, and the sick to be healed by their prayers. Columbanus, to find solitude for prayer, often lived for long periods in a cave seven miles from the monastery, using a messenger to stay in touch with his brothers. When the number of new monks over-crowded the old fortress, King Gontram gave them the old castle of Luxeuil to found a new house in 590. Soon after, a third house was founded at Fontaines. Columbanus served as master of them all, and wrote a Rule for them; it incorporated many Celtic practices, was approved by the Council of Macon in 627, but was superseded by the Benedictine.


Problems arose early in the 7th century. Many Frankish bishops objected to a foreign missionary with so much influence, to the Celtic practices he brought, especially those related to Easter, and his independence from them. In 602 he was summoned to appear before them for judgment; instead of appearing, he sent a letter advising them to hold more synods, and to concern themselves with more important things than which rite he used to celebrate Easter. The dispute over Easter continued to years, with Columbanus appealing to multiple popes for help, but was only settled with Columbanus abandoned the Celtic calender when he moved to Italy.


In addition to his problems with the bishops, Columbanus spoke out against vice and corruption in the royal household and court, which was in the midst of a series of complex power grabs. Brunehault stirred up the bishops and nobilty against the abbot; Thierry ordered him to conform to the local ways, and shut up. Columbanus refused, and was briefly imprisoned at Besançon, but he escaped and returned to Luxeuil. Thierry and Brunehault sent an armed force to force him and his foreign monks back to Ireland. As soon as his ship set sail, a storm drove them back to shore; the captain took it as a sign, and set the monks free.


They made their way to King Clothaire at Soissons, Neustria and then the court of King Theodebert of Austrasia in 611. He travelled to Metz, France, then Mainz, Germany, Suevi, Alamanni, and finally Lake Zurich. Their evangelization work there was unsuccessful, and the group passed on to Arbon, then Bregenz, and then Lake Constance. Saint Gall, who knew the local language best, took the lead in this region; many were converted to the faith, and the group founded a new monastery as their home and base. However, a year later political upheaval caused Columbanus to cross the Alps into Italy, arriving in Milan in 612. The Christian royal family treated him well, and he preached and wrote against Arianism and Nestorianism. In gratitude, the Lombard king gave him a tract of land call Bobbio between Milan and Genoa in Italy. There he rebuilt a half-ruined church of Saint Peter, and around it he founded an abbey that was to be the source for evangelization throughout northern Italy for centuries to come.


Columbanus always enjoyed being in the forests and caves, and as he walked through the woods, birds and squirrels would ride on his shoulders. Toward the end of his life came word that his old enemies were dead, and his brothers wanted him to come back north, but he declined. Knowing that his time was almost done, he retired to a cave for solitude, and died as he had predicted. His influence continued for centuries as those he converted handed on the faith, the brothers he taught evanglized untold numbers more, and his brother monks founded over one hundred monasteries to protect learning and spread the faith.


Miracles ascribed to Columbanus include -


• to obtain food for a sick brother monk, he cured the wife of the donor


• once when he was surrounded by wolves, he simply walked through them


• at one point he needed a cave for his solitary prayers; a bear lived there; when Columbanus asked, the bear left


• when he needed water in order to live in the cave, a spring appeared nearby


• when the Luxeuil Abbey granary ran empty, Columbanus prayed over it and it refilled


• he multiplied bread and beer for his community


• he cured several sick monks, who then got straight out of bed to reap the monastery's harvest


• gave sight to a blind man at Orleans


• he destroyed a vat of beer being prepared for a pagan festival by breathing on it


• when the monastery needed help in the fields, he tamed a bear, and yoked it to a plough


Born

543 at West Leinster, Ireland


Died

• 21 November 615 in a cave at Bobbio, Italy of natural causes

• interred at the abbey church of Bobbio

• miracles reported at his tomb

• relics re-interred in a new altar there in 1482

• altar and shrine were refurbished and the relics re-interred in the early 20th century


Patronage

• against floods

• Bobbio, Italy

• Missionary Society of Saint Columban

• motorcyclists




Pope Saint Clement I

✠ புனித முதலாம் கிளமெண்ட் ✠

( St. Clement I )

