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22 February 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 23

 St. Martha


Feastday: February 23


Virgin martyr of Spain. She was beheaded at Astorga, Spain, and her relics were enshrined in the abbey of Ribas de Sil and at Ters.




St. Zebinus


Feastday: February 23

Death: 5th century


A hermit who lived in Syria.




St. Cerneuf


Feastday: February 23



Serenus, the Gardener, also known as Cerneuf, according to his probably fictious legend, was born in Greece. He imigrated to Sirmium (Metrovica, Yugoslavia), and was known for his gardening. He went into hiding for a time to escape a persecution of Christians that had just begun, and on his return, rebuked a lady for walking in his garden at an unseemly time. She reported to her husband that he had insulted her, and the husband, a member of the imperial guards, reported the matter to Emperor Maximian. Upon orders from the Emperor the governor investigated the matter, found Serenus innocent of insulting the woman, but while examining him, found that he was a Christian. When Serenus refused to sacrifice to pagan gods, he was beheaded. His feast day is February 23rd.


Serenus the Gardener, also known as "Serenus of Billom", "Sirenatus", and, in French, French: Cerneuf is a 4th-century martyr who is venerated by the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches.



Biography

According to pious legend, he was born in Greece;[3] quit his life there and decided to live a celibate life of penance and prayer; emigrated to Sirmium, Pannonia in the Roman Empire (presently Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia); purchased, cultivated, and lived off of a garden there; and was known for his horticultural skill. He rebuked the wife of a Roman imperial guard for walking in his garden with her daughters, this purportedly being contrary to the mores of the time without male accompaniment. Her pride wounded, the wife informed her husband of the affair in writing, and he reported Serenus to Emperor Maximian, who gave the husband a letter to deliver to the governor of Pannonia that permitted the governor to remedy the supposed injustice. On the testimony of Serenus to the governor, the husband retracted his accusation and the governor judged Serenus innocent of insulting the wife. However, the governor suspected from the words of Serenus' testimony that he might be a Christian, and inquired of his religion. When Serenus testified to being one and refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods, the governor had him decapitated on 23 February 307.[1][2]


Parts of this narrative are probably fictitious,[4] however according to Butler there may possibly be some historical basis to the story.[5]


A tradition centered in Clermont-Ferrand, France maintains that Austremonius sent Serenus to evangelize Thiers, also in Auvergne.[6]


Veneration


The Church of Saint-Cerneuf à Billom

The commune of Billom, Auvergne, France claimed a portion of Serenus' relics.[5] Serenus became known as "Saint Cerneuf" in France, and "L'église Saint-Cerneuf" (the Church of Saint Serenus" in Billom is dedicated to him)



St. Jurmin


Feastday: February 23

Death: 7th century


Prince of East Anglia, England, and a relative of King Anna . He is honored as a confessor, and his relics were enshrined at Bury St. Edmunds.


Anna (or Onna; killed 653 or 654) was king of East Anglia from the early 640s until his death.


He was a member of the Wuffingas family, the ruling dynasty of the East Angles, and one of the three sons of Eni who ruled the kingdom of East Anglia, succeeding some time after Ecgric was killed in battle by Penda of Mercia. Anna was praised by Bede for his devotion to Christianity and was renowned for the saintliness of his family: his son Jurmin and all his daughters – Seaxburh, Æthelthryth, Æthelburh and possibly a fourth, Wihtburh – were canonised.


Little is known of Anna's life or his reign, as few records have survived from this period. In 631 he may have been at Exning, close to the Devil's Dyke. In 645 Cenwalh of Wessex was driven from his kingdom by Penda and, due to Anna's influence, he was converted to Christianity while living as an exile at the East Anglian court. Upon his return from exile, Cenwalh re-established Christianity in his own kingdom and the people of Wessex then remained firmly Christian.


Around 651 the land around Ely was absorbed into East Anglia, following the marriage of Anna's daughter Æthelthryth. Anna richly endowed the coastal monastery at Cnobheresburg. In 651, in the aftermath of an attack by Penda on Cnobheresburg, Anna was forced to flee into exile, perhaps to the western kingdom of the Magonsæte. He returned to East Anglia in about 653, but soon afterwards the kingdom was attacked again by Penda and at the Battle of Bulcamp the East Anglian army, led by Anna, was defeated by the Mercians, and both Anna and his son Jurmin were killed. Anna was succeeded by his brother, Æthelhere. Botolph's monastery at Iken may have been built in commemoration of the king. After Anna's reign, East Anglia seems to have been eclipsed by its more powerful neighbour, Mercia.




