புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

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19 March 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மார்ச் 21

 St. Arcangelo Tadini


Feastday: March 21

Birth: 1846

Death: 1912

Beatified: 24 October 2001, St. Peter's Basilica, Italy by Pope John Paul II

Canonized: 19 April 2009, St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy by Pope Benedict XVI



Arcangelo Tadini (12 October 1846 – 20 May 1912) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest.[1][2] Tadini was ordained as a priest in 1870 and went on to found a religious congregation dedicated to the poor and ill while taking advantage of the Industrial Revolution to support women in work and education.[3] Tadini was disabled due to a lame leg he had after suffering an accident while he studied for the priesthood. He initiated various parish initiatives and a relief fund for the aged and the ill.[1][4]


Tadini's beatification process launched in 1960 and he became titled as a Servant of God while the confirmation of his heroic virtue in 1998 enabled for him to be titled as Venerable; he was beatified on 3 October 1999 and was later canonized on 26 April 2009.[1][5]



Life

Arcangelo Tadini was born on 12 October 1846 in Verolanuova in Brescia as the last of four children born to the nobles Pietro Tadini and Antonia Gadola. His father had previous children with his previous wife Giulia Gadola (Antonia's sister) until her death thus making Tadini the eleventh child his father sired.[4] His father had seven children with his first wife and after her death tried to manage his children from 1829 with his sister-in-law's aid whom he married on 10 July 1838. Tadini was baptized in the San Lorenzo Martire church in his hometown on 18 October 1846 with his godparents being Giambattista Scolari and Caterina Gadola.[3]


Tadini's father Pietro was born in Brescia on 15 February 1790 and married his first wife Giulia Gadola on 6 July 1819 and who was born on 28 September 1801. Tadini's own mother Antonia (born in 1806) was 32 upon her marriage to Pietro and in 1848 she became a volunteer nurse. His father Pietro died on 1 January 1860 and his mother died on 23 December 1880.[3]


He suffered from a grave illness that almost killed him when he was two but he rallied and survived. He attended school in his hometown until he was ten and in 1855 attended another school where his brothers Alessandro and Giulio attended.[4] His two brothers studied for the priesthood but Giulio became a priest while Alessandro did not due to being expelled due to his political beliefs. Tadini's vocation to the priesthood grew over time but became more concrete when he attended his brother Giulio's first Mass and subsequent exposure to his activities as a priest. Giulio would later die in 1909.[3]


Tadini commenced his theological and philosophical studies for the priesthood in Brescia in 1864. He suffered an accident during his studies that left him having a lifelong limp due to the inadequacies of treatment for the accident that saw his knee broken.[1] Tadini received ordination to the priesthood on 19 June 1870 from the Prince-Bishop of Trento Benedetto Riccabona de Reichelfels since the current Bishop of Brescia Girolamo Verzieri was in Rome for the First Vatican Council. Tadini celebrated his first Mass as a priest on 26 June 1870 in his hometown. He was looking forward to his duties as a priest but a serious illness forced him to reside with his relatives from 1870 to 1871 as he recovered.[4][3] Upon that he was made the curate for Lodrino in Val Trompia (and a schoolteacher for children) and he held that position from 29 June 1871 until 27 May 1873 when he was made the curate for the Santa Maria della Noce shrine near Brescia. It was there that he was noted for his attentiveness to the material and spiritual needs of his parishioners and his care of refugees. It was also there that he organized a soup kitchen that would serve hundreds after intense flooding caused a great deal of people to become homeless. In 1885 he was appointed as the curate for Botticino Sera (arriving there that 29 November) to aid the ailing parish priest Giacomo Coresti and then became its parish priest in 1887 following Cortesi's death on 26 November 1886; he was undergoing treatment for his leg in Albano when he received this news on 20 July 1887.[1][2][4] He held that position for the remainder of his life and there organized catechesis lessons for various age groups.


He revitalized parish initiatives that all had a pastoral focus at their heart and he founded what became known as the Workers' Mutual Aid Association in 1893 which was a form of social insurance for the ill and injured as well as the aged. He also used his inheritance to build a spinning mill in 1898 that hired women and used the profits to establish a residence for them.[1][2][4] Tadini also founded his own religious congregation in 1900 consisted of women and their role was to help the women in factories and also to provide them with an education. This proved a bit scandalous for the time since factories were considered to be immoral and dangerous places.[5] In his parish he allowed the Third Order of Saint Francis to settle there and he also praised Pope Leo XIII for having issued Rerum Novarum. His Jesuit friend and priest Maffeo Franzini helped him revive the Secular Ursulines in his parish and so Franzini sent from Milan the former Canossian religious Leopoldina Paris to aid him in this. But this was short lived as Paris did not share Tadini's vision and so left him.[4]


Later in life he was forced to use a cane due to the limp he suffered which became worse over time due to his advancing age; he was later forced to use a wheelchair and was wheeled to a 21 March 1912 Mass that commemorated his entrance as a parish priest for that church. He alluded during the Mass that "I will not live much longer" as his failing health was getting worse over time on a gradual level. He was celebrating Mass on 8 May 1912 when he was taken ill after being struck with an illness and on 9 May received both the Anointing of the Sick and the Viaticum from his confessor.[4] Tadini died in his bed on 20 May at 5:00am; his funeral as celebrated the following morning. His remains were exhumed on 11 March 1943 and again on 24 May 1999; the remains were exhumed for the final time on 29 October 2009 just after he was canonized and moved to the parish of Santa Maria Assunta in Botticino Sera now made a minor basilica. His order now operates in countries across the world such as Burundi and the United Kingdom. He had died without his order having received full approval; the Bishop of Brescia Giacinto Gaggia issued diocesan approval on 30 November 1931 while Pope Pius XII issued the decree of praise on 12 January 1953. Pope John XXIII issued papal approval a decade later on 16 March 1962.[4]


Sainthood

Initial process and Venerable

The informative process opened in the Diocese of Brescia on 13 January 1960 - in which he was given the title of Servant of God under Pope John XXIII - and had been assigned to collecting all documentation available on Tadini. Such documents would be designed to attest to his cause for sainthood. It concluded its work on 19 June 1964. Theologians gathered all his writings in order to ascertain whether or not such texts were in line with the faith and voiced their assent to his publications in a decree issued on 5 March 1970.


The Congregation for the Causes of Saints validated the informative process on 27 October 1989 and opened the so-called "Roman Phase" in which the C.C.S. would begin their own investigation into Tadini's potential saintliness. The postulation sent the Positio to the C.C.S. for further assessments which led to theologians approving its contents on 16 June 1998. The C.C.S. followed suit on 17 November 1998.


On 21 December 1998 he was declared to be Venerable after Pope John Paul II confirmed that he had lived a model life of heroic virtue - both cardinal and theological virtues.


Beatification

The miracle needed for his beatification was reported to the postulation and investigated in a diocesan process that opened in April 1996 and closed one month later. It was validated on 25 October 1996 and sent to a medical board that approved the healing to be a miracle on 17 December 1998. Theologians also voiced their approval on 23 March 1999 while the C.C.S. also approved it on 18 May 1999. The pope himself provided the final approval on 28 June 1999.


On 3 October 1999 the pontiff presided over Tadini's beatification.[6]


The miracle that led to his beatification was the healing of the nun Carmela Berardi who was a member of Tadini's order. Berardi suffered from tuberculosis that blocked her vocal cords leaving her unable to speak from 1936 until her healing in 1943. Tadini's remains were being exhumed on 11 March 1943 so the order's Superior General asked her to ask for Tadini's intercession. Berardi did this and found that she could speak to the surprise of those present; the damage that the tuberculosis caused also disappeared.[4]


Canonization

The miracle required for his sanctification took place in the Diocese of Brescia and as such was investigated there as soon as the diocesan process opened on 16 June 2006. It concluded one month later and was validated on 24 November 2006. The medical board approved it on 15 November 2007 and theologians did likewise on 22 April 2008. The C.C.S. also approved it on 28 October 2008 while Pope Benedict XVI voiced his approval on 6 December 2008.


Tadini was proclaimed as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church on 26 April 2009. In that Mass the pope said: "How prophetic was Don Tadini's charismatic intuition, and how current his example is today, in this time of grave economic crisis!" in reference to the 2008-09 Global Financial Crisis.[5]


The miracle that led to his canonization was the healing of the couple Roberto Marazzi and Elisabetta Fostini who were sterile and unable to conceive despite several attempts from 2000 to 2004. Doctors suggested IVF treatment to them but the couple refused while later coming into touch with families who met in Tadini's order's motherhouse for their Gruppo Famiglia Beato Tadini meetings held each month. The couple attended since April 2004 and bore their first child Maria on 5 August 2005 and a second in Giovanni on 3 December 2006.


Bl. Maria Candida of the Eucharist


Feastday: March 21

Birth: 1884

Death: 1949

Beatified: Pope John Paul II


Image of Bl. Maria Candida of the EucharistAs a child, Maria Barba, of Catanzaro, Italy, learned to play the piano. At the age of fifteen, she underwent an interior conversion that turned her heart and mind totally to God. Sadly, her subsequent aspiration to religious life was opposed by her family. During this time, Maria found consolation in developing a profound love for the Eucharist and in reading the autobiography of the Carmelite, Saint Thérčse of Lisieux. When at the age of thirty-six Maria was finally able to become a religious, she entered the Discalced Carmelite Order, having already assimilated their spirituality. Taking the religious name Maria Candida of the Eucharist, she soon became her convent's prioress. Ever zealous for the faithful observance of the Carmelite rule, she once admonished a nun for her laxity, asking her, "My daughter, why do you insult the Lord like this? Don't you realize that mankind needs you?" In the 1930s, Mother Candida wrote a book on the Eucharist steeped in her own devotion to the Blessed Sacrament. She died on June 12, 1949.

Not to be confused with Candida Maria of Jesus.

Maria Candida of the Eucharist (16 January 1884 – 12 June 1949) - born Maria Barba - was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious of the Discalced Carmelites. Barba desired to become a professed religious in her adolescence but her parents forbade this and she was forced to wait two decades for her to realize her dream; she entered the order after her parents died though alienated her brothers in the process who refused to ever see her due to their resentment towards her decision. Barba became a noted member of her convent in Ragusa and she served as prioress for an extensive period in which she fostered a rigid adherence to the order's rule so as to live the fullness of its charism. Her devotion to the Eucharist was a focal point for her spiritual thinking and her own life and she wrote to an extensive degree on the Eucharist and its importance.


The beatification process opened on 15 October 1981 and she became titled as a Servant of God while she later became titled as Venerable on 18 December 2000 upon the confirmation of her life of heroic virtue. Pope John Paul II beatified Barba in Saint Peter's Square on 21 March 2004.