4ஆம் திருத்தந்தை :

(4th Pope)

பிறப்பு : கி. பி. முதலாம் நூற்றாண்டு

உரோமை, உரோமைப் பேரரசு

இறப்பு : மரபுப்படி 99 அல்லது 101

கெர்சொனேசுஸ் டாவுரிக்கா (இன்றைய கிரிமேயா, உக்ரேய்ன்)

புனித முதலாம் கிளமெண்ட், கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையால் நான்காம் திருத்தந்தையாகக் கருதப்படுகிறார். இவரை "ரோம் நகர் புனித கிளமெண்ட்" என்று அழைப்பதும் உண்டு. இவர் தொடக்க காலத் திருச்சபையின் தலைசிறந்த இறையியல் வல்லுநராய் இருப்பதால் "முதல் திருத்தூதுத் தந்தை" (Frist Apostolic Father) என்றும் அறியப்படுகிறார்.

முதலாம் கிளமெண்டின் வாழ்க்கை பற்றி அதிக விவரங்கள் தெரியவில்லை. கிளமெண்டு புனித பேதுருவிடமிருந்து திருப்பொழிவு பெற்றார்; முதல் நூற்றாண்டின் கடைசிப் பகுதியில் ரோமத் திருச்சபையின் தலைவர்களுள் ஒருவராகத் திகழ்ந்தார்.

தொடக்க காலத் திருச்சபை எழுத்தாளர்கள் பொதுவாக கிளமெண்டைப் புனித பேதுருவுக்குப் பின் மூன்றாம் அல்லது நான்காம் திருத்தந்தையாக வரிசைப்படுத்துகின்றனர். தெர்த்துல்லியன் கருத்துப்படி, கிளமெண்டு புனித பேதுருவுக்குப் பின் திருத்தந்தையாகப் பொறுபேற்றார். இக்குழப்பநிலை நிலவுவதற்கு ஒரு முக்கிய காரணம் முதல் நூற்றாண்டில் ஆயர் பதவி துல்லியமாக வரையறுக்கப்பட்டு, ஒரு மறைமாவட்டத்துக்கு ஒருவரே ஆயராக இருக்க முடியும் என்ற கருத்து தெளிவாக எழாததுதான்.

திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் கிளமெண்டின் எழுத்துப் படைப்பாக இன்று உள்ளது அவர் கொரிந்தியருக்கு எழுதிய மடல் ஆகும். அது சுமார் 96ல் எழுதப்பட்டது. புதிய ஏற்பாட்டைத் தவிர்த்து, தொடக்க காலத்தில் உருவான எழுத்துப் படையல்களுள் இதுவே மிக்க பழமையானது ஆகும். கொரிந்து திருச்சபைத் தலைவர்கள் சிலருக்கிடையே ஏற்பட்ட விவாதத்தைத் தொடர்ந்து அவர்களுள் சிலர் பதவி நீக்கப்பட்டனர். இச்சிக்கல் குறித்துத் தீர்ப்பு வழங்குவதாக கிளமெண்டின் மடல் உள்ளது. திருச்சபையில் "ஆயர்கள்" "திருத்தொண்டர்கள்" என்னும் திருப்பணியாளர்கள் திருத்தூதர்களால் நியமிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள் ஆதலால் அதிகாரம் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள் என்று கிளமெண்ட் எடுத்துக் கூறினார்.

கிளமெண்டின் கடிதம் திருச்சபைகளில் புதிய ஏற்பாட்டுக் கடிதங்கள் போலவே வாசிக்கப்பட்டது. ஆயர்கள் (மூப்பர்கள்) திருச்சபையில் திருத்தூதர்களிடமிருந்து வரும் அதிகாரத்தைக் கொண்டுள்ளனர் என்று வலியுறுத்திய முதல் வல்லுநர் கிளமெண்ட் தான்.