Bl. Daniel Brottier


Feastday: February 23

Birth: 1876

Death: 1936

Beatified: November 25, 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Daniel Jules Alexis Brottier, C.S.Sp. (September 7, 1876 - February 28, 1936) was a French Roman Catholic priest in the Congregation of the Holy Ghost. He was awarded the Croix de guerre and the Légion d'honneur for his services as a chaplain during World War I, did missionary work in Senegal, and administered an orphanage in Auteuil, a suburb of Paris. He was declared venerable in 1983, and beatified on November 25, 1984, by Pope John Paul II.


Daniel Jules Alexis Brottier, C.S.Sp. (7 September 1876 – 28 February 1936), was a French Roman Catholic priest in the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (who currently refer to themselves as Spiritans). He was awarded the Croix de guerre and the Légion d'honneur for his services as a chaplain during World War I, did missionary work in Senegal, and administered an orphanage in Auteuil, a suburb of Paris. He was declared venerable in 1983, and then beatified on the 25 November 1984, by Pope John Paul II.


Early life

Brottier was born in La Ferté-Saint-Cyr, a commune in the Loir-et-Cher Department of France on 7 September 1876, the second son of Jean-Baptiste Brottier, coachman for the Marquis Durfort, and his wife Herminie (née Bouthe).[1] A story from his childhood recounts that his mother asked him what he would like to be when he grew up. Daniel's answer was, "I won't be either a general or a pastry chef—I will be the Pope!" His mother reminded him that to be the pope, he would first have to become a priest. Little Daniel piped up, "Well, then I'll become a priest!" [a] At the age of 10, Brottier made his First Communion, and enrolled a year later in the minor seminary at Blois. In 1896, at the age of 20, he did one year of military service at Blois.[2] He was ordained on 22 October 1899, after which he was assigned to teach for three years at a secondary school in Pontlevoy, France.[1]


Missionary work in Africa


A young Father Brottier in 1903, ready to set out for Senegal, posed for a picture with his parents, Jean-Baptiste and Herminie

Restless in his life as a teacher and determined to be a missionary, the young Abbé Brottier joined the Congregation of the Holy Spirit at Orly in 1902. After completing his novitiate, Brottier was sent by the congregation to serve as a vicar in a mission parish in Saint-Louis, Senegal in 1903. He was disappointed that he had been assigned to a city rather than the more difficult interior.[3]


Nevertheless, Brottier immediately set to work. He gave weekly instructions to secondary school students, founded a center for child welfare, and published a parish bulletin, The Echo of St. Louis.[3] His health suffered from the climate, however, and he spent a six-month period of convalescence in France in 1906.[1] In 1911 his poor health would force him to return to France for good.[4]


After his final departure from Senegal, Brottier spent a brief, but personally significant, stay at the Trappist monastery at Lérins—the same island monastery associated with Saint Patrick's preparation for evangelization in Ireland. Brottier had felt called to a more contemplative life than he had been living as a missionary in Africa, but the stay at Lérins rid him of that idea. As Brottier wrote to his sisters, "I lived unforgettable hours in the recollection of the cloister in an atmosphere of sacrifice and immolation. But the lack of sleep, and especially of food, wore me down, and after a few days I had to yield to the evidence: I was not made for this kind of life".[3]


Even after he had left Senegal, Brottier was asked by Bishop Hyacinthe Jalabert, the Apostolic Vicar of Senegal, to conduct a fund-raising campaign to build a cathedral in Dakar.[1] To this end, Brottier was appointed the Vicar General of Dakar, even though he was residing in Paris.[3] Brottier focused on this project for seven years over two periods (i.e., 1911–1914 and 1919–1923), the interlude being a result of the First World War.[3] The so-called "African Memorial Cathedral" was consecrated on February 2, 1936, just a few weeks before Brottier's death.