Life

Maria Barba was born on 16 January 1884 in Catanzaro as the tenth of twelve children (five who died in their childhoods) to the appellate court judge Pietro Barba and Giovanna Flora; she was baptized on the following 19 January.[1] Her parents and siblings all hailed from Palermo but moved to Catanzaro while her father was in that town during a brief assignment. In 1886 the family returned to Palermo.[2]


In 1891 she began her time at school and achieved excellent grades while there; she completed her studies in 1898. That same year she began to learn the piano. On 3 April 1894 she made her First Communion and from that point on fostered a special devotion to the Eucharist and developed what she referred to as her "vocation for the Eucharist".[1] Barba despaired at not being able to receive it on a frequent basis.[3] In 1899 she felt a strong calling to the religious life as she reflected before an image of the Sacred Heart and would call this experience her "transformation" and the 2 July 1899 vesting of her cousin as a nun augmented this desire. The girl informed her parents of her decision but her parents opposed this,[4][5] believing it nothing more than initial spiritual fervour rather than an actual desire. But Barba's devotion grew after learning about the charism of the Carmelites which inspired her more through reading the journal of Thérèse of Lisieux. This also encouraged her to persevere despite being rejected and she continued to wait for the time when she could achieve her dream.[1]


Her father died on 21 June 1904. In September 1910 she and her mother and siblings undertook a pilgrimage to Rome and met Pope Pius X in an audience. The girl later made her Confirmation at a rather advanced age on 12 November 1912. Her mother died on 5 June 1914. Barba could not receive the Eucharist on a frequent basis as her brothers would not allow her to go out on her own so she complied so as not to offend them.[3][1][4]


Barba waited for two decades before she could enter the order's convent at Ragusa on 25 September 1919 and the Cardinal Archbishop of Palermo Alessandro Lualdi encouraged her to enter and fulfil her desire to become a nun.[2] Her entrance into the order saw her assume the religious name of "Maria Candida of the Eucharist" on 16 April 1920 after receiving the habit. Barba made her initial profession on 17 April 1921 and later made her perpetual profession on 23 April 1924.[3][4] In 1924 her period of formation came to a close and she was elected as the prioress of the convent on 10 November;[6] she held this position until 1947 and was reconfirmed in that position on five separate occasions. Barba worked hard with caution to revive the spirit of their foundress and under her able leadership the convent grew to a point where a new foundation could be made in Siracusa. The prioress also helped to secure the return of the friars of the order to the Sicilian region.[3] Barba spent hours before the Eucharist. None of her brothers ever visited her having grown to resent her decision and did not even attend the celebration when she was first vested with the order's habit.[4]


On 19 June 1933 - the feast of Corpus Christi - the nun began writing the book that served as a record of her own personal experiences and reflections on Eucharistic meditations and this was completed in 1936.[2] The book also records deepening theological reflections on those personal experiences of hers.[1] On 16 June 1922 she had starting writing "Up: First Steps" on her vocation and arrival to the order while later on 5 November 1926 beginning "Mountain Song" at the request of her confessor on her Carmelite life.[4]


Barba was first diagnosed with a tumor in her liver back in 1947. She died of cancer on the evening of 12 June 1949 and her remains were interred at Ragusa the following 14 June. [4][5] Her remains were later relocated on 12 November 1970.


Beatification

The beatification process opened in Ragusa in an informative process that Bishop Francesco Pennisi oversaw from its inauguration on 5 March 1956 until its closure later on 28 June 1962; the formal introduction to the cause came on 15 October 1981 in which she became titled as a Servant of God. The Congregation for the Causes of Saints later validated the previous informative process in Rome on 31 May 1991 and received the Positio dossier from postulation officials in 1992. Theologians assented to the cause on 28 April 2000 as did the C.C.S. on 17 October 2000; the confirmation of her life of heroic virtue allowed for Pope John Paul II to name her as Venerable on 18 December 2000.


The process for a miracle needed for beatification was investigated in the place of its origin from 12 June 1986 until 9 December 1986 while the C.C.S. later validated the process on 26 March 1993 in Rome. Medical experts approved this healing to be a legitimate miracle on 23 May 2002 as did theologians on 13 December 2002 and the C.C.S. themselves on 4 March 2003. John Paul II approved this miracle on 12 April 2003 and later beatified Barba on 21 March 2004 in Saint Peter's Square. The second miracle - the one needed for sainthood - was investigated in the place of its origin from 29 June 2007 until 19 June 2008.


The current postulator for the cause is the Discalced Carmelite priest Romano Gambalunga.



Saint Benedicta Cambiagio Frassinello

புனித_பெனடிக்டா (1791-1858)


மார்ச் 21


இவர் (#StBenedictaCambiagioFrassinello) இத்தாலியில் பிறந்தவர்.


இவருக்கு இருபது வயது நடக்கும்போது காட்சி ஒன்று கண்டார். அக்காட்சியில் இவர் தன்னை ஆண்டவருக்கு அர்ப்பணித்து வாழப் பணிக்கப்பட்டார். இவரும் அவ்வாறே வாழ்ந்தார்.


இந்நிலையில் இவரது பெற்றோர் இவரைக் கியோவன்னி என்பவருக்கு மணமுடித்துக் கொடுக்க முடிவு செய்தனர். கடவுளுக்குத் தன்னை அர்ப்பணித்து வாழ முடிவு செய்தும், தன் பெற்றோர் தன்னைக் கியோவன்னி என்பவருக்கு மணமுடித்துக் கொடுக்க முடிவு செய்ததால், இவர் அதற்கு மறுப்புத் தெரிவிக்க முடியாமல் திருமணத்திற்குச் சம்மதித்தார்.


திருமண வாழ்வில் இவர் கற்பு நெறியைக் கடைப்பிடித்ததால் இவரது கணவர் இவரை இவரது விருப்பம் போல் வாழ அனுமதித்தார்.

சிறிது காலத்திற்குப் பிறகு இருவரும் துறவற வாழ்க்கை மேற்கொள்ளத் தொடங்கினர். இவர் உருசிலியன் சபையிலும், இவரது கணவர் சொமாஸ்கன் சபையிலும் சேர்ந்து துறவற வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்தனர்.


பின்பு அச்சபையிலிருந்து வெளியேறிய இவர் உழைக்கும் பெண்களுக்காகப் பாடுபட்டார். மேலும் இவர் ஏழைக் குழந்தைகள் நல்ல கல்வி பெற பல பள்ளிக்கூடங்களை நிறுவினார். இதனால் இவரால் பலரும் பயன்பெற்றனர். இடையில் இவர்மீது பலவிதமான விமர்சனங்கள் எழுந்தன. அவற்றையெல்லாம் இவர் பொய்யென நிரூபித்தார்.


இப்படி இறைப்பணியையும் மக்கள் பணியையு ஒருசேரச் செய்து வந்த இவர் 1858 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவருக்கு 2002 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பால் அவர்களால் புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

Also known as

• Benedetta Cambiagio Frassinello

• Benedikta Frassinello

• Benedetta Cambiagio



Profile

Daughter of Giuseppe and Francesca Cambiagio, she grew up in Pavia, Italy. At the age of 20 she had a profound mystical experience that left her devoted to prayer and desiring a religious life. However, to go along with her family's wishes, she married Giovanni Battista Frassinella on 7 February 1816. The couple had a normal married life for two years, but Giovanni, impressed with Benedicta's holiness and desire for religious life, agreed to live continently. The two took care of Benedicta's little sister Maria until the girl's death from intestinal cancer in 1825. Giovanni then joined the Somaschan Fathers, Benedicta became an Ursuline nun.


In 1826 ill health forced Benedicta to return home to Pavia. There she began to work with young women in the area. The work sent so well that her husband Giovanni was assigned to help. The schools continued to grow and prosper, and Benedicta was appointed Promoter of Public Instruction in Pavia. However, no matter how chastely they lived, Benedicta and Giovanni's unusual relationship drew gossip and criticism from civil and Church authorities. To insure that she did not get in the way of the work, in 1838 Benedicta turned her work over to the bishop of Pavia, and withdrew to live as a nun at Ronco Scrivia, Italy.


Not content to withdraw from the world, Benedicta began all over. With five companions, she founded the Congregation of the Benedictine Sisters of Providence dedicated to teaching, and opened another school. Living alone, the local authorities found no causes for gossip, and Benedicta spent her remaining years in prayer and service.


Born

2 October 1791 at Langasco, Campomorone, Italy as Benedetta Cambiagio


Died

21 March 1858 at Ronco Scrivia, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

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



Saint Nicholas of Flüe

புனிதர் நிக்கொலஸ் 

(St. Nicholas of Flüe)


துறவி, விவசாயி, இராணுவ தலைவர், சட்டமன்ற உறுப்பினர், கவுன்சிலர், நீதிபதி மற்றும் ஆன்மபலம் கொண்டவர்:

(Hermit, Farmer, Military Leader, Member of the Assembly, Councillor, Judge and Mystic)



பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1417

அண்டர்வெல்டென், சுவிட்சர்லாந்து

(Unterwalden, Switzerland)


இறப்பு: மார்ச் 21, 1487

சச்செல்ன், சுவிட்சர்லாந்து

(Sachseln, Switzerland)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1669

திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் கிளமென்ட்

(Pope Clement IX)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1947

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

சச்செல்ன், சுவிட்சர்லாந்து (Sachseln, Switzerland)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 21


பாதுகாவல்:

சுவிட்சர்லாந்து, போண்டிஃபிகல் ஸ்விஸ் காவலர்கள்

(Switzerland, Pontifical Swiss Guards)


புனிதர் நிக்கொலஸ், ஒரு துறவியும், ஸ்விட்சர்லாந்து நாட்டின் பாதுகாவலருமாவார். சில வேளைகளில் "சகோதரர் கிளாஸ்" (Brother Klaus) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படும் இவர், ஒரு விவசாயியும், இராணுவ தலைவரும், சட்டமன்ற உறுப்பினரும், கவுன்சிலரும், நீதிபதியும் மற்றும் ஆன்மபலம் கொண்டவருமாவார். அவர் ஒரு முழுமையான ஒழுக்கநெறியாளராக மதிக்கப்படுகிறார். கி.பி. 1481ம் ஆண்டு, சகோதரர் கிளாஸின் ஆலோசனைகளால் பழைய சுவிஸ் கூட்டமைப்பின் மண்டலங்களுக்கிடையே நிகழவிருந்த யுத்தத்தை தவிர்க்க உதவியது.