கிளமெண்ட் இரண்டாம் கடிதம் ஒன்றினையும் எழுதினார் என்றொரு மரபு உண்டு. ஆயினும் அண்மைக்கால அறிஞர்கள், அக்கடிதத்தை எழுதியவர் வேறொருவர் என்று கருதுகின்றனர்.

நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் அளவில் தொடங்கிய ஒரு மரபின்படி, கிளமெண்ட் ட்ரேஜன் மன்னன் காலத்தில் தம் கிறித்த நம்பிக்கையை முன்னிட்டுச் சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டார். அங்கும் அவர் பிற சிறைக்கைதிகளுக்குக் கிறிஸ்துவின் செய்தியை அறிவித்தார். பின்னர் அவரை ஒரு நங்கூரத்தில் கட்டி கடலில் ஆழ்த்திக் கொன்றுவிட்டார்கள்.

பல கிறிஸ்தவ சபைகள் கிளமெண்டைப் புனிதராகப் போற்றுகின்றன. ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை, லூதரன் சபை, மற்றும் ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சபை அவரது விழாவை நவம்பர் 23ஆம் நாளும், கீழை மரபுவழித் திருச்சபைகள் சில நவம்பர் 24, வேறு சில நவம்பர் 25 ஆகிய நாள்களில் கொண்டாடுகின்றன.

புனித பவுல் பிலிப்பியருக்கு எழுதிய திருமுகத்தில் "கிளமந்து" என்னும் ஓர் உடனுழைப்பாளர் பற்றிப் பேசுகிறார் (பிலிப்பியர் 4:3). அவர் திருத்தந்தை கிளமெண்டாக இருக்கலாம் என்று கி.பி. 3 மற்றும் நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டு ஆசிரியர்கள் கருதுகிறார்கள். அவர்களுள் ஒரிஜென், யூசேபியஸ், ஜெரோம் போன்றோர் அடங்குவர்.

"திருத்தந்தையர் நூல்" (Liber Pontificalis) என்னும் பண்டைக்கால நூலின்படி, கிளமெண்ட் பேதுருவை அறிந்திருந்தார். கிரேக்க நாட்டில் ட்ரேஜன் மன்னனின் ஆட்சிக்கால மூன்றாம் ஆண்டில் (அதாவது கி.பி. 101இல்) இறந்தார்.

Also known as

• Clement of Rome

• Clemens Romanus





Profile

Convert, brought to Christianity either by Saint Peter or by Saint Paul. One of the Seventy Apostles. Consecrated as a bishop by Saint Peter the Apostle. Mentioned in Philippians 4:3. Fourth Pope. Apostolic Father. The Basilica of Saint Clement in Rome, Italy, one of the earliest parish churches in the city, is probably built on the site of Clement's home. Author of the Epistle to the Corinthians. His name occurs in the Canon of the Mass. Origen and Saint Jerome identify him as working with Saint Paul the Apostle. Martyred in the persecutions of Trajan.


Born

Rome, Italy


Papal Ascension

c.88


Died

• martyred c.101

• relics in the basilica of Saint Clement


Patronage

• boatmen, mariners, sailors, watermen

• marble workers

• sick children

• stonecutters

• Aarhus, Denmark, diocese of

• Dundee, Scotland

• Steenwijk, Netherlands

• Velletri, Italy


Representation

• anchor (miraculously freed when cast into the sea with an anchor bound to him)

• drowning man

• kneeling before an altar




Blessed Miguel Agustín Pro


Profile

Son of a mining engineer. From childhood he was known for high spirits and cheerfulness, and he grew up in a pious home. Born to privilege, he had great affinity for the poor and working classes. Victim of recurring stomach disorder. Jesuit novice at 20. Exiled during the Mexican Revolution, he continued his studies abroad.



Ordained in Belgium in 1925 at age 36, he returned to Mexico in 1926, a time when churches were closed, priests were in hiding, and persecution of the Church was government policy. Father Miguel used disguises to conduct an underground ministry, bringing the comfort of charity and the sacraments to the covert faithful.