My secret is this: help yourself and heaven will help you. ... I have no other secret. If the good God worked miracles [at Auteuil], through Thérèse's intercession, I think I can say in all justice that we did everything, humanly speaking, to be deserving, and that they were the divine reward of our work, prayers and trust in providence.


—Daniel Brottier[3]

Service during World War I

At the outbreak of the First World War, Brottier became a volunteer chaplain for France's 121st Infantry Regiment. He was cited six times for bravery, and awarded the Croix de guerre and the Légion d'honneur. He attributed his survival on the front lines to the intercession of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, and built a chapel for her at Auteuil when she was canonized: the first church dedicated to the saint.[5] After the war, Brottier founded the National Union of Servicemen (L'Union Nationale des Combattants), an organization of French veterans of various conflicts.[1]


Work with the orphans of Auteuil

In November 1923, the Cardinal Archbishop of Paris, Louis-Ernest Dubois, asked the Congregation of the Holy Spirit to assume charge of an orphanage in an arrondissement of Paris, the Orphan Apprentices of Auteuil. Brottier, with his associate chaplain Yves Pichon, labored for 13 years to expand the facilities and worked for the welfare of the orphans. He dedicated his work to two aims: to save the most poor and unfortunate, and to dedicate those efforts to the intercession of Saint Thérèse.[1] In 1933, Brottier pioneered a program that placed the children in the households of Catholic paysans associated with the Orphan Apprentices. The fruit of his labors at Auteuil included the construction of workshops, opening a printing house and a cinema, and launching magazines. At the time of his arrival, the facility was in charge of 140 orphans; when Brottier died, there were more than 1,400.[1]


Particularly notable of Brottier's work with the orphans of Auteuil, and perhaps of his work in general, was his eagerness to expand to previously unexplored means of seeking financial support. An example of this is that he mastered the art of the camera and offered instruction on film making to the children. He even produced a popular film on the life of his personal patron, Saint Thérèse.[3]


Brottier died on 28 February 1936 in the Hospital of St. Joseph in Paris.[1] Fifteen thousand Parisians attended his funeral Mass.[2] He was buried in the Chapel of St. Thérèse in Auteuil on 5 April 1936.[1]


Veneration

Brottier was declared venerable on 13 January 1983 with a decree of heroic virtue by Pope John Paul II. He was beatified by John Paul II in Paris on 25 November 1984.[4] The cause for his canonization was greatly advanced by the claim, in 1962, that his body was as intact as on the day of his burial.[2] In addition, many miracles have been attributed to his intercession.[3] His feast day is celebrated by the Spiritan Fathers on 28 February



Saint Polycarp of Smyrna

புனிதர் பொலிகார்ப் 


(St. Polycarp)

மறைசாட்சி, திருச்சபை தந்தையர், ஆயர்:

(Martyr, Church Father and Bishop)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 69

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 156

ஸ்மைரனா, ஆசியா, ரோமப் பேரரசு

(Smyrna, Asia, Roman Empire)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:


கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை


(Roman Catholic Church)


கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை


(Eastern Orthodox Church)


ஆங்கிலிக்கன் ஒன்றியம்


(Anglican Communion)


லூதரனியம்


(Lutheran Church)


ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை


(Oriental Orthodox Church)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஃபெப்ரவரி 23


சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை :

பாலியம் அணிந்தவாறு, ஒரு நூலினை ஏந்தியவாறு

பாதுகாவல்:

காது வலியால் அவதியுறுவோர், இரத்தக்கழிசல்


குறிப்பிடத்தக்க படைப்புகள்:


பொலிகார்ப் பிலிப்பியர்களுக்கு எழுதிய திருமுகம்


புனிதர் பொலிகார்ப், கி.பி. 2ம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்த, “ஸ்மைரனா” (Smyrna) நகரின் ஆயராவார். “பொலிகார்ப்பின் மறைசாட்சியம்” (Martyrdom of Polycarp) என்னும் நூலின்படி, அடுக்கப்பட்ட விரகுகளின்மீது இவரை வைத்து உயிருடன் தீயிட்டு கொளுத்த முயன்றபோது, தீ இவரை தொட தவறியதால், இவர் கத்தியால் குத்திக் கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார். கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை, கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை, ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை, ஆங்கிலிக்கன் மற்றும் லூதரனியம் இவரை புனிதர் என ஏற்கின்றன.