கி.பி. 1417ம் ஆண்டு, மத்திய சுவிட்சர்லாந்தின் பண்டைய சுவிஸ் கூட்டமைப்பிலுள்ள "அண்டர்வெல்டென்" (Unterwalden) எனும் இட்டத்தில் உள்ள ஒரு வசதிவாய்ப்புள்ள விவசாய குடுமத்தின் மூத்த மகனாகப் பிறந்த இவர், தமது 21 வயதில் இராணுவத்தில் சேர்ந்தார். கி.பி. 1446ம் ஆண்டு, "ராகஸ் போரில்" (Battle of Ragaz) பங்கேற்றார். "ஜூரிச்" (Zurich) மண்டலத்திற்கு எதிரான நடவடிக்கைகளில் ஒரு வீரராக ஈடுபாட்டுடன், கூட்டமைப்பிற்கு எதிராக போர் செய்தார். கி.பி. 1460ம் ஆண்டில் ஆஸ்திரியாவின் (Austria) "ஆர்ட்யுட்க்ஸ் சிக்ஸ்சிசுண்டிற்கு" (Archduke Sigismund ) எதிரான "துர்கவ் போர்" (Thurgau war) என்ற போரில் அவர் மீண்டும் ஆயுதமேந்தி போரிட்டார். அவருடைய செல்வாக்கு காரணமாக "டொமினிகன் கான்வென்ட் செயின்ட் காத்ரீனாண்டல்" (Dominican convent St. Katharinental), பல ஆஸ்திரியர்கள் "டிஸ்சென்ஹோபனை" (Diessenhofen) கைப்பற்றிய பின்னர் ஓடிவிட்டனர். ஆனால், அது சுவிஸ் கூட்டமைப்புகளால் அழிக்கப்படவில்லை.


தமது 30 வயதில், அவர் ஒரு விவசாயி மகளான "டோரதி விஸ்" (Dorothea Wyss) எனும் பெண்ணை மணந்தார். அவர்கள், "ஃப்ளூ" என்னும் ஆல்ப்ஸ் மலை சார்ந்த மலையடிவார நகரில் விவசாயம் செய்தனர். தமது 37 வயதுவரை இராணுவத்தில் பணியாற்றிய நிக்கொலஸ், கேப்டன் பதவி வரை உயர்ந்தார். ஒரு கையில் வாளும் மறு கையில் ஜெபமாலையுடனும் போர் புரிபவர் என்று பெயர் பெற்றிருந்தார். இராணுவத்திலிருந்து வெளிவந்த பிறகு, அவர் 1459ம் ஆண்டு, ஒரு கவுன்சிலர் மற்றும் நீதிபதி ஆனார். மற்றும் ஒன்பது ஆண்டுகள் ஒரு நீதிபதியாக பணியாற்றினார். ஆளுநராக பணியாற்ற கிட்டிய வாய்ப்பை அவர் நிராகரித்தார்.



ஒருமுறை, லீலி எனப்படும் குவளை மலரை ஒரு குதிரை உண்பது போன்றதொரு காட்சியை இவர் கண்டார். அந்த மாயக் காட்சியானது, தாம் வாழ்ந்துவரும் தற்போதைய வாழ்வானது தமது ஆன்மீக உணர்வுகளையும் நாட்டங்களையும் விழுங்குவதாக இவர் நம்பினார். அவர் முற்றிலும் தியான வாழ்க்கைக்கு தன்னை முழுவதுமாக அர்ப்பணிக்க முடிவு செய்தார். கி.பி. 1467ம் ஆண்டு, அவர் தனது மனைவியையும் அவர்களது பத்து குழந்தைகளையும் மனைவியின் ஒப்புதலுடன் விட்டுவிட்டு துறவியாக ஒதுங்கி வாழ தொடங்கினார். சுவிட்சர்லாந்தில் உள்ள "ரான்ஃப்ட் ச்சின்" (Ranft chine) எனுமிடத்தில், தமது சொந்த பணத்திலிருந்து ஒரு ஆலயத்தை கட்டினார். புராணங்களின்படி, அவர் பன்னிரெண்டு ஆண்டுகள் நற்கருணையை மட்டுமே உண்டு வாழ்ந்திருந்தார். அடையாள தரிசனங்கள் அவரது சிந்தனைக்குரிய ஒரு அம்சங்களாக தொடர்ந்து இருந்தன. மேலும் அவருடைய ஆலோசனைகள் வேண்டி மக்கள் பரவலாக அவரை தேடி வந்தனர். அவர், ஒரு ஆன்மீக வழிகாட்டியாக மாறினார்.


அவருடைய ஞானம் மற்றும் பக்தியானது, ஐரோப்பா முழுதும் பரவின. ஐரோப்பா முழுதுமிலிருந்தும் அவரது ஆலோசனைகளை கேட்க பலரும் வந்தனர். அவர் அனைவருக்கும் "சகோதரர் கிளாஸ்" (Brother Klaus) என்று அறியப்பட்டார். கி.பி. 1470ம் ஆண்டு, திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் பவுல், ரன்ஃப்டில் உள்ள சரணாலயத்திற்கு முதல் அங்கீகாரம் வழங்கினார். ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டின் தூய ஜேம்ஸ் எனும் இடத்திலுள்ள "சந்தியாகு" (Santiago de Compostela in Spain) திருத்தலத்திற்கு போகும் வழியில் இருந்த காரணத்தால், அது ஒரு புனித யாத்திரை தலமாக மாறிப்போனது.


கி.பி. 1481ம் ஆண்டு, இவரது ஆலோசனைகளின் பயனாக, பழைய சுவிஸ் கூட்டமைப்பின் மண்டலங்களுக்கிடையே நிகழவிருந்த யுத்தத்தை தவிர்க்கபட்டது. கல்வியறிவு இல்லாத, மற்றும் குறைந்த உலக அனுபவங்களைக் கொண்டிருந்த போதிலும், சுவிட்சர்லாந்தின் நிரந்தர தேசிய ஒற்றுமையைக் கொண்ட எதிர் திருச்சபையினர் மற்றும் கத்தோலிக்கர்களிடையே அவர் கௌரவிக்கப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

• Brother Klaus

• Bruder Klaus

• Nicholas von Flüe

• Niklaus von Flüe



Additional Memorial

25 September (Switzerland and Germany)


Profile

Born to a family of relatively wealthy peasants. Soldier who distinguished himself in combat against the break-away canton of Zurich and eventually reached the rank of captain; reported to have fought with a sword in one hand, a rosary in the other. At age 30 he married Dorothy Wiss; they couple had ten children. Cantonal judge and government advisor; declined to serve as cantonal governor. Following a vision of a harnessed draft horse (representing his worldly life as a farmer) eating a lily (representing his spiritual life of purity), Nicholas felt a desire withdraw from the world. With the approval of his family, he became a hermit in the Ranft valley, Switzerland in 1467; he assisted daily at Mass and spent most of the rest of his day in prayer. Reported to have had the gifts of prophecy and of inedia, surviving for 19 years solely on Holy Communion. His reputation for sanctity spread, and he attracted spiritual students. In 1481 he was called on to mediate a dispute that threatened civil war in Switzerland. He succeeded in averting the conflict, then retired to his hermitage. He is considered by many to be the father of this country, honoured by both Swiss Protestants and Catholics for his wisdom, holiness and work to unify Switzerland.


Born

21 March 1417 at Sachseln, Canton Unterwalden, Lake Lucerne, Switzerland


Died

• 21 March 1487 at Ranft, Aargau, Switzerland of natural causes; his wife and children were at his side

• relics in the church of Sachseln, Switzerland


Canonized

15 May 1947 by Pope Pius XII




Saint Serapion the Scholastic

Also known as

• Serapion of Thmuis

• Serapion the Scholar


Profile

Egyptian monk. Ran the famous catechetical school of Alexandria, Egypt. Resigned to spend more time in prayer and penitence. Spiritual student of Saint Anthony the Abbot in the desert. Friend of Saint Athanasius of Alexandria.


Bishop of Thmuis, near Diospolis in the Nile delta of Egypt in 339. Fought Arianism. Supporter of Athanasius, and spoke for him in the Council of Sardis in 347. Banished by Emperor Constantius II for his opposition to Arianism. Named a Confessor of the Faith by Saint Jerome. Fought Macedonianism, which denies the divinity of the Holy Spirit. Wrote against Manichaeism, showing that our bodies can be instruments of good or evil, that it is our choice, and that just and wicked men often change; it's therefore a lie to think our souls are of God, our bodies of the devil.


Wrote several learned letters, a treatise on the titles of the Psalms, and a sacramentary called the Euchologium, a collection of liturgical prayers. Saint Athanasius wrote several works against Arians at Serapion's request, but thought so much of Sarapion that he told him to revise them as he saw fit.


Died

c.365-370 of natural causes while in exile in Egypt




Saint Enda of Arran

Also known as

• Enda of Aran

• Enda of Arranmore

• Éanna, Edna, Éinne, Endeus, Enna


Profile

An Irish prince, the son of Conall Derg of Ergall, Ulster. Brother of Saint Fanchea of Rossory who brought him to the Faith. Brother-in-law to King Oengus of Munster, Ireland. Soldier. When he converted to Christianity, he gave up the military life and his dreams of conquest, and planned to marry. When his fiancee suddenly died, Enda renounced his claim to the throne and became a monk. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy. Priest. Studied with Saint Ninian in Galloway, Scotland. Founded a monastery at Killeany on Inishmore in the Arran Islands on land donated by King Oengus. It was the first true monastery in Ireland, ten other houses developed directly from it, and Enda is considered the founder of Irish monasticism. Built churches at Drogheda, and a monastery in the Boyne valley. His houses lived under a severely austere rule, and prayerful men lived in them for centuries. Spiritual teacher of Saint Ciaran of Clonmacnoise, Saint Brendan the Voyager, Saint Finnian, Saint Columba of Iona, Saint Jarlath of Tuam, and Saint Carthach the Elder.


Born

Meath, Ireland


Died

• c.530 of natural causes

• buried at Tighlagheany, Inishmore, Ireland



Blessed Thomas Pilcher

Also known as

Thomas Pilchard


Additional Memorials

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai

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

• 1 December as one of the Martyrs of Oxford University


Profile

Studied at Balliol College, Oxford, England. Converted to Catholicism. Studied at Douai College, Rheims, France. Ordained a priest at Laon, France in 1583. He then returned to England to minister to covert Catholics in Hampshire and Dorset. Arrested and condemned to death for the crime of being a priest.


Born

c.1557 in Battle, East Sussex, England


Died

• hanged, drawn and quartered on 21 March 1587 in Dochester, Dorset, England

• no official executioner could be found; a local butcher was hired to do the disemboweling, but stopped halfway when Thomas asked him, “Is this your justice?”