Falsely accused in 1927 of a bombing attempt, Pro became a wanted man, was betrayed to the police, and without trial, he was sentenced to death. The photograph on this page was taken the day of his martyrdom. As he was about to be shot, he forgave his executioners, refused a blindfold, and died shouting "Long live Christ the King!" The government prohibited a public funeral, but the faithful lined the streets when his body passed.


Born

13 January 1891 at Guadalupe, Zacatecas, Mexico


Died

shot by firing squad on 23 November 1927 in Mexico City, Mexico


Beatified

25 September 1988 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Enrichetta Alfieri


Also known as

• Sister Maria Angela

• Henrietta Alfieri

• prisoner 3209

• Mother of San Vittore

• Angel of San Vittore

• La Mamma di San Vittore



Profile

From childhood Enrichetta felt a call to religious life, and joined the Sisters of Charity of Saint Joan Antida Thouret on 20 December 1911. She worked as a kindergarten teacher in Vercelli, Italy, but was forced to quit when she developed Pott's disease, a form of tuberculosis of the spine, in 1917. On 25 February 1923 she was miraculously cured by a pilgrimage to Lourdes, France through the intercession of Mary Immaculate.


She recovered so completely that on 24 May 1923 Sisters Maria Angela was assigned to prison ministry at San Vittore Prison in Milan, Italy. Her work with the prisoners was a great success, and she became known as the Mother and Angel of San Vittore, and was named the superior of the Sisters there in 1939.


She was there when it became an SS headquarters and prison for Jews, priests, nuns and resistance workers who were fighting the Axis powers of World War II. She and the Sisters helped them by smuggling in supplies, smuggling out messages and working with Church authorities to intervene for the prisoners, saving many in the process. On 23 September 1944 a message from a prisoner was intercepted that was director to Enrichetta, and she was arrested for spying and sentenced to death or imprisonment in Germany. Church officials, including Blessed Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster, Archbishop of Milan, intervened for her, and she was transferred to the Sisters' house in Brescia, Italy where she wrote a memoir of her imprisonment. On 7 May 1945, at the end of the war, she was re-assigned to the San Vittore where she administered to prisoners of war - including the former jailers.


Born

23 February 1891 in Borgo Vercelli, Vercelli, Italy


Died

23 November 1951 in Milan, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

26 June 2011 by Pope Benedict XVI



Blessed Margaret of Savoy


Also known as

Margarita, Margherita, Marguerite



Profile

Born to the nobility, daughter of Amadeo of Savoy, Lord of Piedmont and titular Prince of Achaea, and Catherine of Geneva. Married to Theodore Paleologus, marquis of Montferrat on 17 January 1403. Widowed in 1418. Declined a marriage offer from Philip, Visconti of Milan. Influenced by Saint Vincent Ferrer, she became a Dominican tertiary. In 1426 she founded a house at Alba, Liguria and served as its Prioress. In 1451, 25 years later, she received papal approval for the congregation from Pope Eugene IV. She was subject to visions and ecstasies, and was a reputed miracle worker. Her later years were spent under a cloud of controversy as her house faced false charges of doctrinal irregularities, and she charges of being overly strict with her nuns.


Born

21 June 1382 at Pignerol, Italy


Died

• 23 November 1464 at Alba, Piedmont, Italy of natural causes

• re-interred at her monastery in 1481


Beatified

9 October 1669 by Pope Clement IX (cultus confirmed)




Saint Felicity of Rome


Also known as

Felicitas



Profile

Rich, noble widow. Mother of seven sons, all of whom were martyred - Alexander, Vitalis, Martial, Januarius, Felix, Philip and Silvanus.


Felicity was devoted to charity and caring for the poor. She was arrested for her faith and ordered to worship pagan gods; she refused. Her sons were arrested and given the same order; they refused. After a series of appeals, all of which were turned down, they were all ordered executed by emperor Antoninus. Felicity was forced to watch as her children were murdered one by one; after each one she was given the chance to denouce her faith. Martyr.