இவரை “திருத்தூதர் யோவானின்” (John the Apostle) சீடர் என “இரனேயுஸ்” (Irenaeus) மற்றும் “டேர்டுல்லியன்” (Tertullian) ஆகியோர் குறிக்கின்றனர். பொலிகார்ப், யோவானின் சீடர் என்றும், யோவானே இவரை ஸ்மைர்னா நகரின் ஆயராக திருப்பொழிவு செய்தார் எனவும் புனிதர் ஜெரோம் (Saint Jerome) கூறியுள்ளார்.


“ரோமின் கிளமெண்ட்” (Clement of Rome) மற்றும் “அந்தியோக்குவின் இஞ்ஞாசியார்” (Ignatius of Antioch) ஆகியோரோடு புனித பொலிகார்ப்பும், அப்போஸ்தலிக்க தந்தையர்களுல் (Apostolic Fathers) மிக முக்கியமானவராகக் கருதப்படுகின்றார்.


இவரால் எழுதப்பட்டதாக தற்போது உள்ள ஒரே ஆவணம், பொலிகார்ப் பிலிப்பியர்களுக்கு எழுதிய திருமுகம் (Letter to the Philippians) ஆகும். இதனை முதன் முதலில் பதிவு செய்தவர் இரனேயு (Irenaeus of Lyons) ஆவார்.


பொலிகார்ப், ஆரம்பகால கிறிஸ்தவ திருச்சபை வரலாற்றில் ஒரு முக்கியமான இடத்தை ஆக்கிரமித்துள்ளார். ஆரம்பகால கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் பலருள் இவரது எழுத்துக்கள் இன்னமும் இருக்கின்றன. இவர், கிறிஸ்தவ திருச்சபைகளை நிறுவுவதில், பெரும் பங்களிப்பாக இருந்த ஒரு முக்கிய சபையின் மூப்பராவார். முக்கிய மரபுகளைக் கொண்டிருந்த இவருடைய சகாப்தம் அனைத்து திருச்சபைகளாலும் பரவலாக ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளப்பட்டன. விவிலிய அறிஞரான “டேவிட் ட்ரோபிக்” (David Trobisch) என்பவரின் கூற்றுப்படி, பொலிகார்ப் புதிய ஏற்பாட்டினை தொகுத்து, திருத்தி, வெளியிட்டவர்களுள் ஒருவராக இருந்திருக்கலாம். இவையனைத்தும், இவரது எழுத்துக்களை பெரும் ஆர்வம் கொண்டவைகளாக ஆக்கின

Profile

Associate of, converted by, and disciple of Saint John the Apostle. Friend of Saint Ignatius of Antioch and Saint Papias; spiritual teacher of Saint Irenaeus of Lyon. Fought Gnosticism. Bishop of Smyrna (modern Izmir, Turkey). Revered Christian leader during the first half of the second century. The Asia Minor churches recognized Polycarp's leadership and chose him representative to Pope Anicetus on the question the date of the Easter celebration. Only one of the many letters written by Polycarp has survived, the one he wrote to the Church of Philippi, Macedonia. At 86, Polycarp was to be burned alive in a stadium in Smyrna; the flames did not harm him and he was finally killed by a dagger, and his body burned. The Acts of Polycarp's martyrdom are the earliest preserved reliable account of a Christian martyr's death. Apostolic Father.



Born

c.69


Died

• stabbed to death c.155 at Smyrna

• body burned


Patronage

• against dysentery

• against earache




Saint Serenus the Gardener


Also known as

• Serenus of Billom

• Cerneuf, Serenusa, Sireno, Sinero, Sirenatus



Additional Memorial

10 May (in Billum, France)


Profile

Serenus abandoned his home and people to live as a hermit in Sirmiun, Pannonia (modern Hungary) where he directed his thought to prayer, his labour to working a garden of fruit and herbs.


One day he found a woman and her daughters walking in the garden around noon. He recommended they withdraw, and return in the cool of the evening, but the way he said it led her to believe he was simply chasing them out. The woman's husband was an imperial guard, and he convinced Emperor Maximian to avenge this imagined insult. Serenus was arrested and brought to trial, but simply repeated what he had said, and was immediately acquitted. However, his demeanor led the judge to suspect that Serenus was a Christian, which was illegal. When questioned about it, Serenus admitted his faith. He was ordered to sacrifice to pagan gods; he refused, and was sentenced to death.