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Mark Gjani


Also known as

Mark Xhani



Profile

Studied at the Shkodra Pontifical Seminary, and then theology in Bobion, Italy. Ordained on 21 March 1942 as a priest of the archdiocese of Shkodrë-Pult, Albania. Imprisoned and tortured in the anti–Christian persecutions of the Albanian Communist government. His torturers repeatedly ordered him to curse Christ; he repeatedly answered "Long live Jesus Christ!" Martyr.


Born

10 July 1914 in Mirditë, Albania


Died

• tortured to death in 1947 in Shën Pal, Mirditë, Albania

• body dumped in a canal to be eaten by stray dogs


Beatified

• 5 November 2016 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated at the Square of the Cathedral of Shën Shtjefnit, Shkodër, Albania, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato



Saint Augustine Tchao


Also known as

• Augustin Rong Zhao

• Augustinus Zhao

• Augustine Zhao Rong



Additional Memorial

28 September as one of the Martyrs of China


Profile

Soldier. Escorted Saint Gabriel John Tauin du-Fresse to Beijing, China during his missionary work. Convert to Christianity. Priest. Worked in the Sichuan apostolic vicariate. Arrested for his faith and his work. He died in prison. Martyr.


Born

c.1746 at Wuchuan, Guizhou, China


Died

27 January 1815 due to poor conditions in prison at Chengdu, Sichuan, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Matthew Flathers


Additional Memorial

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai

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



Profile

Studied at the English College in Douai, France. Priest in the apostolic vicariate of England, serving covert Catholics during the persecutions of James I. Martyr.


Born

1560 in Weston, near Otley, West Yorkshire, England


Died

21 March 1608 in York, North Yorkshire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed John of Valence


Profile

Canon at Lyons, France. Pilgrim to Compostela, Spain. Benedictine Cistercian monk at Clairvaux Abbey under Saint Bernard. Founded the Cistercian Bonneval Abbey in 1117, and later served as its abbot. Bishop of Valence, France in 1141; he felt so unworthy of the position that he had to be physically carried to the altar to be consecrated. Fought for his flock not just in matters spiritual but for farmers, merchants and the impoverished who were all ruined by debt during a regional financial crisis.


Born

at Lyons, France


Died

1146 of natural causes


Beatified

1901 by Pope Pius X (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Lucia of Verona


Profile

As a girl, Lucia was noted for her piety and charity. She joined the Third Order of the Servants of Mary in Verona, Italy, and lived in her house as though it was a monastery. She developed a ministery of visiting the sick, nursing them in their homes, dressing wounds, sitting with the dying, and caring for those struck down with plague until it took her away, as well.



Born

c.1514 in Verona, Italy


Died

1574 in Verona, Italy of plague



Blessed Santucci Terrebotti

Profile

Married. Mother of one daughter who died in childhood. She and her husband agreed to split up, each entering religious life. Benedictine nun in Gubbio, Italy. Abbess of her house. She moved her community to Santa Maria in Via Lata, the Via Iulia in Rome, Italy where they lived in very strict observance of the Benedictine Rule and became known as Mary's Servants or Le Santucci.


Born

in Gubbio, Umbria, Italy


Died

1305



Blessed William Pike


Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Layman in the apostolic vicariate of England during a period of persecutions of Catholics. Martyr.


Born

in Dorset, England


Died

• hanged on 22 December 1591 in Dorchester, Dorset, England

• body dismembered and the pieces distributed as a warning to others


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Birillus of Catania


Also known as

Berillo, Beryl, Beryllus



Profile

Travelling companion of Saint Peter the Apostle. First bishop of Catania, Sicily, consecrated by Saint Peter.


Born

Antioch


Died

c.90 of natural causes



Blessed Alfonso de Rojas


Also known as

• Alfonso of Coria

• Alonso de Rojas

• Alphonsus de Rojas


Additional Memorial

26 March in Coria, Spain


Profile

Professor in Salamanca, Spain. Tutor to the children of duke. Canon at Coria, Spain. Franciscan.


Died

1617



Saint Christian of Cologne


Also known as

• Christian of St-Pantaleon

• Christianus of...


Profile

Monk in the monastery of Fulda, Germany. First abbot of the St-Pantaleon Abbey in Cologen, Germany. Wrote works on theology that were widely read in his time.


Died

1002



Martyrs of Alexandria


Profile

A large but unknown number of Catholics massacred in several churches during Good Friday services in Alexandria, Egypt by Arian heretics during the persecutions of Constantius and Philagrio.


Died

Good Friday 342 in Alexandria, Egypt



Saint Lupicinus of Condat


Profile

Brother of Saint Romanus of Condat. Monk. With Romanus, he founded the abbeys of Condat and Leuconne.



Died

c.480



Saint James the Confessor


Profile

Martyred for opposing iconoclasm.


Died

c.824 at Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey)



Saint Isenger of Verdun


Profile

Monk at the Anabaric monastery in Ireland. Priest. Ninth-century bishop of Verdun (in modern France).



Saint Domninus of Rome


Profile

Travelling preacher throughout Italy. Martyr.


Born

Rome, Italy



Saint Philemon of Rome


Profile

Preached across Italy. Martyr.


Born

Rome, Italy



திருக்காட்சியாளர் எமிலி ஷ்னைடர் Emilie Schneider

பிறப்பு 

6 செப்டம்பர் 1820, 

ஹாரன், ஜெர்மனி

இறப்பு 

21 மார்ச் 1859, 

ட்யூசல்டோர்ஃப் Düsseldorf, ஜெர்மனி

இவரின் திருமுழுக்குப் பெயர் ஜூலி. இவர் 1845 ல் திருச்சிலுவையின் மகள் என்றழைக்கப்பட்ட துறவறச் சபையில் சேர்ந்தார். 1851 ல் அஸ்பல் Aspel என்ற ஊரில் நவத்துறவிகளை கண்காணிக்கும் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றார். 1852 ல் ட்யூசல்டோர்ஃபில் உள்ள துறவற மடத்தில் தலைவியாக நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். அப்போது அவர் தன்னுடன் வாழ்ந்த மற்ற துறவிகளுடன் சுமூகமான உறவின்றி வாழ்ந்தார். பலவித பிரச்சினைகளை சந்தித்தார். 





இவர் எல்லா எதிர்மறையான சூழல்களையும் சந்திக்க இடைவிடாமல் இறைவேண்டல் செய்தார். இயேசுவின் திரு இதயத்தின் அன்பை சுவைத்தார். தேவையான சக்தியை திருச்சிலுவையிலிருந்து பெற்றார். இவர் அடிக்கடி ஆண்டவரிடமிருந்து திருக்காட்சிகளை பெற்றார். இவர் இறந்த பிறகு ட்யூசல்டோர்ஃபில் உள்ள தெரேசியன் மருத்துவமனையில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார். அங்குதான் இன்றுவரை அவரின் கல்லறை உள்ளது.


இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மாரச் 20

 St. Photina

புனித_ஃபோடினா (முதல் நூற்றாண்டு)

மார்ச் 20


இவர் (#StPhotina) வேறு யாருமல்லர்; யோவான் நற்செய்தி 4:4-26 -இல் வரும் சமாரியப் பெண்ணே‌ ஆவார்.


யூதர்களுக்கும் சமாரியர்களுக்கும் இடையே அடிக்கடி சண்டை வரும். மேலும் யூதர்கள் தூய்மைவாதம் பேசி, சமாரியர்களை ஒரு பொருட்டாக மதிப்பதில்லை. இவற்றையெல்லாம் கடந்து இயேசு சமாரியப் பெண்ணோடு பேசினார்.‌ அவரிடம் தான் மெசியா என்பதை வெளிப்படுத்துகிறார். 

கிரேக்க மரபுப்படி இவர் இயேசுவின் போதனையால்  ஈர்க்கப்பட்டுக் கார்த்தேஜிற்குச் சென்று, அங்கு நற்செய்தி அறிவித்துச் சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டுக் கொல்லப்பட்டார் எனச் சொல்லப்படுகிறது.


இன்னொரு மரபுப்படி இவர் உரோமை சென்று நற்செய்தி அறிவித்ததாகவும், நீரோ மன்னனுடைய மகள் உட்பட நூற்றுக்கு மேற்பட்டவர்களை மனமாற்றியதாகவும் அதனாலேயே இவர் தன் மகன்கள் விக்டர், ஜான்‌ ஆகிய இருவரோடும், ஒருசில‌ கிறிஸ்தவர்களோடும் சேர்த்துக் கொல்லப்பட்டார்‌ எனவும் சொல்லப்படுகிறது.


இயேசுவின் போதனைகளைக் கேட்கும் ஒருவர் அவருடைய நற்செய்தியைத் தனக்குள் வைத்துக் கொள்ளாமல், மற்றவருக்கும் அறிவிக்க வேண்டும் என்பதை இவர் நமக்கு அற்புதமாக உணர்த்துகிறார்.

Feastday: March 20

Death: 1st century


Samaritan martyr. According to Greek tradition, Photiona was the Samaritan woman with whom Jesus spoke at the well as was recounted in the Gospel of St. John, chapter four. Deeply moved by the experience, she took to preaching the Gospel, received imprisonment, and was finally martyred at Carthage. Another tradition states that Photina was put to death in Rome after converting the daughter of Emperor Nero and one hundred of her servants. She supposedly died in Rome with her sons Joseph and Victor, along with several other Christians, including Sebastian, Photius, Parasceve, Photis, Cyriaca, and Victor. They were perhaps included in the Roman Martyrology by Cardinal Cesare Baronius owing to the widely held view that the head of Photina was preserved in the church of St. Paul's Outside the Walls.



The Water of Life Discourse between Jesus and the Samaritan Woman at the Well by Angelika Kauffmann, 17–18th century

The Samaritan woman at the well is a figure from the Gospel of John, in John 4:4–26. In Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic traditions, she is venerated as a saint with the name Photine (Φωτεινή), meaning "luminous [one]".[a]


Biblical account


Eastern Orthodox icon of Saint Photine meeting Christ

The woman appears in John 4:4–42; here is John 4:4–26:


But he had to go through Samaria. So he came to a Samaritan city called Sychar, near the plot of ground that Jacob had given to his son Joseph. Jacob's well was there, and Jesus, tired out by his journey, was sitting by the well. It was about noon.


A Samaritan woman came to draw water, and Jesus said to her, "Give me a drink." (His disciples had gone to the city to buy food.) The Samaritan woman said to him, "How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?" (Jews do not share things in common with Samaritans.) Jesus answered her, "If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, 'Give me a drink', you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water." The woman said to him, "Sir, you have no bucket, and the well is deep. Where do you get that living water? Are you greater than our ancestor Jacob, who gave us the well, and with his sons and his flocks drank from it?" Jesus said to her, "Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, but those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life." The woman said to him, "Sir, give me this water, so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water."