Died

• beheaded in 165 at Rome, Italy

• buried in the cemetery of Maximus beside the Via Salaria, Rome

• relics in Capuchin church at Montefiascone, Tuscany, Italy


Patronage

• against the death of children

• against sterility

• martyrs

• to have male children

• widows

• Badia di Cava, Italy, Abbey of




Saint Trudo of Hesbaye


Also known as

• Apostle of Hasbein

• Tron, Trond, Trudjen, Trudon, Trutjen, Truyen


Profile

Son of Blessed Adela. Related to the dukes of Austrasia. Benedictine monk under Saint Remaclus. Studied at the cathedral at Metz, France. Ordained by Saint Clodulf of Metz. Noted preacher. Built a church on the land around his family's home c.656, and had it blessed by Saint Theodard of Liege in the names of Saint Quintinus and Saint Remigius of Rheims. Evangelized the throughout the area of Hasbein, and as the converts grew he was forced to build a monastery which was later named for him. Founded a convent near Bruges, Belgium c.660. The assorted movements of his relics have led to several local lists having different dates for his memorial.


Born

7th century in Hasbein (Hasbeye), Brabant province


Died

• c.695 of natural causes

• buried in the church of Saint Quintinus and Saint Remigius that he had built

• relics translated in 880

• relics later hidden to save them from Norman incursions, and lost

• relics re-discovered in 1169



Saint Clement of Metz


Profile

Bishop of Metz, France; tradition says he was sent there as a missionary by Saint Peter the Apostle.


Legend says that when Clement arrived in Metz, the area was besieged by the Graoully, a large, poison-breathed serpent that lived in a local Roman amphitheatre with an army of snakes. Clement chased away the snakes and banished the Graoully by making the Sign of the Cross at them. This led to the conversion of the whole town.



Representation

• with a dragon

• raising a girl (often dressed as a princess) from the dead (refers to converting a king by bringing his daughter back to life)

• with a stag kneeling at his feet (refers to a stag hiding from hunters by runnning to him for sanctuary which convinced the hunters of Clement's holiness and led to their conversion)



Saint Amphilocus of Iconium


Also known as

Amfilokius, Amphilochius, Anfiloquio, Anfilochio



Profile

Cousin and friend of Saint Gregory Nazianus; close friend of Saint Basil the Great. Studied law and rhetoric in Constantinople, and taught rhetoic there. Bishop of Iconium (modern Konya, Turkey) in 374. Fought against heresies of Arianism, the Manichaeans and the Messalians. Attended the Council of Constantinople in 381. Presided over the synod in Sida, Pamphylia in 394. He wrote poetry in classical Greek, and his letters to Gregory and Basil have survived to today.


Born

339 in Cappadocia, Asia Minor (in modern Turkey)


Died

400 of natural causes



Saint Loëvan of Brittany


Also known as

Laouénan, Louénan, Lavan


Additional Memorials

• 23 January (in Brittany)

• 2nd Sunday in July (procession in Tréflaouénan, France)


Profile

Monk and then abbot of the monastery of Saint Tudwals of Tréguier in Brittany (in modern France) c.528 to c.564 from where he evangalized the region.


Born

early 6th century Britain


Died

• c.564 of natural causes

• relics enshrined in Tréflaouénan, France until the 16th century

• it became the custom to swear oaths involving credit and debt on the relics of Saint Loëvan


Patronage

Tréflaouénan, France



Saint Alexander Newski


Also known as

• Alexander Nevski

• Alexander Nevsky



Additional Memorials

• 30 August (translation of relics)

• 23 May (Russian Orthodox as one of the saints of Rostov and Yaroslavl)


Profile

Grand Duke of Novgorod and Kiev. He defeated the Swedes in battle on the River Neva; from that he derived his surname of Newski (Nevski). Defended his land against invading Tatars. Confessor of the faith.


Born

1219 in Vladimir, Russia


Died

• 1263 in Gorodetz, Russia

• relics at Saint Petersburg, Russia



Saint Cecilia Yu Sosa


Also known as

• Caecilia Yu So-Sa

• Jechillia Yu So-Sa



Additional Memorial

20 September as one of the Marytrs of Korea


Profile

Married lay woman in the apostolic vicariate of Korea. Mother of Saint Paul Chong Hasang and Saint Jung Hye. Martyr.