His story was very popular in times past due to his being a simple man brought to ruin not through any fault of his own, but as a result of the arrogance of the ruling class, a theme which has resonated in many an age, and because many writers and preachers liked to use the metaphor of the garden as an example of a proper Christian life.


Born

Greece


Died

beheaded 23 February 303 at Sirmiun, Pannonia (modern Hungary)


Patronage

• bachelors

• falsely accused people

• gardeners



Saint Willigis of Mainz

மைன்ஸ் பேராயர் வில்லிஜிஸ் Willigis von Mainz

பிறப்பு 

10 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, 

நீடர்சாக்சன், ஜெர்மனி

இறப்பு 

23 பிப்ரவரி 1011, 

மைன்ஸ் Mainz, ஜெர்மனி

இவர் ஓர் ஏழைக் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவரது இளம் பருவத்தைப் பற்றி குறிப்புகள் ஏதும் வழங்கப்படவில்லை. 970 ஆம் ஆண்டு அரசர் 2 ஆம் ஓட்டோ என்பவர் இவரை மைசன் Meißen நகருக்கு ஆயராகத் தேர்ந்தெடுத்தார். அதன்பிறகு ஆயர் அரசரின் ஆலோசகராகவும் இருந்தார். பிறகு 975 ஆம் ஆண்டு மைன்ஸ் நகரின் பேராயராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். முதல் ஜெர்மனி ஆயர் என்றழைத்த திருத்தந்தை 5 ஆம் கிரகோர் வில்லிஜிஸை உரோமிற்கு மாற்றினார். 


வில்லிஜிஸ் உரோமையில் 1002 ஆம் ஆண்டு அரசர் 2 ஆம் ஹென்றிக்கு அரசராக முடிசூட்டும் பட்டத்தை முன்னின்று வழிநடத்தினார். அதன்பிறகு அரசர் ஜெர்மனியிலுள்ள பாம்பெர்க்கிற்கு தன் இருப்பிடத்தை மாற்ற தேவையான உதவிகளை வில்லிஜிஸ் செய்துக் கொடுத்தார். பின்னர் ஏழை மக்களின் நல்வாழ்வுக்காக அரசரிடம் பெரிதும் பரிந்து பேசினார். ஒவ்வொரு நாளும் ஏறக்குறைய 30 ஏழைகள் தேவையான அளவு உணவு உட்கொள்ள ஏற்பாடு செய்து உதவினார். இவர் ஏழைகளின் தந்தை என்றழைக்கப்பட்டார். 

இவர் இறந்தபிறகு, மைன்சில் உள்ள புனித ஸ்டீபன் பேராலயத்தில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டு வணக்கம் செலுத்தப்பட்டது. செயின் ஸ்டீபன் ஆலயமானது வில்லிஜிஸ் அவர்கள்தான் ஆயராக இருக்கும் எழுப்பினார் என்று கூறப்படுகின்றது.

Profile

Son of a wheelwright. Well educated. Priest. Canon at Hildesheim, Germany. Noted speaker. Chaplain to Emperor Otto II. Chancellor of Germany in 971. Archbishop of Mainz, Germany in 973. Archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire in 975. Vicar apostolic to Germany in 975, ordained by Pope Benedict VII. He crowned the infant Otto III as Holy Roman Emperor in 983, and served in the regencies of Empress Theophano and Empress Adelaide. Assisted at the consecration of Pope Gregory V in 996. Participated in the synod in 996, and spoke for the return of Saint Adalbert of Prague, whom he had consecrated as bishop, to his diocese. Worked to insure the choice of Emperor Henry II in 1002, and consecrated the the emperor. Presided at the Synod of Frankfort in 1007. He sent missionaries to Scandinavia, founded churches, built roads and bridges, supported artists and monasteries, and rebuilt the cathedral of Mainz. Though he was known as a brilliant statesman and politician, he was a Church man first, and was also known for the care he took in educating priests, and choosing them for their assignments.