Jesus said to her, "Go, call your husband, and come back." The woman answered him, "I have no husband." Jesus said to her, "You are right in saying, 'I have no husband'; for you have had five husbands, and the man you are now living with is not your husband. What you have said is true!" The woman said to him, "Sir, I see that you are a prophet. Our ancestors worshipped on this mountain, but you say that the place where people must worship is in Jerusalem." Jesus said to her, "Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews. But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such as these to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth." The woman said to him, "I know that Messiah is coming" (who is called Christ). "When he comes, he will proclaim all things to us." Jesus said to her, "I am he, the one who is speaking to you."


— John 4:4–26

This episode takes place before the return of Jesus to Galilee.[3] Some Jews regarded the Samaritans as foreigners and their attitude was often hostile, although they shared most beliefs, while many other Jews accepted Samaritans as either fellow Jews or as Samaritan Israelites.[4][5][6] The two communities seem to have drifted apart in the post-exilic period.[7] Both communities share the Pentateuch, although crucially the Samaritan Pentateuch locates the holy mountain at Mount Gerizim rather than at Mount Zion, as this incident acknowledges at John 4:20.


The Gospel of John, like the Gospel of Luke, is favourable to the Samaritans throughout, and, while the Matthaean Gospel quotes Jesus at one early phase in his ministry telling his followers to not at that time evangelize any of the cities of the Samaritans,[8] this restriction had clearly been reversed later by the time of Matthew 28:19. Scholars differ as to whether the Samaritan references in the New Testament are historical. One view is that the historical Jesus had no contact with Samaritans; another is that the accounts go back to Jesus himself. In Acts 1:8, Jesus promises the apostles that they will be witnesses to the Samaritans.[9]


Interpretations

Scholars have noted that this story appears to be modelled on a standard betrothal 'type scene' from Hebrew scripture, particularly that of Jacob in Genesis 29.[10] This convention, which would have been familiar to Jewish readers, following on from an earlier scene in which John the Baptist compares his relationship to Jesus with that of the friend of a bridegroom.[3] Jo-Ann A. Brant, for example, concludes that there is "near consensus among literary critics that the scene at Jacob’s well follows conventions of the betrothal type-scene found in Hebrew narrative."[11] Other scholars note significant differences between John 4 and betrothal type-scenes in the Hebrew Bible.[12] For example, Dorothy A. Lee lists several discrepancies between Hebrew betrothal scenes and John 4: “the Samaritan woman is not a young Jewish virgin and no betrothal takes place; the well is not concerned with sexual fertility but is an image of salvation (see Isa. 12:3); Jesus is presented not as a bridegroom but as giver of living water.”[13]


This Gospel episode is referred to as "a paradigm for our engagement with truth", in the Roman Curia book A Christian reflection on the New Age, as the dialogue says: "You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know" and offers an example of "Jesus Christ the bearer of the water of life".[14] The passages that comprise John 4:10–26 are sometimes referred to as the Water of Life Discourse, which forms a complement to the Bread of Life Discourse.[15]


In Eastern Christian tradition, the woman's name at the time of her meeting Jesus is unknown, though she was later baptized "Photine". She is celebrated as a saint of renown. As further recounted in John 4:28–30 and John 4:39–42, she was quick to spread the news of her meeting with Jesus, and through this many came to believe in him. Her continuing witness is said to have brought so many to the Christian faith that she is described as "equal to the apostles". Eventually, having drawn the attention of Emperor Nero, she was brought before him to answer for her faith, suffering many tortures and dying a martyr after being thrown down a dry well. She is remembered on the Sunday four weeks after Pascha, which is known as "the Sunday of the Samaritan Woman".[16]


In Oaxaca, Oaxaca, Mexico, a celebration of the Samaritan woman takes place on the fourth Friday of Lent. The custom of the day involves churches, schools, and businesses giving away fruit drinks to passers-by.[17]


Photini, The Samaritan Woman is honored with a Lesser Feast on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America[18] on February 26.



St. William of Penacorada


Feastday: March 20

Death: 1042


Benedictine founder. A monk in the monastery of Sathgun, in Leon, Spain, he fled with companions from the house in 988 when the monastery was under danger of Saracen attack. They settled at Penacorada and established the monastery of Santa Maria de los Valles, which was Iater named San Guillermo de Penacorda.


"Finisterra" redirects here. For other uses, see Finisterre (disambiguation).

Cape Finisterre (/ˌfɪnɪˈstɛər/,[1][2] also US: /-tɛri/;[3] Galician: Cabo Fisterra [fisˈtɛrɐ]; Spanish: Cabo Finisterre [finisˈtere]) is a rock-bound peninsula on the west coast of Galicia, Spain.[4]


In Roman times it was believed to be an end of the known world. The name Finisterre, like that of Finistère in France, derives from the Latin finis terrae, meaning "end of the earth". It is sometimes said to be the westernmost point of the Iberian Peninsula. However, Cabo da Roca in Portugal is about 16.5 kilometres (10.3 mi) farther west and thus the westernmost point of continental Europe. Even in Spain Cabo Touriñán is farther west.


Monte Facho is the name of the mountain on Cape Finisterre, which has a peak that is 238 metres (781 ft) above sea level. A prominent lighthouse is at the top of Monte Facho. The seaside town of Fisterra is nearby.


The Artabri were an ancient Gallaecian Celtic tribe that once inhabited the area.



Bl. John of Parma

 பார்மா நகர் அருளாளர் ஜான் 

(Blessed John of Parma)

ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் ஏழாவது தலைவர்:

(Seventh Minister General of Franciscan Order)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1209

பார்மா சமூகம், தூய ரோம பேரரசு

(Commune of Parma, Holy Roman Empire)


இறப்பு: மார்ச் 19, 1289

கமரினோ, அன்கோனா, திருத்தந்தையர் மாநிலம்

(Camerino, March of Ancona, Papal States)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(இளம் துறவியர் சபை)

(Roman Catholic Church)

(Order of Friars Minor)

முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: 1781

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius VI)

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மார்ச் 21

அருளாளர் ஜான், ஒரு இத்தாலிய ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் துறவியும் (Italian Franciscan Friar), ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் இளம் துறவியர் சபையின் ஏழாவது தலைமைப் பொறுப்பாளரும் ஆவார் (Ministers General of the Order of Friars Minor). புனிதர் அசிசியின் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் (Saint Francis of Assisi) மரித்ததன் பின்னர், ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் (Franciscan Order) முன்னிருந்த எளிமையும், பணிவும் நிறைந்த நிலையினை திரும்ப கொண்டுவர அவர் எடுத்துக்கொண்ட முயற்சிகள் அனைவரும் அறிந்ததே. இவர், தாம் வாழ்ந்த காலத்தின் குறிப்பிடத்தக்க இறையியலாளரும் (Theologian) ஆவார்.


கி.பி. சுமார் 1209ம் ஆண்டு, வடக்கு இத்தாலியின் பிராந்தியமான “பார்மா” (Parma) நகரில் பிறந்த ஜான், அங்குள்ள புனித லாசரஸ் ஆலயத்தின் (Church of St. Lazarus at Parma) அருட்பணியாளரான தமது மாமனின் ஆதரவில் கல்வி கற்றார். கற்றலில் இவருக்கு இருந்த ஆர்வமும் வேகமும், இவர் விரைவிலேயே “தத்துவ ஞான சாஸ்திர” (Philosophy) ஆசிரியராக உதவின.


ஒரு கத்தோலிக்க குருவாக குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்ட இவர், “பொலொக்னா” (University of Bologna) மற்றும் “நேப்ள்ஸ்” (University of Naples) சர்வகலாசாலைகளில் “தத்துவ ஞான சாஸ்திரம்” கற்பித்தார். இறுதியில், “பாரிஸ் பல்கலைகழகத்தில்” (University of Paris) “பீட்டர் லொம்பார்ட்” அவர்களின் வார்த்தைப் பாடுகளை (Sentences of Peter Lombard) கற்பித்தார்.

கி.பி. 1245ம் ஆண்டு, திருத்தந்தை "நான்காம் இன்னொசென்ட்" (Pope Innocent IV) ஃபிரான்ஸ் (France) நாட்டின் லியோன்ஸ் (Lyons) நகரில் பொது மாநாடு ஒன்றினை கூட்டினார். அதில் பங்குபெற வேண்டிய, அப்போது தலைமைப் பொறுப்பிலிருந்த துறவி "க்ரெசென்ஷியஸ்" (Crescentius of Jesi) நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டிருந்த காரணத்தால் செல்ல இயலவில்லை. அவரது பிரதிநிதியாக செல்ல ஜான் நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். அம்மாநாட்டில், அங்கு கூடியிருந்த திருச்சபையின் அனைத்து தலைவர்களிலும் இவர் ஆழ்ந்த தாக்கத்தினை ஏற்படுத்தினார்.


இரண்டு வருடங்களின் பின்னர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பிற்கு நடந்த தேர்தலில் தலைமை தாங்கிய அதே திருத்தந்தை "நான்காம் இன்னொசென்ட்" (Pope Innocent IV), இரண்டு வருடத்தின் முன்னர் நடந்த போது மாநாட்டின் நிகழ்வுகளை நினைவில் இருத்தி, துறவி ஜான் அந்த பதவிக்கும் பொறுப்பிற்கும் பொருத்தமானவர் என்று ஜானையே தேர்ந்தெடுத்தார்.


தலைமைப் பொறுப்பினை ஏற்ற ஜான், சபையின் அனைத்துப் பிரிவுகளுக்கும் நடை பயணமாகவே சென்றார். அவரது தாழ்ச்சி மற்றும் பணிவு காரணமாக பல மடங்களில் அவரை அங்குள்ள துறவியர் அடையாளம் காணவேயில்லை. ஓரிரு நாட்கள் அங்கே தங்கியிருந்து அங்குள்ள நடவடிக்கைகளை கண்காணிப்பார்.