Born

1761 in Seoul, South Korea


Died

23 November 1839 in Bo-jeong Prison, Seoul, South Korea of injuries following repeated whippings


Canonized

6 May 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Falitrus of Chabris


Also known as

Faletrius, Faletrus, Falier, Falère, Phaletrius, Phalier, Phalitrus


Profile

Pilgrim from Limoges, France to Jerusalem. Monk at Issoudun, France. Hermit at Chabris, France.


Born

latter 5th century Gaul (in modern France)


Died

• 525 of natural causes

• his tomb became a pilgrimage site and a place of healing for sick children

• relics burned by Huguenots


Patronage

sick children



Blessed Detlev of Ratzeburg


Also known as

• Detlev of Parkentin

• Detlef of...


Profile

Born to the nobility. Premonstratensian canon. Canon of the Premonstratensian monastery in Ratzeburg (in modern Germany). Bishop of Ratzeburg. Lived as a simple friar, but was known for his charity.


Born

14th century Mecklenburg (in modern Germany)


Died

23 November 1419 of natural causes



Blessed Felícitas Cendoya Araquistain


Also known as

Sister María Cecilia


Profile

Member of the Visitation Nuns. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

10 January 1910 in Azpeitia, Guipúzcoa, Spain


Died

23 November 1936 in Madrid, Spain


Beatified

10 May 1998 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Gregory of Girgenti


Also known as

Gregory of Agrigentum


Profile

Bishop of Girgenti, Italy. Wrote a commentary on the book of Ecclesiastes, which has survived, and was a noted Bible teacher, explaining the Scriptures in a plain way to plain people.


Born

Girgenti, Sicily, Italy


Died

c.638 of natural causes



Saint Adalbert of Casauria


Also known as

Adalbert of Monte Caramanico


Profile

Benedictine monk at Cassoria, Abruzzi, Italy. Worked for a while with Saint Guy of Casauria. Retired to live as a hermit on Mount Caramanico where he eventually founded the abbey of Saint Nicholas.


Died

c.1045 of natural causes



Saint Mustiola of Chiusi


Profile

Cousin of Emperor Claudius. Martyred with Saint Irenaeus of Chiusi for ministering to Christian prisoners, and burying martyrs.


Died

273 at Chiusi, Tuscany, Italy


Patronage

Chiusi, Italy




Saint Paulinus of Whitland


Also known as

• Paulinus of Wales

• Paulhen, Pewlin, Polin


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Illtyd. Monk. Founded the monastery of Whitland in Wales and served as its abbot. Spritual teacher of Saint David of Wales and Saint Teilo of Llandaff.


Died

c.505



Saint Rachildis of Saint-Gall


Also known as

Richildis


Profile

Benedictine anchoress who lived walled up in a cell near Saint Wiborada, under obedience to the abbot of Saint Gall in Switzerland.


Died

c.946 of natural causes



Saint Sisinius of Cyzicus


Also known as

Sisinnio, Sisinio


Profile

Bishop. Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

stabbed with a sword in Cyzicus in the Hellespont in the early 4th century



Saint Lucretia of Mérida


Also known as

Lucrezia


Profile

Consecrated virgin. Martyred in a period of imperial Roman persecution.


Died

306 in Mérida, Spain



Saint Wilfetrudis of Nivelles


Profile

Niece of Saint Gertrude of Nivelles. Abbess of the abbey in Nivelles, Belgium.


Died

c.670



Saint Paternian of Fano


Profile

Fled into the mountains for a period to escape the persecutions of Diocletian. Bishop of Fano, Italy.


Died

c.343



Saint Severin of Paris


Also known as

Severino, Severinus


Profile

Sixth-century hermit who lived in a cell in Paris, France.



Blessed Guy of Casauria


Profile

Benedictine monk at Farfa. Abbot of Casauria, Italy.


Died

1045



Saint Faustina of Alexandria


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Alexandria, Egypt



Saint Augusta of Alexandria


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Alexandria, Egypt