Born

at Schoningen, Germany


Died

• 23 February 1011 of natural causes

• interred in the Church of Saint Stephen




Blessed Josephine Vannini


Also known as

• Giuditta Vannini

• Giuseppina Vannini



Profile

Orphaned as a small child. Raised in the Torlonia Conservatory on Via Sant' Onofrio, under the guidance of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul. Entered the Daughters' novitiate in Siena, Italy, but was forced to leave due to poor health.


On retreat in 1891 she met Blessed Louis Tezza, procurator general of the Camillians. He had been thinking of founding a women's community for the care of the sick. He invited Josephine to help establish the new community, she prayed over it, and decided "yes." In 1892 she and two companions received the scapular of Camillian tertiaries, and a year later professed private vows, adding service to the sick, even at risk of their lives. They took their perpetual vows in 1895, and Josephine was elected Superior General. Blessed Louis was sent to Lima, Peru in 1900, responsibility for the new congregation rested with Mother Vannini, and under her leadership the congregation spread to France, Belgium and Argentina.


Born

7 July 1859 at Rome, Italy


Died

23 February 1911 in Rome, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

16 October 1994 by Pope John Paul II


Canonized

on 13 May 2019 Pope Francis promulgated a decree of a miracle received through the intercession of Blessed Josephine



Blessed Ludwik Mzyk


Also known as

• Ludivico Mzyk

• Ludvig Mzyk


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Polish Martyrs



Profile

The fifth of ten children born in the family of a pious coal miner. Early feeling a call to the priesthood, Ludwyk entered the seminary in Heiligenkreuz in his teens; when there was a break in the classes, he would go home to work in the mines to help support his family. Joined the Society of the Divine Word. He continued his theological studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Italy. Ordained a priest on 30 October 1932. Served three years as director of novices at the Chludowie monastery near Poznan, Poland where he taught theology, and became rector of the house. When the German army invaded Poland in 1939, Father Ludwyk came into immediate conflict with the Gestapo for trying to defend his novices against Nazi demands and propaganda. He was arrested on 25 January 1940, and assigned to barracks 7 at the Poznan death camp. Between bouts of torture, Ludwyk ministered to other prisoners until the Nazis finally gave up trying to break him and simply killed him. Martyr.


Born

22 April 1905 in Chorzów, Slaskie, Poland


Died

23 February 1942 in Poznan, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Giovanni Theristi


Additional Memorial

24 February (monastery of Bivongi, Italy)


Also known as

• Giovanni Terestes

• Giovanni Theristus

• John the Reaper



Profile

When his mother was pregnant with Giovanni, she was enslaved and taken to Palermo, Sicily by Saracen raiders; his father was killed in the same attack. At age 14, Giovanni returned to his parent’s home town of Stilo, Italy and was baptized by his bishop, Giovanni, at one of the old monasteries around the town. The area Christians, including the bishop, were surprised and suspicious that a young man dressed as an Arab wanted to become a Christian. As an adult, Giovanni was drawn to religious life, and became an Eastern style monk. He would help reapers in the field and then give all he had earned to the poor. A miracle worker, he once prayed for help to save a harvest that was about to be destroyed by a storm; an angel appeared and instantly harvested the crop, saving the peasants from starving. Founded the monastery at Bivongi, Italy; the house was later re-named in his hounour.


Born

c.995 in Palermo, Italy


Died

• c.1050 in Stilo, Calabria, Italy of natural causes

• relics in the church of San Giovanni Theristi in Stilo, Italy


Patronage

Stilo, Italy



Blessed Alerinus de Rambaldis


Also known as

Alerino Rembaudi



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility, from his youth Alerinus was drawn to religious life. He became a canon of the cathedral of Alba, Italy, and was chosen bishop of Alba by Pope Martin V on 10 September 1419; he led the diocese for over 36 years.


Following a vision, Bishop Alerino rediscovered the lost burial site and relics of Blessed Theobald Roggeri on 31 January 1429; legend says that all the bells of the local churches rang out on their own the next morning. Alerino conducted the Synod of Alba in 1434. He invited the Augustinians to work in his diocese, supported the vocation and work of Blessed Margaret of Savoy, and in 1446 he laid the first stone of her Dominican monastery. On 27 April 1455, he translated the relics of Saint Frontiniano and others to the cathedral in Alba, and proclaimed 27 April to be the feast of the patrons of the city of Alba.