ஜானுக்குப் பிறகு, புனிதர் "பொனவென்ச்சுரா" (Saint Bonaventure) சபையின் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பினை ஏற்றார். தமது இறுதி காலத்தில் குருத்துவப் பணியிலிருந்து விடுவிக்கப்பட்ட அவர், “க்ரேஸ்ஸியோ” (Greccio) நகரில் உள்ள ஆசிரமத்தில் தமது ஜெப வாழ்வைத் தொடர்ந்தார். கி.பி. 1274ம் ஆண்டு, மரபுவழி (Orthodox) கிறிஸ்தவர்கள், கிறிஸ்தவ ஒற்றுமைக்கு எதிராக செயல்பட ஆரம்பித்த காரணத்தால், என்பது வயதான ஜான், தமது இறுதி சக்தி முழுவதையும் கிறிஸ்தவ ஒற்றுமைக்காக உழைக்க முடிவெடுத்தார். திருத்தந்தை "நான்காம் நிகோலஸ்" (Pope Nicolas IV) அவர்களின் அனுமதி பெற்று, கிரீஸ் (Greece) பயணமானார். ஆனால், அவரால் "கமேரினோ" (Camerino) வரை மட்டுமே பயணிக்க முடிந்தது. தீவிர நோய்வாய்ப்பட்ட அவர், அங்கேயுள்ள துறவிகள் மடத்தில், கி.பி. 1289ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 19ம் நாளன்றும், மரணமடைந்தார்.

ஜான், கி.பி. 1781ம் ஆண்டு, “திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பயஸ்” (Pope Pius VI) அவர்களால் அருளாளராக முக்திபேறு பட்டமளிக்கப்பட்டார்.


Feastday: March 20





John Buralli, the seventh minister general of the Franciscans, was born at Parma in the year 1209, and he was already teaching logic there when at the age of twenty-five, he joined the Franciscans. He was sent to Paris to study and, after he had been ordained, to teach and preach in Bologna, Naples and Rome. He preached so well that crowds of people came to hear his sermons, even very important persons flocked to hear him.  In the year 1247, John was chosen Minister General of the Order of Franciscans. He had a very difficult task because the members of his community were not living up to their duties, due to the poor leadership of Brother Elias. Brother Salimbene, a fellow townsman who worked closely with John, kept an accurate record of Johns activities. From this record, we learn that John was strong and robust, so that he was always kind and pleasant no matter how tired he was. He was the first among the Ministers General to visit the whole Order, and he traveled always on foot. He was so humble that when he visited the different houses of the Order, he would often help the Brother wash vegetables in the kitchen. He loved silence so that he could think of God and he never spoke an idle word. When he began visiting the various houses of his Order, he went to England first. When King Henry III heard that John came to see him, the King went out to meet him and embraced the humble Friar. When John was in France, he was visited by St. Louis IX who, on the eve of his departure for the Crusades, came to ask John's prayers and blessing on his journey. The next place John visited was Burgundy and Provence. At Arles, a friar from Parma, John of Ollis, came to ask a favor. He asked John if he and Brother Salimbene could be allowed to preach. John, however, did not want to make favorites of his Brothers. He said, "even if you were my blood brothers, I would not give you that permission without an examination." John of Ollis then said, "Then if we must be examined, will you call on Brother Hugh to examine us?" Hugh, the former provincial was in the house, but since he was a friend of John of Ollis and Salimbene, he would not allow it. Instead, he called the lecturer and tutor of the house. Brother Salimbene passed the test, but John of Ollis was sent back to take more studies. Trouble broke out in Paris where John had sent St. Bonaventure who was one of the greatest scholars of the Friars Minor. Blessed John went to Paris and was so humble and persuasive that the University Doctor who had caused the trouble, could only reply, "Blessed are you, and blessed are your words". Then John went back to his work at restoring discipline to his Order. Measures were taken to make sure the Friars obeyed the Rules of the Order. In spite of all his efforts, Blessed John was bitterly opposed. He became convinced that he was not capable of carrying out the reforms that he felt was necessary. So he resigned his office and nominated St. Bonaventure as his successor. John retired to the hermitage of Greccio, the place where St. Francis had prepared the first Christmas crib. He spent the last thirty years of his life there in retirement. He died on March 19, 1289 and many miracles were soon reported at his tomb. His feast day is March 20th.


John of Parma (c. 1209 – 19 March 1289) was an Italian Franciscan friar, who served as one of the first Ministers General of the Order of Friars Minor (1247–1257). He was also a noted theologian of the period.


Life

John was born about 1209[1] in the medieval commune of Parma in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna; his family name was probably Buralli. Educated by an uncle, chaplain of the Church of St. Lazarus at Parma, his progress in learning was such that he quickly became a teacher of philosophy (magister logicæ). When and where he entered the Order of Friars Minor (commonly called the "Franciscans"), the old sources do not say. Affò[2] assigns 1233 as the year, and Parma as the probable place. Ordained a priest, he taught theology at the University of Bologna and the University of Naples, and finally taught the Sentences of Peter Lombard at the University of Paris. He assisted at the First Council of Lyons in 1245, representing the current Minister General, Crescentius of Jesi, who was too ill to attend.[3]


At the General Chapter of the Order held at Lyons in July 1247, John was elected Minister General, at the suggestion of Pope Innocent IV, who had been impressed by him during his service at the Council of Lyons two years earlier.[4] He was elected with the support of the rigorist branch of the Order (known as the Fraticelli), which office he held till 2 February 1257. The desire for the original fervor of the Order animated the new Minister General and of his purposes for the full observance of the Rule of St. Francis, reflects from the joy recorded by Angelus Clarenus among the survivors of Francis's first companions at his election—though Giles of Assisi's words sound somewhat pessimistic: "Welcome, Father, but you come late".[5]


John set to work immediately. Wishing to know personally the state of the Order, he began visiting every community of friars. His first visit was to England, where he was extremely satisfied, and where he was received by King Henry III of England.[6] At Sens in France, King Louis IX (later a member of the Third Order of St. Francis) honored with his presence the Provincial Chapter held by John.


Having visited the Provinces of Burgundy and of Provence, he set out in September 1248, for Spain, whence Pope Innocent recalled him to entrust him with an embassy to the East. Before departing, John appears to have held the General Chapter of Metz in 1249 (others put it after the embassy, 1251). It was at this Chapter that John refused to draw up new statutes to avoid overburdening the friars.[7] Only some new rubrics were promulgated, which in a later chapter in Genoa (1254) were included in the official ceremonial of the Order.[8] The object of John's embassy to the East was reunion with the Eastern Orthodox Church, whose representatives he met at Nice, and who saluted him as an "angel of peace". John's mission bore no immediate fruit, though it may have prepared the way for the union decreed at the Council of Lyons in 1274.


In his generalate occurred also the famous dispute between the mendicants and the Sorbonne University of Paris. According to Salimbene,[9] John went to Paris (probably in 1253), and, by his mild yet strenuous arguments, strove to secure peace. It was in connection with this attack on the Dominicans and the Franciscans that John of Parma and Humbert of Romans, Master General of the Dominicans, published at Milan in 1255 a letter recommending peace and harmony between the two Orders (text in Wadding, 111, 380). In the "Introductorius in Evangelium Æternum" of Gerard of S. Donnino (1254), John's friend, Humbert, was denounced by the professors of Paris and condemned by a commission at Anagni in 1256;[10] John himself was in some way compromised—a circumstance which, combined with others, finally brought about the end of his generalate. He convened a General chapter at Rome on 2 February 1257. If Peregrinus of Bologna[11] is correct, Pope Alexander IV secretly intimated to John that he should resign, and decline reelection should it be offered him, while Salimbene[12] insists that John resigned of his own free will. The pope may have exerted some pressure on John, who was only too glad to resign, seeing himself unable to promote henceforth the good of the Order. Questioned as to the choice of a successor, he proposed Bonaventure, who had succeeded him as professor at Paris.


John retired to the hermitage at the famed village of Greccio, near Rieti, memorable for the Nativity scene first introduced there by Francis of Assisi. There he lived in voluntary exile and complete solitude; his cell near a rock is still shown. But another trial awaited him. Accused of Joachimism, he was submitted to a canonical process at Cittá della Pieve (in Umbria), reportedly presided over by Bonaventure and Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, Cardinal protector of the Order. The mention of this cardinal as protector brings us to a chronological difficulty, overlooked by writers who assign the process against John to 1257; for Alexander IV (1254–61) retained the protectorship[13] and Orsini became protector, at the earliest, at the end of 1261.[14]


Angelus Clarenus tells us that the concealed motive of this process was John's attachment to the literal observance of the Rule; the accusation of Joachimism, against which he professed his Catholic faith, being only a pretext. Other sources, however,[15] speak of retractation. Clarenus relates that John would have been condemned had it not been for the powerful intervention of Innocent IV's nephew, Cardinal Ottoboni Fioschi, later Pope Hadrian V.[16] John certainly did not profess the dogmatic errors of Joachimism, though he may have held some of its apocalyptic ideas.


Upon his acquittal, he returned to Greccio and continued his life of prayer and work. It was there, it is said, that an angel once served his Mass,[17] and that in 1285 he received the visit of Ubertin of Casale, who has left an account of this meeting.[18] Hearing that the Orthodox were abandoning the union agreed upon in 1274, John, now 80 years old, desired to use his last energies in the cause of Christian unity. He obtained the permission of Pope Nicolas IV to go to Greece, but reached only as far as Camerino, in the March of Ancona, where he died in the local friary on 19 March 1289.


He was beatified by Pope Pius VI in 1777; his feast day is celebrated by the Friars Minor on 20 March.



Saint Wulfram of Sens


Also known as

• Wulfram of Fontenelle

• Offran, Oufran, Suffrain, Vuilfran, Vulfran, Vulfranno, Vulphran, Wilfranus, Wolfram, Wolframus, Wolfran, Wulframnus, Wulfran, Wulfrann, Wulfrannus



Additional Memorials

• 15 October (translation of relics)

• 8 November as one of the Saints of the Diocese of Evry


Profile

Son of an official in the court of King Dagobert. Courtier under Clotaire III. Priest. Benedictine. Archbishop of Sens, France in 682, but in 685 he surrendered his see to Saint Amatus, whom he felt was the rightful bishop. Gave away his lands and evangelized the Frisians in Scandanavia with a group of monks for twenty years, remembered there as the Christian crew who "bore the White Christ" to these people.


Converted the son of King Radbod, and was allowed to preach the Gospel. He met with some success, but it was a rough and pagan land. children were sacrificed to heathen gods by hanging or drowning in the sea; people would cast lots at festivals to pick a victim, and the loser was immediately hanged or cut to pieces. Wulfram appealed to King Radbod to stop the slaughter, but the king said it was their custom, and he could not change it. He challenged Wulfram to rescue the victims if he could; Wulfram then waded into the sea to save two children who had been tied to posts and left to die in the rising tide.


The turning point in the mission came with the rescue of Ovon. Ovon had been picked by lot to be sacrificed by hanging. Wulfram begged King Radbod to stop the killing, but the commoners were outraged at the sacrilege. Wulfram eventually obtained an agreement that if Wulfram's God saved Ovon's life, Wulfram and the God could have the man. Ovon was hanged, and swung from the rope for two hours, during which Wulfram prayed. When the heathens decided to leave Ovon for dead, the rope broke, Ovon fell - and was alive. Ovon became Wulfram's slave, his follower, a monk, and then a priest at Fontenelle. The faith of the missionaries (and their power to work miracles), frightened and awed the people who turned from their old ways, and were baptized.


Even King Radbod converted, but just before his baptism, Radbod asked where his ancestors were. Wulfram told him that idolators went to hell. "I will go to hell with my ancestors," said the King, "rather than be in heaven without them." Later, near death, Radbod sent for Saint Willibrord to baptize him, but died before the saint's arrival.


Wulfram's relics were translated from Fontenelle to Abbeville, and in 1062, they were moved to Rouen, France. The life of Wulfram was written by the monk Jonas of Fontenelle eleven years after his death.


Born

c.640; French


Died

• 20 March 703 at Fontenelle, France of natural causes

• relics at Abbeville, France


Patronage

• Abbeville, France

• against the dangers of the sea




Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne

தூய கத்பர்ட் (மார்ச் 20)


இன்று நாம் நினைவுகூரும் கத்பர்ட், இங்கிலாந்து நாட்டில் உள்ள நார்த்தம்பிரியா என்னும் இடத்தில் 635 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிறந்தார். இவர் சிறுவயதிலே தன்னுடைய பெற்றோரை இழந்ததால், கென்ஸ்வித் என்பவருடைய பாதுகாப்பில்தான் வளர்ந்து வந்தார்.


கத்பர்ட், சிறுவயதில் பள்ளிக்குச் செல்லவில்லை, மாறாக ஆடுகளை ஓட்டிக்கொண்டு மெல்ரோஸ் என்ற மலைச்சரிவில் மேய்க்கச் சென்றார். அப்போது அங்கிருந்த ஆசிர்வாதப்பர் துறவற மடத்தைக் கண்டு, ஒருநாள் தானும் ஒரு துறவியாகவேண்டும் என்ற எண்ணம் கொண்டார். இதற்கிடையில் வயது வந்த இளைஞர்கள் யாவரும் நாட்டிற்காக இராணுவத்தில் சேர்ந்து போராடவேண்டும் என்றொரு நிலை உருவானது. எனவே, கத்பர்ட் இராணுவத்தில் சேர்ந்து நான்கு ஆண்டுகள் இராணுவத்தில் பணிபுரிந்தார். நான்கு ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பிறகு மீண்டுமாக தன்னுடைய சொந்த ஊருக்குத் திரும்பி வந்து, ஏற்கனவே செய்து வந்த வேலையைச் செய்து வந்தார்.

இச்சமயத்தில் ஒருநாள் தூய ஆர்டன் என்பவருடைய ஆன்மாவை வானதூதர்கள் தூக்கிக்கொண்டு போகும் காட்சியைக் கண்டார். இதனைக் கண்ட கத்பர்ட், தன்னுடைய ஆன்மாவையும் இவ்வுலக மாசுகளிலிருந்து காப்பாற்ற வேண்டும், அதற்கு நாம் துறவற வாழ்க்கையை மேற்கொள்வதே சரியானது என்று முடிவுசெய்து மெல்ரோஸ் மலைச்சரிவில் இருந்த தூய ஆசிர்வாதப்பர் சபையில் சேர்ந்து துறவியானார். கத்பர்ட், சிறுவயதில் பள்ளிக்குச் செல்லவில்லை என்றாலும் துறவற மடத்தில் சொல்லிக்கொடுக்கப்பட்ட பாடங்களை மிக எளிதாகக் கற்று, கல்வியில் சிறந்து விளங்கினார்.

இப்படி கத்பர்ட்டின் வாழ்க்கை மகிழ்ச்சியாய் போய்கொண்டிருந்த தருணத்தில், அவர் இருந்த துறவற மடத்தில் நிறையப் பேர் குறிப்பாக தலைமைப் பொறுப்பில் இருந்த தூய பாசில் உட்பட தொற்றுநோய் தாக்கி இறந்துபோனார்கள். அதனால் கத்பர்ட் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றார். அக்காலத்தில் வழிபாடுகள் ஒழுகில்லாமல் நடைபெற்றுக்கொண்டிருந்தன. இதனைக் கவனித்த ஆயர் பேரவை உரோமை வழிபாட்டு முறையை எங்கும் அமுல்படுத்தக் கேட்டுக்கொண்டது. அதனடிப்படையில் கத்பர்ட் தான் இருந்த பகுதியில் உரோமை வழிபாட்டு முறையை அமுல்படுத்தினார். இது பிடிக்காத ஒருசிலர் அவருக்கு எதிராகக் கிளர்தெழுந்தார்கள். கத்பர்ட் அதற்கெல்லாம் அஞ்சாமல் மிகவும் துணிச்சலாக இருந்து இறைப்பணியைச் செய்து வந்தார்.


இதற்குப் பின்பு, அவர் பார்னா என்ற தீவிற்குச் சென்று, அங்கு தனிமையில் இறைவனிடம் ஜெபித்து வந்தார். அப்போது அவருக்கு லின்டிஸ்பர்னே என்னும் இடத்திற்கு ஆயராகப் பொறுபேற்க வேண்டும் என்றொரு அழைப்பு வந்தது. கத்பர்ட் அதனைக் கீழ்ப்படிதலோடு ஏற்றுக்கொண்டு சிறப்பான முறையில் இறைப்பணியைச் செய்து வந்தார். இப்படி அவர் ஓயாது பணிசெய்து வந்ததால் அவருடைய உடல் நலம் குன்றியது. இதனால் அவர் 686 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

• Thaumaturgus of England

• Wonder-Worker of England



Profile

Orphaned at an early age. Shepherd. Received a vision of Saint Aidan of Lindesfarne entering heaven; the sight led Cuthbert to become a Benedictine monk at age 17 at the monastery of Melrose, which had been founded by Saint Aidan. Guest-master at Melrose where he was know for his charity to poor travellers; legend says that he once entertained an angel disguised as a beggar. Spiritual student of Saint Boswell. Prior of Melrose in 664.


Due to a dispute over liturgical practice, Cuthbert and other monks abandoned Melrose for Lindisfarne. There he worked with Saint Eata. Prior and then abbot of Lindesfarne until 676. Hermit on the Farnes Islands. Bishop of Hexham, England. Bishop of Lindesfarne in 685. Friend of Saint Ebbe the Elder. Worked with plague victims in 685. Noted (miraculous) healer. Had the gift of prophecy.


Evangelist in his diocese, often to the discomfort of local authorities both secular and ecclesiastical. Presided over his abbey and his diocese during the time when Roman rites were supplanting the Celtic, and all the churches in the British Isles were brought under a single authority.


Born

634 somewhere in the British Isles


Died

• 20 March 687 at Lindesfarne, England of natural causes

• interred with the head of Saint Oswald, which was buried with him for safe keeping

• body removed to Durham Cathedral at Lindesfarne in 1104

• his body, and the head of Saint Oswald, were incorrupt



Blessed Ambrose Sansedoni of Siena


Also known as

• Ambrogio Sansedoni

• Ambrose Sansedone



Profile

The son of a book illuminator, he was born so badly deformed that his mother gave him off to the care of a nurse. The nurse claimed that the only time the child was peaceful was in the local Dominican church, especially when near the altar of relics. Legend says that one day in church, the nurse covered the baby's face with a scarf; an unknown pilgrim told her, "Do not cover that child's face. He will one day be the glory of this city." A few days later the child suddenly stretch out his twisted limbs, pronounced the name "Jesus", and all deformity left him.


A pious child, getting up during the nights to pray and meditate. At age two he was given the choice of two of his father's books - and chose the one about saints. From age seven he daily recited the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin. He was always charitable, and even when young he worked with the poor, the abandoned, and the sick.


When he announced he wanted to join the preaching friars, his parents and friends tried to talk him out of it. But Ambrose had heard the call, and he joined the Dominicans in Siena, Italy in 1237 on his 17th birthday.


He studied in Paris, France, and Cologne, Germany with Saint Thomas Aquinas and Pope Blessed Innocent V under Saint Albert the Great. Taught in Cologne. Ambrose wanted to write, but saw the greatness of Saint Thomas, decided he could not match it, and devoted himself to preaching.


Worked on diplomatic missions for popes and secular rulers. Evangelized in Germany, France, and Italy; his preaching helped lead Blessed Franco of Siena to the solitary life. Mystic with a deep contemplative prayer life. He received ecstacies and visions, was known to levitate when preaching, and was seen circled in a mystic light in which flew bright birds.


Born

16 April 1220 at Siena, Italy


Died

20 March 1287 at Siena, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

8 October 1622 by Pope Gregory XV (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

• affianced couples

• betrothed couples

• engaged couples

• Siena, Italy



Saint John Nepomucene


Also known as

• Jan Nepomucký

• John Nepomucen

• John of Nepomuk

• John Wolflin

• Johannes von Nepomuk

• Martyr of the Confessional



Profile

While a child, he was cured by the prayers of his parents; they then consecrated him to God. Priest. Known as a great preacher who converted thousands. Vicar-general of Prague (in the modern Czech Republic). Counselor and advocate of the poor in the court of King Wenceslaus IV. He refused several bishoprics. Confessor to the queen, he taught her to bear the cross of her ill-tempered husband the king. Imprisoned for refusing to disclose the queen's confession to the king. When he continued to honor the seal of the confessional, he was ordered executed. Symbol of Bohemian nationalism. His image has been used in art as a symbol of the sacrament of Confession, and many bridges in Europe bear his likeness as their protector.


Born

c.1340 at Nepomuk, Bohemia (in modern Czech Republic) as John Wolflin


Died

• burned, then tied to a wheel and thrown off a bridge into the Moldau River (in the modern Czech Republic) to drown on 20 March 1393

• on the night of his death, seven stars hovered over the place where he drowned


Canonized

19 March 1729 by Pope Benedict XIII




Blessed John Baptist Spagnuolo


Also known as

• Baptista Mantuanus

• Baptista Spagnoli

• Baptista Spagnolo

• Baptista Spagnuoli Mantuanus

• Baptista Spanuoli Mantuanus

• Baptistae Mantuani

• Battista Spagnoli

• Battista Spagnuoli

• Giovanni Baptista Mantuanus

• Johannes Baptista Mantuanus

• Mantuan

• Mantuanus

• Mantuanus Baptista



Profile

Son of Peter Spagnoli, a Spanish nobleman assigned to the court in Mantua, Italy. Studied in Padua, Italy where a wild life put him briefly at the mercy of loan sharks, and got him thrown out of his father's house. Drifted through Venice, Italy. Experienced a conversion to the faithCarmelite at age 16 at Ferrara, Italy. Elected vicar-general of his congregation six times. Prior-general of the Carmelites in 1513. Noted poet, writing over 55,000 lines of Latin verse; has been criticized for excessive use of pagan mythological images in his work, but was referred to as the Good old Mantuan by Shakespeare in Love's Labour Lost. Eminent representative of Italian Christian Humanism.


Born

17 April 1447 at Mantua, Italy


Died

20 March 1516 at Mantua, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

1890 by Pope Leo XIII



Blessed Nikollë Prennushi


Also known as

Vinçenc



Profile

Nikollë entered the Franciscan Friars Minor in 1900, taking the name Vinçenc, and made his profession at Salzburg, Austria on 12 December 1904. He studied theology and philosopher in Innsbruck, Austria, and was ordained a priest in Salzburg on 19 March 1908. He wrote, poetry, books and articles for newspapers and magazines on political and international topics, and collected Albanian folklore. Chosen bishop of Sapë, Albania by Pope Pius XI on 27 February 1936. Chosen archbishop of Durrës, Alabania by Pope Pius XII on 26 June 1940. Arrested by Communist authorities on 19 May 1947 and sentenced to 20 years in prison for the crime of staying loyal to Rome and not turning everything over the national church formed by the Communists. After a show trial, he was sentenced to prison where he was tortured, abused and neglected to death. Martyr.


Born

4 September 1885 in Shkodrë, Albania


Died

20 March 1949 in prison in Durrës, Albania of abuse and repeated torture


Beatified

• 5 November 2016 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated at the Square of the Cathedral of Shën Shtjefnit, Shkodër, Albania, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato



Saint Jósef Bilczewski


Also known as

• Giuseppe Bilczewski

• Joseph Bilczewski

• Jozef Bilczewski

• Yosyp Bil'chevs'kyi



Profile

Eldest of nine children in a peasant family. Seminarian at Krakow, Poland. Ordained on 6 July 1884. Doctor of theology at the University of Vienna, Austria in 1886. Studied dogmatic theology and Christian archaeology in Rome, Italy and Paris, France. Professor of theology at the University of Lviv in 1891. Archbishop of Leopoli, Ukraine on 17 December 1900. Often intervened with civil authorities on behalf of Poles, Ukrainians and Jews. Guided his flock during World War I (1914 to 1918), the Polish-Ukrainian War (1918-1919), the Bolshevik invasion (1919-1920), and the anti-Catholic terror started by the Communists; from 1918-1921 his archdiocese lost about 120 priests. Fought to protect everyone in his see, regardless of race or religion.


Born

26 April 1860 at Wilamowice, Austria (modern Ukraine)


Died

20 March 1923 at Lviv, Ukraine of pernicious anemia


Canonized

23 October 2005 by Pope Benedict XVI at Rome, Italy




Blessed Francis Palau y Quer


Also known as

• Francisco Palau y Quer

• Francesc Palau Quer

• Francesc of Jesus, Mary, Joseph



Profile

Joined the Carmelites in 1832. Ordained in 1836. Civil disorder forced him into exile. He returned to Spain in 1851 and founded his School of Virtue at Barcelona to teach catechism. For non-theological reasons, his school was suppressed and he was exiled to Ibiza from 1854 to 1860. Founded the Congregation of Carmelite Brothers and Congregation of Carmelite Sisters in 1860-1861 in the Balearic Islands. Preached popular missions and devotion to Our Lady.


Born

29 December 1811 at Aythona, Lerida, Spain


Died

20 March 1872 at Tarragona, Spain of natural causes


Beatified

24 April 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Maria Josefa Sancho de Guerra


Also known as

Maria Josefa of the Heart of Jesus


Profile

Nun, joining the Institute of the Servants of Mary at age 18, taking name Maria Josefa of the Heart of Mary. Helped found the Institute of the Servants of Jesus in Bilbao, Spain in 1871; the Institute sisters care for the children, the sick, the elderly and the abandoned in hospital and in their homes. By her death, the Insitute had 43 houses and 1,000 sisters; they continue their good work today with 100 houses in 16 countries.



Born

7 September 1842 in Vitoria, Basque Country, Spain


Died

20 March 1912 in Bilbao, Vizcaya, Spain of natural causes


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Martin of Braga


Also known as

• Martin of Dumio

• Martin of Panónia

• Martin of Dume

• Martin Bracarense

• Martin Dumiense

• Martinho...



Profile

Monk in Palestine. In 550 he introduces communal monasticism into Galatia in Spain. Abbot at the Dumio Monastry in Dume, Portugal and missionary to the Arians and pagans of the area by May 561. Bishop of Mondoñedo, Spain. Archbishop of Braga, Portugal by 572. Writer who left text of his homilies and sermons, and moral, liturgical, and ascetical treatises.


Born

515-520 at Pannonia


Died

580 at Braga, Portugal of natural causes


Patronage

Braga, Portugal



Saint Herbert of Derwentwater

Profile

Benedictine monk and priest. Disciple and friend of Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne. Hermit on the island of Lake Derwentwater, later called Saint Herbert's Island. Each year he visited Cuthbert at Lindisfarne. In 686 Cuthbert visited Herbert on his island, and told him that if he had anything to ask, he must do so because he foresaw he would soon die. They both prayed they go together. Soon after, Herbert fell ill; the illness lasted till 20 March 687 when both saints died. In 1374, Bishop Thomas Appleby of Carlisle ordered the vicar of Crosthwaite to celebrate a sun Mass on Saint Herbert's Isle each year on his feast, and granted 40 days Indulgence to all who visited on this day. Ruins of a circular stone building there may be connected with him.


Died

20 March 687 of natural causes



Saint Clement of Ireland


Also known as

• Clemens Scotus

• Clement of the Paris Schools


Profile

Clement and his companion Ailbe, arrived in Gaul in 772, and opened shop as teachers. Their fame spread, and Charlemagne sent for them to come to his court, where they stayed for several months. Ailbe was given direction of a monastery near Pavia, Italy. Clement stayed in France as regent of the Paris school from 775 until his death. Legend says that Clement founded the University of Paris, which in a metaphorical sense he did since he started a great tradition of learning in the city.


Born

c.750 in Ireland


Died

• 20 March 818 in Auxerre, France of natural causes

• interred in the church of Saint-Amator



Saint Archippus of Colossi


Also known as

Archippus the Apostle


Additional Memorials

• 19 February (with Philemon and Appia)

• 6 July (with Onesimus)

• 22 November (with Philemon and Appia)



Profile

Companion of Saint Paul the Apostle. Tradition says he was one of the 72 disciples. In the canonical Epistle to the Colossians, Paul bids him "take heed to the ministry which thou hast received in the Lord, that thou fulfill it."


Born

possibly at Colossae or Laodicea; records vary


Died

1st century



Blessed Hippolytus Galantini


Also known as

Ippolito Galantini



Profile

Silk-weaver. From age twelve, he assisted priests in teaching children their catechism. As an adult, he formed the congregation of Italian Doctrinarians, who taught children catechism.


Born

1565 at Florence, Italy


Died

1619 of natural causes


Beatified

29 June 1825 by Pope Leo XII




Saint Guillermo de Peñacorada

Also known as

William of Peñacorada


Profile

Monk in Sahagún, León, Spain. He and his brothers fled from there ahead of invading Saracens, and settled in Peñacorada, Spain. Built the monastery of Santa Maria de los Valles, which was later renamed San Guillermo de Peñacorada in his honour.


Died

c.1042



Blessed Jeanne Veron


Additional Memorial

21 January as one of the Blessed Martyrs of Laval


Profile

Member of the Sisters of Charity of Our Lady of Evron. Martyred in the French Revolution.


Born

6 August 1766 in Quelaines, Mayenne, France


Died

20 March 1794 in Laval, Mayenne, France


Beatified

19 June 1955 by Pope Pius XII at Rome, Italy



Saint John Sergius


Also known as

John of Mar Sabas


Profile

Monk at the eremetical abbey (a laura) of Saint Sabas' near Jerusalem. Martyred with 20 other monks in an Arab anti-Christian raid during which many others were injured but escaped; one of them, named Stephen, wrote a poem in honour of the group known as the Martyrs of Mar Sabas.


Died

martyred in 796



Saint Alexandra of Amisus


Also known as

• Alexandra of Samsun

• Alessandra



Profile

Christian woman martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

burned to death c.300 in Amisus, Paphlagonia (modern Samsun, Turkey)



Saint Caldia of Amisus


Also known as

Claudia



Profile

Christian woman martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

burned to death c.300 at Amisus, Paphlagonia (in modern Turkey)



Saint Remigius of Strasbourg


Also known as

Remi, Remidius


Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of Hugh of Alsace; cousin of Saint Odilia of Hohenburg. Abbot of Münster near Colmar, France. Bishop of Strasbourg, France in 776.


Died

783



Saint Anastasius XVI


Also known as

• Anastasius of Jerusalem

• Anastasius of Saint Sabas


Profile

Monk. Archimandrite of Saint Sabas Abbey in Jerusalem. Murdered with his brothers in an attack by a band of thieves.


Died

797



Martyrs of San Sabas


Profile

Twenty monks who were martyred together in their monastery by invading Saracens.


Died

797 when they were burned inside the San Sabas monastery in Palestine



Saint Nicetas of Apollonias


Profile

Bishop of Apollonias in Bithynia (in modern Turkey). Persecuted and exiled to Anatolia for opposing the iconoclasm of emperor Leo III.



Saint Urbitius of Metz


Profile

Bishop of Metz, France. Built a church in honour of Saint Felix of Nola; it became part of the Saint Clement monastery.


Died

c.420



Saint Tertricus of Langres


Profile

Son of Saint Gregory of Langres; uncle of Saint Gregory of Tours. Bishop of Langres, France c.540.


Died

572



Saint Benignus of Flay


Also known as

Benignus of Fontenelle


Profile

Monk and abbot at Fontenelle and Flay in France.


Died

725



Saint Cathcan of Rath-derthaighe


Profile

Bishop of Rath-derthaighe, Ireland.



Martyrs of Amisus


Profile

A group of Christian women martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. The only details we have are eight of their names - Alexandra, Caldia, Derphuta, Euphemia, Euphrasia, Juliana, Matrona and Theodosia.


Died

burned to death c.300 in Amisus, Paphlagonia (modern Samsun, Turkey)



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group of Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Nero. We know nothing else about them but the names Anatolius, Cyriaca, Joseph, Parasceve, Photis, Photius, Sebastian and Victor.


Martyrs of Syria

Profile

A group of Christians who were martyred together in Syria. We know nothing else about them but the names Cyril, Eugene and Paul.