Born

late 14th century in Alba, Cuneo, Italy


Died

21 July 1456 of natural causes



Blessed Rafaela Ybarra Arambarri de Villalonga


Profile

Born to a wealthy and pious family, the daughter of Gutiérrez de Cabiedes and Rosaria de Arambarri y Mancebo. Rafeala was a pious girl, made her first Communion at age 11, and was given to long meditations on the suffering of Christ. In 1861, at age 18, she married the wealthy and pious Giuseppe Vilallonga of Catalonia. The couple had seven children of their own, and took in many relatives who were poor, sick, frail or neglected. In her mid-thirties, and with Giuseppe’s approval, Rafaela took personal vows of poverty, obedience and chastity. Widowed, she spent her life and fortune caring for others. She founded the Institute of the Sisters of Guardian Angels to work with abandoned and neglected children.



Born

16 January 1843 in Bilbao, Vizcaya, Spain


Died

23 February 1900 in Bilbao, Vizcaya, Spain


Beatified

30 September 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Alexander Akimetes


Also known as

Alexandros


Profile

Born to the nobility. Studied in Constantinople. Soldier and officer in the imperial army for four years. Adult convert to Christianity who read himself into the faith, and took his example from the words of Christ to the young rich man - he sold all his goods and became a hermit in Syria for several years. At one point he came back to the city; there he burned a pagan temple, and was imprisoned; he spent his time there bringing his jailers to Christianity. Released, he returned to the life of a hermit for several years, but felt called missionary work, and worked in Antioch, but with no success. Founded monasteries in Mesopotamia, Constantinople and Gomon, and at one point led 400 monks. Converted Rabulas, bishop of Edessa. Alexander began the liturgical service in which his monks sang the Divine Office continuously day and night.


Born

4th century on one of the Aegean Islands of Greece


Died

403 in Gomon of natural causes



Saint Romana


Profile

Daughter of an imperial Roman official, Romana was drawn to Christianity. Around age 16, to avoid marriage, she fled her family home. With the help of an angel, she made it to the cave on Mount Soracte where Pope Saint Sylvester was hiding from the persecutions of Diocletian. She explained to him her desire for Christian religious life; he baptized her and left, leaving her the cave as a home. Her reputation for holiness soon spread, and she attracted so many students that they founded a community around her cave.


While such a saint may well have lived in the cave, and such people certainly attracted would-be students and followers, the tales that grew up around her are likely pious fiction that was later mistaken for history.


Born

c.308


Died

• c.324 in her cave on Mount Soracte near Rome, Italy of natural causes

• her parents were brought to the cave, and buried her there



Saint Milburga

புனித_மில்பர்கா (-715)

பிப்ரவரி 23





இவர் (#StMilburga) இங்கிலாந்தில் உள்ள மெர்சியாவை ஆண்ட ஒரு குறுநில மன்னரின் மகள்.

இவர் சிறு வயது முதலே கடவுள்மீது ஆழமான பற்றுறுதி கொண்டிருந்தவர். அதனால் இவர் வளர்ந்து பெரியவரானதும் புனித பெனடிக்ட் துறவற சபையில் சேர்ந்து, துறவியானார்.

சோபிஷேர் என்ற இடத்தில் துறவுமடத்தைத் தொடங்கிய இவர், அம்மடத்தின் தலைவியாக உயர்ந்தார்.

இவரது பகுதியில் இருந்த விளைநிலங்களில் பறவைகள் புகுந்து, கதிர்களையெல்லாம் நாசம் செய்தன. அப்பொழுது இவர் அதற்காக வேண்ட, பறவைகளின் தொந்தரவு  முற்றிலுமாகக் குறைந்தது.

இப்படிப் பல வல்ல செயல்களைச் செய்த 715 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Milburg, Milburge, Mildburg, Mildburga, Milburgh


Additional Memorial

25 June (translation of relics)


Profile

Daughter of Merewalh, King of Mercia, and Saint Ermenburga. Sister of Saint Mildred and Saint Mildgytha. Took the veil from archbishop Saint Theodore. Benedictine nun. Founded Much Wenlock abbey in Shropshire, England, and was abbess there. Miracle worker. Had a mysterious power over birds; they would avoid damaging the local crops when she asked them to.


Born

7th century England


Died

• 715 at the Much Wenlock Abbey, Shropshire, England of natural causes

• relics re-discovered in 1101 and enshrined in the nearby priory church


Patronage

birds



Blessed Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski


Profile

Ordained on 13 March 1937. Arrested by the Gestapo in 1939, Stefan was shuttled through the concentration camps Fort Seven, Stutthof, Grenzdorf, Oranienburg-Sachsenhausen and finally Dachau. Spiritual leader of other prisoners wherever he was imprisoned. He contracted typhus while working with fellow prisoners dying of the disease, and is thus considered a martyr of charity.



Born

22 January 1913 in Chelmza, Poland


Died

23 February 1945 of typhus at the Dachau concentration camp, Germany


Beatified

7 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II at Torun, Poland



Blessed Nicolas Tabouillot


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Verdun, 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

16 February 1745 in Bar-le-Duc, Meuse, France


Died

23 February 1795 of unspecified disease aboard the prison ship Washington, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Milo of Benevento


Also known as

• Milo of Auvergne

• Milone...


Profile

Studied for the priesthood in Paris, France. Priest in Auvergne, France. Canon of the cathedral of Auvergne. He was the teacher of the young Saint Stephen of Muret. Milo’s reputation for piety led to the people of Benevento, Italy to choose him as their bishop where he served the remaining two years of his life.


Born

Auvergne, France


Died

c.1073 in Benevento, Italy of natural causes



Blessed Giovannina Franchi


Profile

Born to a wealthy family, she grew up wanting and working to help the poor. Nun in the diocese of Como, Italy. Founded the Nursing Sisters of Our Lady of Sorrows.


Born

24 June 1807 in Como, Italy


Died

23 February 1872 in Como, Italy of smallpox


Beatified

20 September 2014 by Pope Francis



Saint Boswell


Also known as

Boisil


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Aidan of Lindisfarne. Monk. Abbot at the abbey of Melrose, Scotland. Teacher and spiritual director of Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne and Saint Eghert. Bible scholar. Had the gift of prophecy. Noted preacher.


Born

Northumbrian (in modern England)


Died

• 661 of the yellow plague

• relics at Durham, England



Blessed Juan Lucas Manzanares


Also known as

Braulio Carlos


Profile

Professed religious in the Brothers of the Christian Schools (De La Salle Brothers). Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

10 December 1913 in Cortiji-Lorca, Murcia, Spain


Died

23 February 1937 in Madrid, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Anselm of Milan


Profile

15th century Franciscan friar. His body is enshrined in the church of Santa Maria della Pace in Milan, Italy, but all records about him have been lost, and we know nothing about him.


Died

1481



Saint Martha of Astorga


Profile

Virgin martyr in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

• beheaded in 250 at Astorga, Spain

• relics enshrined in the abbey of Ribas de Sil and at Ters



Saint Zebinus of Syria


Profile

Hermit in Syria. Spiritual teacher of many monks, including Saint Maro and Saint Polychronius.


Died

5th century of natural causes



Saint Medrald


Also known as

Merald, Merault, Meraut


Profile

Benedictine monk at Saint-Evroult, Ouche, France. Abbot of Vendome, France.


Died

850 of natural causes



Saint Felix of Brescia


Profile

Bishop of Brescia, Italy for 40 years. Fierce opponent of Arianism.


Born

6th century


Died

650



Saint Polycarp of Rome


Profile

Priest in Rome, Italy who was known for his ministry to people imprisoned for their faith.


Died

c.300



Saint Dositheus of Egypt


Profile

Sixth-century desert hermit whose deep prayer life led to deep personal holiness.


Born

Egypt



Blessed John of Hungary


Profile

Born

French


Died

1287 of natural causes



Saint Ordonius


Profile

Benedictine monk in Sahagun, Leon, Spain. Bishop of Astorga, Spain in 1062.


Died

1066 of natural causes



Saint Florentius of Seville


Profile

Martyr.


Died

c.485 in Seville, Spain



Martyrs of Syrmium 


Profile

73 Christians who were martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. We know no details about them, and only six of their names - Antigonus, Libius, Rogatianus, Rutilus, Senerotas and Syncrotas.


Died

c.303 at Syrmium, Pannonia (modern Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia)