புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

04 February 2023

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 06

Saint Alfonso Maria Fusco


Profile

Son of Giuseppina Schiavone and Aniello Fusco, the eldest of five children in a pious peasant family. The couple had been unable to have children until a visit to the relics of Saint Alphonsus Maria d' Liguori; there they received the message that they would have a son, name him Alfonso, and that he would led the life of a beati. Confirmed and received his first Communion at age seven, and at eleven he announced his intent to become a priest. Entered the seminary of Nocera dei Pagani on 5 November 1850. Ordained 29 September 1863.



Noted for his devotion to the liturgy, and as a gentle, paternal confessor. In September of 1878, he, Maddalena Caputo of Angri (Sister Crocifissa), and three young women formed what would become the Congregation of the Baptistine Sisters of the Nazarene (Baptistine Sisters), devoted to the care and education of poor orphans, abandoned children, and youth at risk; their first house was soon known as the Little House of Providence.


Along with the usual problems of more needs than resources, the new congregation faced serveral internal trials. False accusations were made about Father Alfonso, and Bishop Vitagliano tried to remove him as the congregation's director. The daughter house in Rome tried to break away from the congregation, even locking the doors to the house when Alfonso came to see them. At one point, Cardinal Respighi, Vicar of Rome, recommended that he resign for the good of the congregation. He was, however, vindicated in the end, remained as director, and saw the congregation through it's early, difficult years. Today they work in fifteen countries around the world.


Born

23 March 1839 in Angri, Salerno, diocese of Nocera-Sarno, Italy


Died

6 February 1910 in Angri, Salerno, Italy of natural causes/p>


Beatified

• 7 October 2001 by Pope John Paul II

• the beatification miracle involved the healing of a child of "malaria infantile cerebral, with prolonged coma and status epilepticus, with pneumonia and septicaemia; with severe blood malarial parasitemia, persistent despite medical therapies" over the night of 2 to 3 February 1998 in the diocese of Ndola, Zambia through the intercession of Saint Alfonso


Canonized

• 16 October 2016 by Pope Francis in Rome, Italy

• the canonization miracle involved the healing of a Baptistine nun of "sub-arachnoid haemorrhage with tetraventricular flooding and hydrocephalus, secondary and ruptured posterior communicating artery aneurysms" on 25 October 2009 through the intercession of Saint Alfonso


Patronage

Congregation of the Baptistine Sisters of the Nazarene




Saint Dorothy of Caesarea

செசாரியா_நகர்ப்_புனித_டாரத்தி (-321)

பிப்ரவரி 06

இவர் (#DorothyOfCaesarae)கப்பதோசியில் உள்ள செசாரியாவில் பிறந்தவர்.

சிறு வயது முதலே தன்னை ஆண்டவருக்கு அர்ப்பணித்து வாழ்ந்த இவரை உரோமை மன்னன் தியோகிளசியனிடம் ஆளுநராக இருந்த சாப்ரிகுஸ் என்பவன், உரோமைக் கடவுளுக்குப் பலி செலுத்தச் சொன்னான். அதற்கு இவர் மறுப்பபுத் தெரிவித்தது மட்டுமல்லாமல், ஆண்டவர்மீது கொண்ட நம்பிக்கையில் உறுதியாக இருந்ததால், அவன் இவரைப் பலவாறாகச் செய்தான்.

மேலும் உரோமை அரசாங்கத்தில் வழக்குரைஞராகப் பணியாற்றிய தியோபிளஸ் என்பவன் இவரிடம், "நீதான் இயேசுவின் மணவாட்டியாயகற்றே! அதனால் அவருடைய தோட்டத்திலிருந்து மலர் பறித்து வா" என்று எள்ளி நகையாடினான். இதற்கு இவர் எதுவும் பேசாமல் அமைதியாக இருந்தார்.

321 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிப்ரவரி திங்கள் 6 ஆம் நாள் இவர் கொல்லப்படுவதற்கு முன்பாகச் சிறுவன் ஒருவன் கையில் மலர்கள் மற்றும் பழங்களோடு வந்து, அவற்றை டோரத்தியைக் கேலி செய்த தியோபிளஸிடம் கொடுத்துவிட்டு மறந்தான். உண்மையில் சிறுவன் வடிவில் வந்தது வானதூதரே. இதையறிந்த தியோபிளஸ் மனம்மாறிக் கிறிஸ்துவை ஏற்றுக் கொண்டான். 

டோரத்தி கொல்லப்பட்ட சில நாள்களுக்குப் பிறகு தியோபிளசும் ஆண்டவர் மீது கொண்ட நம்பிக்கைக்காகக் கொல்லப்பட்டான்.

Also known as

Dora, Dorothea



Profile

Apochryphal martyr whose story has been beautifully told, and was popular for many years. Having made a personal vow of virginity, she refused to marry, or to sacrifice to idols. She was tried, tortured, and sentenced to death for her faith by the prefect Sapricius as part of the persecutions of Diocletian. The pagan lawyer Theophilus said to her in mockery, "Bride of Christ, send me some fruits from your bridegroom's garden." Before she was executed, she sent him, by a six-year-old boy who is thought to have been an angel, her headress which had the fragrance of roses and fruits. Seeing this gift, and the miraculous messenger who brought them, Theophilus converted, and was martyred himself. This story has been variously enlarged through the years. In some places, trees are blessed on her feast day because of her connection with a blooming, fruitful miracle.


Died

beheaded with a sword on 6 February 311 in Caesarea Mazaca, Cappodocia (modern day Kayseri, Turkey)


Patronage

• brewers

• brides

• florists

• gardeners

• midwives

• newlyweds

• Pescia, Italy


Representation

• crown of flowers

• crown of roses

• crowned with flowers and surrounded by stars as she kneels before the executioner

• crowned with palm and flower basket, surrounded by stars

• crowned and carrying a flower basket

• in an orchard

• with the Christ-child in an apple tree

• leading the Christ-child by the hand

• maiden carrying a basket of fruit and flowers, especially roses

• roses

• veiled, with flowers in her lap

• veiled, holding apples from heaven on a branch

• with a basket of fruit and the Christ-child riding a hobby horse

• with an angel and wreath of flowers

• with an angel carrying a basket of flowers



Saint Amand of Maastricht


Also known as

• Apostle of Belgium

• Apostle of Flanders

• Amand of Belgium

• Amand of Elnone

• Amand of France

• Amandus, Amantius, Amatius



Profile

Lived some time as a hermit, then became a monk at age 20 at the Abbey of Saint Martin at Tours, France. When he took the cowl, his family tried to kidnap him to bring him home for "deprogramming", but failed. Given a commission to wander and preach, he evangelized in France, Flanders, Carinthia, Gascony, and Germany, sometimes getting beaten by the locals for his trouble. Bishop of Maastricht, Netherlands in 649. Founded several monasteries and convents. Abbot of the monastery at Elnone-en-Pevele, France. Friend and spiritual director of Saint Humbert of Pelagius, and was assisted in his work by Saint Acharius. In his declining years he retired to Elnon Abbey, where he was the spiritual teacher of Saint Chrodobald of Marchiennes, and ended his days as a prayerful monk. His association with brewers and vintners and related fields comes from spending so much time preaching and teaching in beer-making and wine-making regions.


Born

c.584 at Poitou, France


Died

c.679 in the monastery at Elnone-en-Pevele (modern Saint-Amand-les-Eaux), France


Patronage

• against diseases of cattle

• against fever

• against paralysis

• against rheumatism

• against seizures

• against skin diseases

• against vision problems

• Boy Scouts

• bar staff, barkeepers, bartenders

• brewers

• grocers

• hotel keepers, innkeepers

• merchants

• pharmacists, druggists

• vinegar makers

• vine growers, vintners, wine-makers

• wine merchants

• 5 cities


Representation

• holding a church

• with a dragon (the sin and evil he drove out by his work) • banner • chair • church • flag



Saint Pedro Bautista Blásquez y Blásquez


Also known as

• Peter Baptist Blasquez

• Pietro Battista Blasquez



Profile

Born to the Castillian nobility, Pedro studied at the University of Salamanca and then joined the Franciscans in 1542. Ordained a priest, he taught philosophy and theology, and served as superior of several Franciscan communities. Feeling a call to missionary work, in 1580 he was sent to Mexico where he founded several communities, and then in 1583 he was dispatched to the Philippines.


In 1593, to replace the work of Jesuits who had been expelled from the country in 1590, he and five other friars were sent to Japan where they lived in poverty, cared for lepers, preached the faith, and built schools, churches, convents and hospitals. Father Pedro became known as a miracle worker.


A number of parties, including Buddhist bonzes, European traders, and anti-western Japanese, pushed for a government persecution of these missionaries. The emperor began to fear that missionaries were a prelude to invasion by the West, and ordered them all imprisoned. Arrested in different places, they were all transferred to Nagasaki where they were abused and executed. His last known act was praying for his persecutors. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

1542 in San Esteban del Valle, Avila, Castille (in modern Spain)


Died

• crucified on 5 February 1597 on a hill in Nagasaki, Japan

• his body reported incorrupt after two months exposure to the elements

• local Christians reported seeing Father Pedro celebrating Mass long after his death


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX


Patronage

• Caceres, Philippines, archdiocese of

• Japan




Saint Felipe de Jesus


Also known as

• Felipe las Casas Martínez

• Philip de la Casas

• Philip of Jesus



Profile

Philip's parents had immigrated from Illescas, Spain to Mexico City, and the boy was born in the New World. It was a pious family; two of his brothers entered the Augustinians, and one was martyred.


He joined the Reformed Franciscan Convent of Santa Barbara in Pueblo, Mexico in his early teens, but left after a year. With his father's assistance, Philip sailed to Manila in the Philippines to start an overseas trading buiness. However, he continued to feel the call to religious life, and on 22 May 1594 he entered the Franciscan Convent of Our Lady of the Angels in Manila, becoming a friar, and working with the sick.

At his family's request, he was returned to Mexico in 1596 to be consecrated a bishop, but the ship was blown off course and wrecked on a reef on the coast of Japan; during the storm, Philip had a vision of a white cross hanging above Japan, a cross which became blood red. The locals impounded the ship's cargo and imprisoned the crew. In order to keep the cargo from Philip's ship, the warlord Taikosama accused Philip and his crew of piracy and spying for the king of Spain preparatory to an invasion. Philip and several other Christians were placed under house arrest at Miako for several weeks, and then condemned to death. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

1575 in Mexico as Philip de al Casas


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX


Patronage

• Mexico City, Mexico, city of

• Mexico City, Mexico, archdiocese of



Saint Vaast of Arras


Also known as

Foster, Gaston, Gastone, Vaat, Vedast, Vedasto, Vedastus



Additional Memorial

• 2 January (discovery of relics)

• 7 February (enshrinement of relics)

• 15 July (translation of relics in Cambrai)

• 1 October (translation of relics)


Profile

Hermit. Worked with Saint Remigius to convert the Franks. Priest. Instructed King Clovis in the faith. His miraculous healing of the blind helped convince some of Clovis's pagan court of the power of God (and led to Vaast's patronage against eye trouble). First bishop of Arras, France in 499. Bishop of Cambrai, France c.510. On the night he died, the locals saw a luminous cloud ascend from his house, apparently carrying away Vaast's soul.


Born

c.453 at Limoges, France


Died

539-540 at Arras, France of natural causes


Patronage

• against eye diseases

• children

• children late learning to walk

• disabled people

• Arras, France, city of

• Arras, Boulogne and Saint-Omer, France, diocese of


Representation

• bishop raising to life a goose which a wolf has brought to him

• wolf bringing a goose to a bishop; Vaast will use it to feed the poor

• with a child or children at his feet (represents the people brought to the faith in his area)

• chasing a bear out of a church (represents replacing a rough paganism with Christianity)



Saint Mateo Correa-Magallanes


Also known as

Mateo Correa



Additional Memorial

21 May as one of the Martyrs of the Mexican Revolution


Profile

Attended the seminary at Zacatecas, Mexico on a scholarship, beginning 12 January 1881. Ordained on 20 August 1893. Parish priest, assigned to Concepcion de Oro, Mexico from 1898 to 1905. Close friend of the Pro-Juarez family, he baptized Humberto Pro, and gave First Communion to Blessed Miguel Pro. Re-assigned to Colotlan, Mexico from 1908 to 1910. Following the government's repression of the Church in 1910, he went into hiding. Assigned to Valparaiso, Mexico in 1926.


Arrested while en route to a sick call; when he saw the soldiers approaching, he quickly swallowed the host to prevent desecration. Accused of being part of the armed Cristero rebellion, he was jailed in Zacatecas, and then in Durango, Mexico. While in jail, he heard confessions from other prisoners. When the jail's commander, General Ortiz, demanded to know what the condemned men had said, Father Mateo refused. Martyred for being a priest, and for refusing to break the seal of the confessional.


Born

23 July 1866 at Tepechitlán, Zacatecas, Mexico


Died

shot on 6 February 1927 on the outskirts of Durango City, Durango, Mexico


Canonized

21 May 2000 by Pope John Paul II during the Jubilee of Mexico



Saint Paul Miki

மறைசாட்சியாளர் பவுல் மீகி மற்றும் தோழர்கள் Paul Miki und Gefährten SJ

பிறப்பு 

1565, 

சியோட்டோ Kyoto, ஜப்பான்

இறப்பு 

5 பிப்ரவரி, 

1597 நாகசாகி, ஜப்பான்

புனிதர்பட்டம்: 8 ஜூன் 1862, திருத்தந்தை 9 ஆம் பயஸ்

இவர் ஜப்பான் நாட்டில் வாழ்ந்த ஓர் கிறிஸ்தவ பெற்றோரின் மகனாகப் பிறந்தார். இவர் தனது 22 ஆம் வயதில் இயேசு சபையில் சேர்ந்தார். மிகச் சிறந்த மறையுரையாளரான இவர், ஜப்பான் நாட்டில் சிறப்பாக மறைப்பணியாற்றினார். 1587 ஆம் ஆண்டு சோகுண்டோயோடோமி ஹிடேயோஷி Shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi என்பவர் இட்ட கட்டளையின் பேரில் இப்புனிதர் பிடிக்கப்பட்டு தனித்தீவிற்கு கொண்டுச் செல்லப்பட்டு சிறையிலடைக்கப்பட்டார். இருப்பினும் இவர் ஆற்றியப் பணி மக்களிடையே தீப்போல பரவியது. இவரின் தோழர்களும் மறைப்பணியை சிறப்பாக ஆற்றினர். கிறிஸ்தவ மக்கள் பெருகினர். இதனால் சோகுன் டோயோடோமி ஆத்திரமடைந்து 25 தோழர்களையும் பிடித்து சிறையிலடைத்தான். பின்னர் நாகசாகி நகருக்கு இழுத்துச் செல்லப்பட்டு சிலுவையில் அடித்து கொல்லப்பட்டார்கள்

Profile

Born wealthy, the son of the military leader Miki Handayu. Paul felt a call to religous life from his youth. Jesuit in 1580, educated at the Jesuit college at Azuchi and Takatsuki. Successful evangelist. When the political climate became hostile to Christianity, he decided to continue his ministry, was soon arrested. On his way to martydom, he and other imprisoned Christians were marched 600 miles so they could be abused by, and be a lesson to, their countrymen; they sang the Te Deum on the way. His last sermon was delivered from the cross. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.



Born

1562 at Tsunokuni, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX




Blessed Mary Teresa Bonzel


Also known as

• Aline Bonzel

• Maria Theresia

• Regina Christine Wilhelmine Bonzel



Profile

Franciscan tertiary by age 20. She wanted to enter religious life, but her family strongly opposed it. With eight other women she took the veil as part of the new community of Sisters of Saint Francis of Perpetual Adoration, and became its director, taking the name Mother Mary Teresa. By the time of her death the order had sisters all over the world, and had established schools, hospitals, and orphanages.


Born

17 September 1830 at Olpe, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany as Aline Bonzel


Died

6 February 1905 at Olpe, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany of natural causes


Beatified

• 10 November 2013 by Pope Francis

• the beatification recognition was celebrated at the cathedral of Paderborn, Germany with Cardinal Angelo Amato presiding

• her beatification miracle involved the cure of a four-year-old boy in Colorado Springs, Colorado



Saint Gundisalvus Garcia

புனிதர் கொன்சாலோ கார்ஸியா 

ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் குருத்துவம் பெறாத பொதுநிலை சகோதரர் மற்றும் மறைசாட்சி:

பிறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 5, 1557

வாசை, மும்பை, போர்ச்சுகீசிய இந்தியா

இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 5, 1597

நாகசாகி, ஜப்பான்

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: செப்டம்பர் 14, 1627

திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் அர்பன்

புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 8, 1862

திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ்

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 6

முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:

புனிதர் கொன்சாலோ கார்ஸியா ஆலயம், காஸ், வாசை

பாதுகாவல்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க உயர் மறைமாவட்டம், மும்பை

புனிதர் கொன்சாலோ கார்ஸியா, போர்ச்சுகீசிய இந்தியாவில் பிறந்து, ஜப்பான் நாட்டில் மறை சாட்சியாக மரித்த ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் இருபத்தாறு புனிதர்களுள் ஒருவர் ஆவார். இவர் ஒரு ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் பொதுநிலையினர் சகோதரர் (Franciscan Lay Brother) ஆவார். இந்தியாவில் பிறந்து, அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்ட முதல் புனிதரும் இவரேயாவார். மும்பை நகரின் வடக்கே, சுமார் முப்பது கிலோமீட்டர் தொலைவில் அமைந்துள்ள மேற்கத்திய கடற்கரை நகரான வாசை என்னுமிடத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவர் வாழ்ந்த அக்காலத்தில், அப்பகுதி போர்ச்சுகீசிய காலணித்துவ ஆட்சியின்கீழ் இருந்தது.

இவரது தந்தை ஒரு போர்ச்சுகீசிய படை வீரர் ஆவார். தாயார் “கொங்கண்” (Konkan) மொழி பேசும் ஒரு இந்தியப் பெண் ஆவார். இவர், ஜப்பான் ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபைத்தலைவரான புனிதர் பீட்டர் பாப்டிஸ்டின் வலக்கரமாக இருந்தார்.

"குன்டி ஸ்லாவுஸ் கார்ஸியா" எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட இவர், வாசையில் பணியாற்றிய 'செபஸ்தியோ கான்கால்வ்ஸ்' என்னும் இயேசு சபை குருவிடம் கல்வி பயின்றார். இயேசு சபையினரிடமே கி.பி. 1564 முதல் 1572 வரை எட்டு வருடம் பயின்றார். தனது 15ம் வயதில் குரு செபஸ்தியோவுடன் ஜப்பான் சென்றார். ஜப்பானிய மொழியை இவர் எளிதில் கற்றதால், அம்மக்களின் நன்மதிப்பைப் பெற்றார். இவர் அங்கிருந்து ஆல்கோ சென்று வணிகம் செய்தார். அது தென்கிழக்காசியா முழுவதும் பல கிளைகள் கொண்டு பரவியது.

இவரின் கனவான இயேசு சபை குருவாவது நிறைவடையாமலேயே இவர் ஃபிலிப்பைன்ஸ் நாட்டில் உள்ள மணிலாவுக்கு பொதுநிலை மறைப்பணியாளராய் சென்றார். அங்கே ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபைக் குருவான பீட்டர் பாப்டிஸ்டினால் தூண்டப்பட்டு அச்சபையில் பொதுநிலை சகோதரராக சேர்ந்தார். தொழு நோயாளர்களோடு அங்கே பணியாற்றினார். அப்போதே அவர் அச்சபையில் திருநிலைப்பாட்டினைப் பெற்றார்.

மே 26, 1592ல் ஃபிலிப்பைன்ஸ் நாட்டின் எசுபானிய ஆளுனரால் அரசு சார்பாக ஜப்பானுக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டார். அங்கே நான்காண்டுகள் பணிபுரிந்த பின்னர், அப்போது ஜப்பானிய சர்வாதிகாரியால் ஆட்சி விரோதச் செயல்களில் ஈடுபட்டதாக குற்றம் சாட்டப்பட்டு அவர்கள் தங்கியிருந்த மியாகோ (கியோத்தோ) என்னும் இடத்திலிருந்த மடத்திலேயே 8 டிசம்பர் 1596 அன்று சிறைவைக்கப்பட்டார். சிலநாட்களுக்கு பின் மாலை செபம் செய்து கொண்டிருந்தபோது அவர்கள் கைது செய்யப்பட்டனர்.

ஜனவரி 3, 1597 அன்று கைது செய்யப்பட்ட 26 பேர்களுடைய இடது காதுகள் அறுத்தெறியப்பட்டன. அவற்றை கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் எடுத்து பாதுகாத்து வந்தனர்.

ஃபெப்ரவரி 5, 1597 அன்று அவர்களை சிலுவையில் அறைய ஆணை பிறப்பிக்கப்ப்பட்டது. சிலுவையில் அறையும் இடத்தை கார்சியா முதலில் அடைந்தார். அவர் முதலில் அங்கிருந்த ஒரு சிலுவையின் அருகில் சென்று, "இது எனக்கானதா?" என்றார். "இது இல்லை" என்று பதில் கூறி அவரை வேறு சிலுவையிடம் கூட்டிச்சென்றனர். சிலுவையை அடைந்ததும் முழந்தாள் பணிந்து அதனைத் தழுவினார். அவரோடு கைது செய்யப்பட்ட மற்றெல்லோரையும் சிலுவையில் அறைந்தார்கள். பின்பு அவரை இரண்டு ஈட்டி கொண்டு இதயத்தில் குத்தினர். இவர் சிலுவையில் சாகும்வரை இறை புகழ் பாடிக்கொண்டே இருந்தார். 

புனிதர் பட்டமளிப்பு:

கி.பி. 1927ல் கார்சியாவும் அவருடன் இரத்த சாட்சிகளானவர்களும் வணக்கத்திற்குரியவர்கள் என திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் அர்பன் (Pope Urban VIII) அவர்களால் அறிவிக்கப்பட்டனர். ஜூன் 8, 1862 அன்று திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius IX) அவர்களால் இவர்கள் அனைவரும் புனிதர்களாக அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டது.

இவர் ஒரு போர்ச்சுகீசிய தந்தைக்கும், கொங்கண் தாய்க்கும் பிறந்தவராதலால் இவர் இந்தியப் புனிதராக கருதப்படுவதில்லை. இவர் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையில் அதிகாரப்பூர்வ பட்டியலில் போர்ச்சுகீசிய புனிதராவார்.

Also known as

Gonsalo, Gonsalvo, Gonzalo, Gonçalo 



Profile

His father was a Portugese soldier and immigrant to India, his mother an Indian convert. Gundisalvus grew up a Christian, and served as a lay catechist, working for the Jesuits. Successful businessman in Japan and Macao. Became an Alcantarine Franciscan lay brother in Manila in the Philippines in 1591. Returned to Japan with Saint Peter Baptist to act as interpreter. He stuttered when speaking Portuguese, but when arrested for his faith, he was flawless in Japanese when facing his judges. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

1556 at Bassein, Maharashtra, India


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX


Patronage

• Bombay, India, archdiocese of

• Bombay, India, city of

• East Indians




Saint Elian of Emesa


Also known as

• Elian of Homs

• Ellien, Julian



Additional Memorial

• 7 February (Syrian Orthodox calendar)

• 7 March (Syrian Orthodox calendar)

• 29 December (Armenian Orthodox calendar)


Profile

The son of a senior officer in the imperial Roman army, Elian trained as a physician. He was a convert to Christianity, baptized by Saint Silvanus of Emesa. He developed a reputation of healing by prayer as much as by medicine, and treated the poor sick for free. Caught ministering to Christians awaiting execution, Elian was ordered to renounce the faith; he refused. To change his mind, Elian was imprisoned and tortured for several months; when he still refused, he was executed by his father. Martyr.


Born

Emesa, Phoenicia (modern Homs, Syria)


Died

• nails driven into his hands, feet and head c.312

• in 432 a church was built on the site of his execution

• relics enshrined in a small chapel to the the right of the crypt in the church



Saint Mel of Ardagh


Also known as

Mael, Melchno, Melis



Profile

Son of Conis and Saint Darerca, one of their nineteen children. Brother of Saint Melchu. Nephew of Saint Patrick. Travelled with Patrick and helped evangelize Ireland. Ordained bishop of Ardagh, Ireland by Patrick. Reputed to have professed Saint Brigid of Ireland as a nun. He supported himself by working with his hands, and gave to the poor anything beyond the bare minimum.


Because Mel lived with his aunt, Lupait, and helped on her farm, slanderous gossip developed about their relationship. Patrick came to investigate. To prove that God was on their side, Mel and Lupait each prayed for help and then performed a miracle - Mel plowed up a live fish from the farm land, and Lupait packed around a live coal without being burned.


Born

British Isles


Died

c.489 of natural causes


Patronage

• Ardagh, Ireland, city of

• Ardagh, Ireland, diocese of

• Ardagh and Clonmacnois, Ireland, diocese of



Saint Francesco Spinelli

புனிதர் ஃபிரான்செஸ்கோ ஸ்பைனெல்லி 

குரு:

பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 14, 1853

மிலன், லொம்பார்டி-வெனீஷியா இராச்சியம்

இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 6, 1913 (வயது 59)

ரிவோல்டா டி'அ்டா, கிரெமோனா, இத்தாலி இராச்சியம்

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: ஜூன் 21, 1992

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல்

புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 14, 2018

திருத்தந்தை ஃபிரான்சிஸ்

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 6

பாதுகாவல்:

ஆசிர்வதிக்கப்பட்ட அருட்சாதனத்தை ஆராதிக்கும் அருட்சகோதரியர் சபை

புனிதர் ஃபிரான்செஸ்கோ ஸ்பைனெல்லி, இத்தாலி நாட்டின் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க  திருச்சபையின் குருவும், "ஆசிர்வதிக்கப்பட்ட அருட்சாதனத்தை ஆராதிக்கும் அருட்சகோதரியர் சபை" (Sisters Adorers of the Blessed Sacrament) எனப்படும் சபையை நிறுவியவருமாவார். இவர், "புனிதர் கெல்ட்ரூட் காமன்சோலி"  (Saint Geltrude Comensoli) மற்றும் அருளாளர் "லுய்கி மரியா பலஸ்ஸோலோ" (Blessed Luigi Maria Palazzolo) ஆகியோரின் சமகாலத்தவராவார். மேலும், இவருக்கு காமன்சோலியுடன் முந்தைய ஒத்துழைப்பு இருந்தது. ஐவரும் காமன்சோலியும் இணைந்து "பெர்கமோ" (Bergamo) நகரில் ஒரு மத கல்வி நிறுவனத்தை நிறுவினார்கள். அதற்கு முன்னரே, இவர்களின் உறுப்பினர்களிடையே இரட்டை பிளவு காரணமாக, ஸ்பைனெல்லி தமது பணிகளை விட்டு விலக நேர்ந்தது.

கி.பி. 1853ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 14ம் நாளன்று, வடக்கு இத்தாலியின் "லொம்பார்டி" (Lombardy) பிராந்தியத்தின் தலைநகரான "மிலன்" (Milan) நகரில் பிறந்த ஃபிரான்செஸ்கோ ஸ்பைனெல்லிக்கு அவர் பிறந்த மறுதினம் திருமுழுக்கு தரப்பட்டது. அவர் தமது சிறு வயதில், தமது பெற்றோருடனும், உடன்பிறந்தோருடனும் மிலனிலிருந்து (Milan) "கிரெமோனா" (Cremona) நகருக்கு புலம்பெயர்ந்து சென்றனர். அவர், கி.பி. 1871ம் ஆண்டின் கோடை காலத்தில், "வர்கோ" நகரில், தமக்கிருந்த கடுமையான முதுகெலும்பு பிரச்சனைக்கு மருத்துவம் செய்து குணப்படுத்தினார். தனது குழந்தைப் பருவத்தில், ஏழை எளியவர்களுக்கும், நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டவர்களுக்கும் அடிக்கடி கிடைக்கும் சந்தர்ப்பங்களில் தமது அம்மாவுடன் சேர்ந்து, சக தோழர்களுக்கு பொம்மை நிகழ்ச்சிகளை நடத்திக் காட்ட விரும்பினார்.

அவரது ஆன்மீக வாழ்க்கைக்கான அழைப்புக்கு, அவரது தாயாரும், குருவாக இருந்த அவரது மாமா "பியேட்ரோ காக்ளியரொளி" (Pietro Cagliaroli) என்பவரும் அவருக்கு ஆதரவு அளித்தனர். பெர்கமோ நகரில் இறையியல் கற்கத் தொடங்கிய இவரை இவரது நண்பர் "அருளாளர் லுய்கி மரிய பலஸ்ஸோ"  (Blessed Luigi Maria Palazzolo) என்பவரும் ஊக்கப்படுத்தினார். கி.பி. 1875ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம், 14ம் தேதி, குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு பெற்றார். விரைவிலேயே, திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius IX) அவர்களின் பொது அழைப்பினை ஏற்று, யூபிலி ஆண்டு நிகழ்வுகளில் பங்கேற்க ரோம் நகர் பயணமானார்.

அங்கே, மரிய அன்னை பேராலயத்திற்கும் சென்ற ஸ்பைநெல்லி, அங்கிருந்த குழந்தை இயேசு கெபியினருகே, மறையுரைச் சிந்தனைகளில் ஆழ்ந்தார். அத்துடன், நற்கருணை ஆராதணையில் பெண்கள் ஈடுபடுவதாக இவர் கண்ட திருக்காட்சி, தாம் சொந்தமாக ஒரு சபையை நிறுவ இவருக்கு உந்துசக்தியாக விளங்கியது. ரோமிலிருந்து திரும்பியதும் ஒரு மாலை பள்ளியில் கல்விப் பணிகளை நடத்தினார்.

கி.பி. 1882ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 15ம் தேதி, பெர்கமோ (Bergamo) நகரில், புனிதர் கெல்ட்ருட் காமென்சோலி (Saint Geltrude Comensoli) உடன் இணைந்து "நற்கருணை அருட்சகோதரியார்" (Sacramentine Sisters) சபையை தொடங்கினார். இது, நற்கருணைக்கு அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட இச்சபை, நற்கருணை ஆராதனைப் பணிகளில் மட்டுமே ஈடுபடும். சபையின் முதல் கான்வென்ட், "வயா சான் அன்டோனினோ'வில்" (Via San Antonino) திறக்கப்பட்டது. நகரில் ஏற்பட்ட தொடர் பேரழிவுகள் மற்றும் நிதி நெருக்கடிகளின் காரணமாக, இந்த இல்லம் தோல்வியடைந்த காரணத்தால், கி.பி. 1889ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 4ம் தேதியன்று, அதை விட்டுவிட வேண்டிய கட்டாயம் ஸ்பைநெல்லிக்கு ஏற்பட்டது.

பெர்மாமோவில் நடந்ததை எண்ணி மன வேதனையடைந்த ஸ்பைநெல்லி, "கிரெமோனா" (Cremona) நகரிலுள்ள "ரிவோல்டா டி'அ்ட்டா" (Rivolta d'Adda) எனும் இடத்துக்கு வந்து சேர்ந்தார். அவரது குருத்துவ கடமைகளை நிறைவேற்றுவதற்காக கிரெமோனாவுக்கு வருமாறும், மறைமாவட்ட ஆயர் அவரை அழைத்திருந்தார். கி.பி. 1892ம் ஆண்டு, அவர், "ஆசிர்வதிக்கப்பட்ட அருட்சாதனத்தை ஆராதிக்கும் அருட்சகோதரியர் சபையை" (Sisters Adorers of the Blessed Sacrament) நிறுவினார். இச்சபைக்கு, பின்னாளில் கி.பி. 1897ம் ஆண்டு, "கிரெமோனா ஆயர்" (Bishop of Cremona) "கெரேமியா பொனோமெல்லி" (Geremia Bonomelli) அவர்களின் மறைமாவட்ட அங்கீகாரம் கிட்டியது.

ஃபிரான்செஸ்கோ ஸ்பைனெல்லி, கி.பி. 1913ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம், 6ம் தேதி மரித்தார்.

கி.பி. 1926ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 11ம் நாளன்று, இவரது சபைக்கு, திருத்தந்தை அவையின் பாராட்டுப் பத்திரம் வழங்கப்பட்டது. பின்னர், கி.பி. 1932ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம், 27ம் நாளன்று, திருத்தந்தை பதினோராம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius XI) முழு அங்கீகாரம் வழங்கினார். இவர்களது சபை, "அர்ஜென்ட்டினா" (Argentina) மற்றும் "செனெகல்" (Senegal) உள்ளிட்ட நாடுகளில் செயல்பாட்டில் உள்ளது. 2005ம் ஆண்டு கணக்கெடுப்பின்படி, மொத்தமிருந்த 59 இல்லங்களில், 436 மறைப்பணியாளர்கள் இருந்தனர்


Profile

As a child, Francesco would put on puppet shows for other kids. With his mother, he would visit and help the poor and sick in his city. Francesco studied in Bergamo, Italy, and ordained as a priest in 1875. Later that year, while in Rome, Italy to celebate the Jubilee, he had a vision of women continually adoring the Blessed Sacrament. Back in Bergamo he began teaching in the seminary by day, running an evening school for the poor of his parish by night. On 15 December 1882 he realized the fulfillment of his vision when he helped found the Sisters Adorers of the Blessed Sacrament in Bergamo. Transferred to the diocese of Cremona, Italy on 4 April 1889 where the Sisters cotninue their work of adoring Christ in the Eucharist and in their care for their poor.



Born

14 April 1853 in Milan, Italy


Died

6 February 1913 in Rivolta d'Adda, Cremona, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

14 October 2018 by Pope Francis at Saint Peter’s Basilica, Rome, Italy



Blessed Angelus of Furci


Profile

Born to wealthy parents; they were childless for many years but conceived Angelus after a pilgrimage and prayers for the intercession of Michael the Archangel. Educated by his uncle, the Benedictine abbot of Cornaclano at Furci, Italy. Entered the Augustinian hermits at Vasto, Italy in 1266. Priest. Studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, France for five years. Taught theology at the Augustinian school in Naples, Italy. Noted theologian and preacher, known for his great learning. Provincial superior of the Augustinians in 1287. Refused the bishoprics of Acerra and Melfi in Italy.



Born

1246 at Furci, in the Abruzzi region, diocese of Chieti, Italy


Died

• 6 February 1327 at the Augustinian convent in Naples, Italy of natural causes

• re-interred in Furci, Italy in August 1808


Beatified

20 December 1888 by Pope Leo XIII (cult confirmed)



Saint Brinolfo Algotsson


Also known as

Brynolf


Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of Algot Brynolfsson. Educated at the cathedral of Skara, Sweden, and in Paris, France where he heard lectures by Saint Thomas Aquinas; Brinolfo was noted all his life for his learning. Had an extensive background in theology and canon law. Dean of the Linköping chapter and bishop of Skara in 1278; he served for over 38 years. Active in the political life of the country, Brinolfo worked to ensure that the needs and teachings of the Church became part of public policy. He supported missionaries in Sweden. When his work ran afoul of the absolutist King Magnus Ladulas c.1288, Brinolfo was forced briefly into exile. Wrote on theology, church administration, and poetry for feasts and holy days.


Died

6 February 1317 in Skara, Sweden of natural causes


Canonized

• Saint Bridget of Sweden received a vision that revealed the holiness of Brinolfo

• c.1498 by Pope Alexander VI



Saint Liminius of Auvergne


Also known as

Limin, Liminéè, Limineo, Limiunius, Linguin


Additional Memorial

Sunday after 13 May


Profile

Companion of Saint Antholian of Auvergne. Martyred by pagan Alamanni under the leadership of Chrocus during their invasion of the Auvergne region of Gaul. Saint Gregory of Tours wrote about him in his history of the time.


Died

• c.265 in Auvergne, France

• buried in the basilica of Saint Vénérand in Clermont-Ferrand, France

• some relics enshrined in the church of the St-Allyre Abbey in Clermont, France in 1311 by order of Bishop Albert Aycelin, Archdiocese of Clermont

• some relics enshrined in a reliquary bust in the priory of Thuret, France in 1311 by order of Bishop Albert Aycelin, Archdiocese of Clermont, France

• relics destroyed in 1793 as part of the anti–Christian persecutions of the French Revolution



Saint James Kisai


Also known as

• James Kizayemon

• Ichikawa Kizaemon

• Didacus, Diego, Diogo



Profile

Raised Buddhist. Convert to Christianity. Married layman, and father of one son. His wife returned to her Buddhist roots; the two separated, and placed their child with a Christian family. Worked as a layman with the Jesuits in Osaka, Japan, caring for guests in their residence. Catechist in Osaka. Arrested with Paul Miki. Jesuit novice co-adjutor brother, joining the Society while imprisoned. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

1533 in Okayama, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Peter of Saint Dionysius


Also known as

Pietro di San Dionigi


Profile

Mercedarian priest. In 1247, he and Blessed Bernard de Prades were sent to Tunis, Tunisia to ransom Christians held in slavery and prison by the Moors under King Mohammed Alicur. They rescued 209 Christians. Bernard led them back to Spain, and planned to return with more money to rescue more slaves; Saint Peter stayed in north Africa to served the spiritual needs of those slaves. His preaching and zeal for the faith kept the prisoners from converting to Islam. This brought him to the attention of King Mohammed who had him arrested, beaten and executed. Martyr.


Born

France


Died

• beheaded outside the city walls of Tunis, Tunisia in 1247

• body burned and ashes scattered



Saint John Soan de Goto


Also known as

• John Soan of Goto

• John Soan

• John of Goto

• Juan de Soan de Gotó



Profile

Raised Christian. He and his family fled to Nagasaki, Japan to escape persecution on the Goto Islands. Studied with the Jesuits at Nagasaki and Shiki. Jesuits temporal-coadjutor. Catechist at Osaka, Japan. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

c.1578 in the Goto Islands, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Francis of Nagasaki


Also known as

• Francis of Miyako

• Francis of Miako

• Franciscus...


Profile

Physician. Adult convert to Catholicism by Franciscan missionaries. Even before his conversion he carried a set of rosary beads. Franciscan tertiary. Catechist and preacher. Worked with the sick, treating them for free, and bringing religious teaching to those who were interested. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

1548 at Miyako, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Michael Kozaki


Also known as

• Michael Cozaki

• Michael Kasaki


Profile

Married lay man. Father of Saint Thomas Kozaki. Bow maker and carpenter. Already a Christian with the Franciscans started their missionary work in his area, he joined as a Secular Franciscan, and worked with them as a catechist, and as a nurse in their hospital. Helped to build convents and churches in Kyoto and Osaka. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

c.1551 at Ise, Mie, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Leo Karasumaru


Also known as

Leo Carasuma


Profile

Younger brother of Saint Paul Ibaraki. Uncle of Saint Louis Ibaraki. A Buddhist bonze in his youth. Convert to Christianity, baptized by Japanese Jesuits in 1589. First Korean Franciscan tertiary. Chief catechist for the Franciscan friars, and threw himself into any task they gave him. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

in Owari, Korea


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Guethenoc


Also known as

Guéhénec, Guéhenneuc, Guéhenocus, Guéneuc, Guennec, Guénoc, Guethenoc, Guéthénoc, Guéthnec, Gueveneux, Guézennec, Guinau, Guinnous, Guinou, Guithénoc, Guithern, Gwezheneg, Hinec, Ithizieux, Izinieux, Venec, Veneuc, Vennec, Venoc, Vinec, Wéthénoc, Wihenoc



Profile

Son of Saint Fragan and Saint Gwen; brother of Saint Jacut and Saint Gwenaloe. Spiritual student of Saint Budoc. With Jacut, he was driven from Britain to Brittany in the 5th century by invading Saxons.



Saint Antolian of Clermont


Also known as

Antoliano


Profile

Martyred in the invasion of Crocus, king of the Alemanni, who invaded Gaul in the mid-3rd century.


Died

• c.255 in Clermont-Ferrand, Aquitaine (in modern France)

• a basilica was constructed over the tomb of Saint Antolian c.475

• relics transferred to the church of Saint Gall in Clermont when the basilica collapsed in the 6th century

• when that church was destroyed, the relics were transferred to the church of Saint-Allyre

• relics destroyed when the Saint-Allyre church was sacked during the French Revolution



Saint Paul Ibaraki


Also known as

• Paulus Ibaraki

• Yuanki, Yauniqui


Profile

Member of a noble samuri family. Brother of Saint Leo Karasumaru. Ran a small sake brewery to support his family. Convert, brought to the faith by Jesuit missionaries. Franciscan lay tertiary. Worked with the missionaries in Kyoto as an interpreter, catechist and lay preacher near the Franciscan convent of Our Lady of the Angels. Always charitable to those even poorer than himself.


Born

in Owari, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Martin of the Ascension


Also known as

• Martin Loynaz de Aguirre

• Martin de Aguirre

• Martin Loynaz of the Ascension


Profile

Studied in Alcala, Spain. Joined the Franciscans in 1586. Priest. Loved to sing. Missionary to Mexico. Missionary to Manila in the Philippines. Briefly served as missionary in Osaka, Japan. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

c.1567 at Guipuzcoa, Spain


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Thomas Xico


Also known as

• Thomas Dauki

• Thomas Dangi

• Thomas Danki


Profile

Pharmacist with a violent disposition. Prayer and faith eventually mellowed him, and he became a kind-hearted Franciscan tertiary. When the Franciscans opened the convent of Our Lady of the Angels, Thomas moved his drug store next door to it. Catechist. Interpreter for the Franciscan missionaries. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Matthias of Miyako


Also known as

Matthias of Meako


Profile

Franciscan tertiary. When soldiers arrived to arrest Christians during an official persecution, they were looking for another Matthias who was not there. This Matthias offered himself, both to stand for his faith and to save the other Matthias. The soldiers were happy to take him. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

Japanese


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Bonaventure of Miyako


Also known as

• Bonaventure of Maeco

• Bonaventure of Miako


Profile

Baptized as an infant, his mother died when he was a baby, and his step-mother sent him to be raised in a Buddhist monastery. When he was judged old enough, he was told about his background. To learn more, he visited the Franciscan convent at Kyoto. There he found a peace he had been looking for, and stayed to become a Franciscan tertiary. Catechist. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

at Kyoto, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Louis Ibaraki


Also known as

Louis Ibarki


Profile

Nephew of Saint Paul Ibaraki and Saint Leo Karasumaru. Altar boy for the Franciscan missionaries. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki. Noted for maintaining his high spirits and encouraging all around him during the torture and forced march to Nagasaki.


Born

c.1585 in Owari, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Cosmas Takeya


Also known as

Zaquira Tachegia



Profile

Sword maker. Convert to Christianity, brought into the faith by Jesuit missionaries. Lay Franciscan tertiary. Interpreter for the missionaries. Catechist for the Franciscans. Preached in Osaka. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

at Owari, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Thomas Kozaki


Also known as

• Thomas Cozaki

• Thomas Kasaki


Profile

Son of Saint Michael Kozaki. Altar boy. Helped his father with his carpentry for the Franciscan missionaries, and then stayed at the convent they had built. His farewell letter to his mother, written from prison, has survived. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

c.1582 at Ise, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Francisco of Saint Michael


Also known as

• Francisco Andrade Arco

• Francis...


Profile

Franciscan lay brother, joining the Order in 1566. Missionary to Phillipines and Japan. Arrested in Osaka with Saint Peter Baptist in 1596. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

c.1544 at La Parilla, Spain (near Valladolid)


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Ina of Wessex


Also known as

Ine, Ini, Im


Profile

King of Wessex (in modern England) from 688 to 726. Known as a great warrior, lawgiver and justice, he restored Glastonbury Abbey. Married to Saint Ethelburga of Wessex who helped shift his focus from earthly to spiritual concerns. In 726, Ina abdicated his throne, he and Ethelburga moved to Rome, Italy where he spent his remaining days as a penitential monk and prayful pilgrim to the tombs of the martyrs.


Born

in Wessex, England


Died

727 at Rome, Italy of natural causes



Saint Francis Blanco


Also known as

Francisco Blanco



Profile

Studied at Salamanca, Spain. Alcantarine Franciscan monk. Evangelist in Mexico, Philippines, and Japan. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

c.1567 at Monterey, Spanish Galacia


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Hildegund


Also known as

Hilda, Hildegundis, Ildegonda


Profile

Born to the 12th-century German nobility, the daughter of Count Herman of Lidtberg. Countess, married to Count Lothair. Mother of three, one of whom died in his youth; the other two were Blessed Herman Joseph and Blessed Hadewych. Widowed, in 1178 she turned her castle at Meer, Germany, a former fortress, into a Premonstratensian convent. Against strong family opposition, she and her daughter joined the Order. Prioress of the convent.


Died

6 February 1183 of natural causes



Saint Joachim Sakakibara


Also known as

• Joachim Sakachibara

• Joachim Saccachibara

• Ioachim...


Profile

Physician who treated the poor for free. Franciscan tertiary. Sometime cook for the Franciscan missionaries at Osaka, Japan. Catechist. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

1556 at Osaka, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Peter Sukejiroo


Also known as

• Peter Sukejiro

• Peter Xukexico

• Peter Shukeshiko


Profile

Franciscan tertiary. Catechist. House servant and sacristan to the Franciscan missionaries. Arrested for his faith in Kyoto while ministering to imprisoned fellow Christians. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Guarinus of Palestrina


Profile

Born to the Italian nobility. Priest. Canon of the catehdral of Bologna, Italy. Augustinian canon c.1104. Chosen bishop of Pavia, Italy c.1139, but adamantly refused the appointment, citing his inadequacy to the task. Elevated to cardinal-bishop of Palestrina in 1144 by Pope Lucius II.



Born

c.1080 in Bologna, Italy


Died

1159 of natural causes


Canonized

by Pope Alexander III



Saint Kichi Franciscus


Also known as

• Caius Francis

• Gaius Francis


Profile

Layman soldier. Convert. Franciscan tertiary. When soldiers came to arrest the Franciscan friars, he insisted he was a Christian, too; they took him, and he shared their fate. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

Kyoto, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Blessed Biagio of Cento


Profile

15th-century Franciscan priest. After preaching a Lenten sermon in Castelluccio, Italy, he let the parishioners know that he going to die very soon; he did a little later in the day. He was buried at the parish church until the Franciscans could send people to take the body home. However, miracles began occurring at his grave, and the locals would not let them take him away.


Died

1462 in Castelluccio, Calabria, Italy of natural causes



Saint Antony Deynan


Also known as

• Antony Dainan

• Anthony, Antonius


Profile

Son of a Chinese father and Japanese mother. Altar boy. Educated by the Jesuits in Nagasaki and the Franciscans in Osaka. Franciscan tertiary. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki at age 13.


Born

c.1583 at Nagasaki, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Tanco of Werden


Also known as

Tancho, Tanchon, Tatta, Tatto



Profile

Monk. Abbot of Amalbarich Abbey in Saxony (in modern Germany). Bishop of Werden, Germany. Murdered by pagans for denouncing their customs. Martyr.


Born

Ireland


Died

808



Blessed Diego de Azevedo


Profile

Courtier to Prince Ferdinand. He was sent to escort the fiance' of the prince, but when Diego arrived he found that she had recently died. He heard Saint Dominic de Guzman preaching, and decided to give up court life for religious. He travelled with Saint Dominic and became one of the first Dominicans. Bishop of Osma, Spain in 1201.


Died

30 December 1207 of natural causes



Saint Paul Suzuki


Profile

Convert, baptized by the Jesuits in 1584. Franciscan tertiary. Catechist. In charge of Saint Joseph’s hospital in Kyoto, Japan. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki. He preached from the cross in his last minutes.


Born

1563 at Owari, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX




Saint Relindis of Eyck


Also known as

• Relindis of Maaseik

• Renildis, Renula, Renule, Renilde


Profile

She and her sister Herlindis were nuns in Valenciennes in northern France. An artist, Relindis was known for her painting and embroidery. Abbess in Maaseik, Belgium.


Died

c.750 in Tongres, Brabant, Astrasia (in modern Belgium) of natural causes



Saint John Kisaka


Also known as

• John Kimoia

• John Kinuya


Profile

Layman. Silk-weaver. Convert. Franciscan tertiary. One of the Martyrs of Nagasaki.


Born

at Miyako, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Ethelburga of Wessex


Profile

Queen of Wessex (part of modern England) from 688 to 726, married to Saint Ina of Wessex. Late in life, Ina abdicated, and the couple moved to Rome, Italy where they spent their time caring for English pilgrims, and praying at the tombs of the saints.


Born

England


Died

Rome, Italy of natural causes



Saint Gabriel de Duisco


Profile

Convert, brought to the faith by Saint Gundisalvus Garcia. Franciscan tertiary. Catechist. Martyr.


Born

c.1578 at Ise, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Theophilus the Lawyer


Also known as

• Theophilus Scholasticus

• Theophilus of Caesarea


Profile

Pagan lawyer brought to the faith through a miracle received through the intervention of Saint Dorothy of Caesarea. Martyr.


Born

beheaded in 300 in Caesarea, Cappadocia (in modern Turkey)



Saint Amantius of Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux


Also known as

Amanzius


Profile

10th bishop of the diocese of Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux, France.


Born

France


Died

relics burned by Calvinists in 1561




Saint Gerald of Ostia


Also known as

Geraldo, Gerardo, Geroldo, Gherardo


Profile

Benedictine monk. Prior of Cluny Abbey. Bishop of Ostia, Italy. Papal legate to France, Spain and Germany. Imprisoned by the German emperor, Henry V.


Died

1077


Patronage

Velletri, Italy



Blessed Antimo of Urbino


Also known as

• Antimo of Saltara

• Antonio


Profile

Twin brother of Blessed Giovanni of Urbino. Franciscan tertiary. Hermit. Known for his life of penance, and as a miracle worker.


Died

1438 in Saltara, Pesaro, Italy



Blessed Teresa Fernandez


Profile

Founded and led the Mercedarian monastery of the Consolation in Lorca, Spain.



Died

Consolation monastery, Lorca, Spain of natural causes



Saint Jacut


Profile


Son of Saint Fragan and Saint Gwen; brother of Saint Guethenoc and Saint Gwenaloe. Spiritual student of Saint Budoc. With Guethenoc, he was driven from Britain to Brittany in the 5th century by invading Saxons.



Saint Melchu of Armagh


Profile

Son of Conis and Saint Darerca, one of their nineteen children. Brother of Saint Melchu. Nephew of Saint Patrick. Travelled with Patrick and helped evangelize Ireland. Ordained bishop of Armagh, Ireland by Patrick.


Born

British Isles




Saint Silvanus of Emesa


Also known as

Silvano


Profile

Bishop of Emesa, Phoenicia for 40 years. Martyred in the persecutions of Maximian.


Died

thrown to wild animals c.311 in Emesa, Phoenicia (modern Homs, Syria)



Saint Mucius the Lector


Profile

Lector for bishop Saint Silvanus of Emesa, Phoenicia. Martyred with Silvanus during the persecutions of Maximian.


Died

thrown to wild animals c.311 in Emesa, Phoenicia (modern Homs, Syria)



Saint Luke the Deacon


Profile

Deacon for and martyred with Bishop Silvanus of Emesa, Phoenicia. Martyred in the persecutions of Maximian.


Died

thrown to wild animals c.311 in Emesa, Phoenicia (modern Homs, Syria)



Blessed Compagno of Recanati


Profile

Franciscan friar who had a reputation for piety, but about whom all information has been lost.


Died

1289 in Recanati, Italy of natural causes



Saint Antholian of Auvergne


Also known as

Antoliano, Anatolianus


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian and Gallienus.


Died

c.265 in Auvergne, France



Saint Amand of Nantes


Also known as

Amandus, Amantius, Amatius


Profile

Founder and first abbot of the monastery at Nantes, France.


Died

7th century of natural causes



Saint Amand of Moissac


Also known as

Amandus, Amantius, Amatius


Profile

Founder and first abbot of the monastery of Moissac, France.


Died

644 of natural causes



Saint Mun of Lough Ree


Profile

Fifth-century bishop in Ireland, consecrated by his uncle, Saint Patrick. In later life he retired to live as a hermit on the island of Lough Ree, Ireland.



Saint Renilde of Aldeneyk


Also known as

Renula


Profile

Nun. Abbess of the Aldeneyk monastery at Tongeren, Brabant, Austrasia (in modern Belgium).



Saint Victorinus of Auvergne


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian and Gallienus.


Died

c.265 in Auvergne, France



Saint Andrew of Elnone


Profile

Monk. Spiritual student of Saint Amandus of Maastricht at Elnone-en-Pevele, France. Abbot there.


Died

c.690



Saint Dura of Drum-Cremha


Profile

Bishop in Ireland, though the date and exact location are unknown, and we have no details of his life.



Saint Cassius of Auvergne


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian and Gallienus.


Died

c.265 in Auvergne, France



Saint Maximus of Auvergne


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian and Gallienus.


Died

c.265 in Auvergne, France



Blessed Francesca of Gubbio


Profile

Franciscan tertiary.


Died

1360 of natural causes



Saint Saturninus


Profile

Martyr.



Saint Theophilus


Profile

Martyr.



Saint Revocata


Profile

Martyr.



Martyrs of Nagasaki


Also known as

• Nagasaki Martyrs

• Saint Paul Miki and Companions

• Saint Peter Baptist and Companions



Profile

Twenty-six Franciscan and Jesuit missionaries and Japanese converts crucified together by order of Toyotomi Hideyoshi.


Following their arrests, they were taken to the public square of Meako to the city's principal temple. They each had a piece of their left ear cut off, and then paraded from city to city for weeks with a man shouting their crimes and encouraging their abuse. The priests and brothers were accused of preaching the outlawed faith of Christianity, the lay people of supporting and aiding them. They were each repeatedly offered freedom if they would renounce Christianity. They each declined.


• Saint Antony Deynan

• Saint Bonaventure of Miyako

• Saint Cosmas Takeya

• Saint Felipe of Jesus

• Saint Francis Blanco

• Saint Francis of Nagasaki

• Saint Francis of Saint Michael

• Saint Gabriel de Duisco

• Saint Gundisalvus Garcia

• Saint James Kisai

• Saint Joachim Saccachibara

• Saint John Kisaka

• Saint John Soan de Goto

• Saint Kichi Franciscus

• Saint Leo Karasumaru

• Saint Louis Ibaraki

• Saint Martin of the Ascension

• Saint Matthias of Miyako

• Saint Michael Kozaki

• Saint Paul Ibaraki

• Saint Paul Miki

• Saint Paul Suzuki

• Saint Pedro Bautista Blásquez y Blásquez

• Saint Peter Sukejiroo

• Saint Thomas Kozaki

• Saint Thomas Xico


Died

• crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan

• the Japanese style of crucifixion was to put iron clamps around the wrists, ankles and throat, a straddle piece was placed between the legs for weight support, and the person was pierced with a lance up through the left and right ribs toward the opposite shoulder


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX




Also celebrated but no entry yet


• Deceased Parents of Dominicans

• Our Lady of Louvain

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 05

 St. Abraham



Died 345

Telman

Venerated in Syrian Orthodox Church

Feast February 4 and 5, January 31


A bishop of Arbela in Assyria who suffered martyrdom during the persecutions conducted by King Shapur II of Persia. He is recorded as being executed at a site called Telman.

Abraham of Arbela (died c. 345) (also known as Abramius) was a bishop of Arbela (also Persian) in Assyria.

During the imprisonment of Bishop Ioannis of Arbela, he was appointed as his deputy by the local religious community. The church historian Sozomen (died c. 450) described in the second book of his Christian Church, among other things, the persecutions and tortures that took place in the Persian Empire under Shapur II (died 379). In paragraph 8 of chapter 8 he says:

At that same period of government [of Sapor] the blood of an almost innumerable multitude of bishops, priests, deacons, lower clergy, religious and consecrated virgins, received the crown of martyrdom.[1]

Among the names he had been able to retrieve, the name of Bishop Abraham of Arbela also appeared. [2] He was tortured and later beheaded under Shapur II because he refused to worship the sun in Telman. The saint is venerated on February 5.[3]

He has two feast days – February 4 and 5, but January 31 in the Catholic Church.


Saint Agatha of Sicily

சிசிலியின் புனிதர் அகதா 

கன்னி மற்றும் மறைசாட்சி:

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 231

கேட்டனியா அல்லது பலெர்மோ, சிசிலி

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 251

கேட்டனியா, சிசிலி

ஏற்கும் சபை/ சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

ஓரியண்ட்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சமூகம்

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஃபெப்ரவரி 5

பாதுகாவல்:

கேட்டனியா (Catania), மோலிஸ் (Molise), மால்ட்டா (Malta), சேன் மரினோ (San Marino), ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டின் செகோவியா பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள 'ஸமர்ரமல' என்னும் ஊர்ப்பஞ்சாயத்து (Zamarramala, a municipality of the Province of Segovia in Spain), மார்பக புற்று நோயாளிகள் (Breast cancer patients), மறைசாட்சிகள் (Martyrs), செவிலியர் (Wet Nurses), கலிபோர்னியாவின் தென்மேற்கு பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள "பெல்" என்ற நகரை கண்டுபிடித்தவர்கள் (Bell-Founders), ரொட்டி செய்யும் தொழிலாளி (Bakers), தீ (Fire), பூகம்பம் (Earthquakes), "எட்னா" மலையின் வெடிப்புகள் (Eruptions of Mount Etna).

சர்ச்சைகள் 

ரோமப் பேரரசர்களை வணங்க மறுத்தல்

கட்டாயப்படுத்தப்பட்ட பாலியல் தொழில்

பாலியல் வன்கொடுமை, மற்றும் கன்னித்தன்மையை காத்துக்கொள்வதற்கான போர்

புனிதர் அகதா, மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்த ஒரு கன்னியரும், கிறிஸ்தவ புனிதருமாவார். ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் திருப்பலியின்போது, கடவுளை அதிதூய அன்னை, அர்ச்சிஷ்ட்ட கன்னி மரியாளுடன் சேர்ந்து நினைவுகூறப்படும் ஏழு பெண்களில் இவரும் ஒருவர் ஆவார்.

பழங்கால கிறிஸ்தவ புராணத்தில், மிகவும் உயர்வாக போற்றப்படும் கன்னியராக மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்த பெண்களுள் புனிதர் அகதாவும் ஒருவர் ஆவார். கி.பி. 249ம் ஆண்டு முதல் 253ம் ஆண்டு வரையான காலகட்டத்தில், ரோமப் பேரரசை ஆண்ட பேரரசன் "டேசியஸ்" (Full Name - Gaius Messius Quintus Trajanus Decius) என்பவன் கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கெதிரான துன்புறுத்தல் மற்றும் சித்திரவதைகளை ஆரம்பித்து வைத்த முதல் பேரரசன் ஆவான். இவனது காலத்திலேயே புனிதர் அகதா, சிசிலியில் உள்ள “கேட்டனியா” (Catania) என்னும் இடத்தில் வைத்து, தமது மிக உறுதியான கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்திற்காக கொடூரமான முறையில் வதைக்கப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டார்.

வசதிவாய்ப்புகளுள்ள குடும்பமொன்றில் பிறந்த அகதா, ஆன்மீகத்தில் ஈடுபாடு மிகக்கொண்டிருந்தார். தமது வாழ்வின் ஒவ்வொரு தருணங்களும் இறைவனால் தீர்மானிக்கப்பட்டவை என்ற தீவிர விசுவாசம் கொண்டிருந்தார். "ஜாகொபஸ் டி வொராஜின்" (Jacobus de Voragine) என்ற கிறிஸ்தவ சரித்திர ஆசிரியரின் (Legenda Aurea of 1288 AD) எனும் இலக்கியத்தின்படி, அகதா தமது கன்னிமையை இறைவனுக்கே அர்ப்பணித்தார். இவருக்கு பதினைந்து வயதானபோது, இவர்மீது மோகம் கொண்ட ரோமன் நிர்வாக அலுவலரான (Roman prefect) "குயின்ஷியானஸ்" (Quintianus) என்பவனை தீர்க்கமாக நிராகரித்தார். ஆத்திரம் கொண்ட குயின்ஷியானஸ், இவரை இவரது கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்துக்காக துன்புறுத்தினான். பின்னர், "அப்ரோடிசியா" (Aphrodisia) என்ற விபச்சார விடுதி நடத்துபவனிடம் அனுப்பினான்.

அவரை எளிதில் கையாள முடியாது என்பதை கண்டுகொண்ட குயின்ஷியானஸ், அகதாவை பயமுறுத்தினான். அவருடன் வாதிட்டான். இறுதியில் அவரை சிறையில் அடைத்தான். சிறையில் எண்ணற்ற சித்திரவதைகளுக்கு ஆளான அகதாவின் மார்பகங்களை குறடு போன்ற இடுக்கியால் அறுத்தனர். மேற்கொண்டும் அவனுக்கு மசியாத அகதா அவனுடன் வியக்கத்தக்க வகையில் வாதிட்டு தமது மனோபலம் மற்றும் உறுதியான பக்தியைக் காண்பித்தார்.

இறுதியில், அகதாவை கூறிய மரக்குச்சுகளினால் தீயிட்டு எரித்துக் கொள்ள தீர்ப்பிடப்பட்டது. ஆனால் அவரது விதி, அவரை ஒரு பூகம்பம் மூலம் இரட்சித்தது. மீண்டும் சிறையிலடைக்கப்பட்ட அகதாவுக்கு அப்போஸ்தலரான புனிதர் பேதுரு (St. Peter the Apostle) காட்சியளித்து அவரது மார்பக மற்றும் உடலிலிருந்த காயங்களை ஆற்றினார். புனிதர் அகதா சிறையிலேயே மரித்துப் போனார். "கட்டானியா" பேராலயம் (Catania Cathedral) இவர் பெயரில் அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்டதாகும்.


Also known as

• Agatha of Catania

• Agatha of Palermo

• Águeda...



Profile

We have little reliable information about this martyr, who has been honoured since ancient times, and whose name is included in the canon of the Mass. Young, beautiful and rich, Agatha lived a life consecrated to God. When Decius announced the edicts against Christians, the magistrate Quinctianus tried to profit by Agatha's sanctity; he planned to blackmail her into sex in exchange for not charging her. Handed over to a brothel, she refused to accept customers. After rejecting Quinctianus's advances, she was beaten, imprisoned, tortured, her breasts were crushed and cut off. She told the judge, "Cruel man, have you forgotten your mother and the breast that nourished you, that you dare to mutilate me this way?" One version has it that Saint Peter healed her. She was then imprisoned again, then rolled on live coals; when she was near death, an earthquake stuck. In the destruction that followed, a friend of the magistrate was crushed, and the magistrate fled. Agatha thanked God for an end to her pain, and died.


Legend says that carrying her veil, taken from her tomb in Catania, in procession has averted eruptions of Mount Etna. Her intercession is reported to have saved Malta from Turkish invasion in 1551.


Born

in prison at Catania or Palermo, Sicily (sources vary)


Died

martyred c.250 at Catania, Sicily by being rolled on coals


Patronage

• against breast cancer

• against breast disease

• against earthquakes

• against eruptions of Mount Etna

• against fire

• against natural disasters

• against sterility

• against volcanic eruptions

• bell-founders

• fire prevention

• jewelers

• martyrs

• nurses

• rape victims

• single laywomen

• torture victims

• wet-nurses

• Malta

• San Marino

• 2 dioceses in Italy

• 67 cities in Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands



Blessed Elisabetta Canori Mora


Profile

Born to a wealthy Italian noble family, the daughter of Tommaso and Teresa Primoli. She married Cristoforo Mora on 10 January 1796. Cristoforo, a lawyer, was jealous, controlling, and became suspicious of Elisabetta's family ties; he finally became resentful, abusive, then cold and indifferent to her. Along the way they had four daughters, two of whom died in infancy. Cristoforo took up with another woman, spent the family funds on her, and finally deserted Elisabetta and the girls, leaving them in poverty. Elisabetta's health broke, she became very ill, and was finally compelled to sell inherited jewelry and her wedding dress to pay her bills. She dedicated herself to caring for her children, to prayer, and to a quiet ministry of caring for the sick and the poor, especially poor families. Trinitarian tertiary. Her reputation for holiness spread, as did a reputation for mystic experiences and miracles. Her prayers certainly achieved one amazing result - after her death, Cristoforo changed his life, joined in the Franciscans, and became a priest in Sezze, Italy.



Born

21 November 1774 in Rome, Italy


Died

• the night of 5 February 1825 in Rome, Italy

• buried at the Church of San Carlino alle Quattro Fontane, Rome


Beatified

24 April 1994 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Adelaide of Guelders


Also known as

• Adelaide of Vilich

• Adelaide of Bellich

• Adelaide of Münster

• Alice, Adelheid, Adalheide



Profile

Daughter of Megingoz (Megengose), Count of Guelders. Joined the Ursuline convent at Cologne, Germany. Benedictine nun. Abbess of Villich, Germany. Abbess of Our Lady of the Capitol at Cologne. Both houses had been founded by her father. She insisted that the sisters in her houses study Latin so they would better understand the Mass. Noted for her charity to the poor. Counselor to the archbishop of Cologne.


Born

c.960 in Geldern, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany


Died

• 5 February 1015 at Our Lady of the Capitol convent at Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany of natural causes

• buried in Villich, Germany


Beatified

27 January 1966 by Pope Paul VI (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

against eye diseases




Saint Avitus of Vienne


Also known as

• Alcimus Ecdicius

• Avito



Profile

Son of Saint Isychius. Brother of Saint Apollinaris of Valence. Bishop of Vienne, France, succeeding his father. Fought Arianism, ransomed captives, and supported papal authority as the mainstay of religious unity. Brought King Saint Sigismund of Burgundy, and was well thought of personally not only by the Christians in his diocese but also the pagan Franks and Arian Burgundians. Presided over the Council of Epaon in 517. He wrote a long, elegant narrative poem describing original sin, expulsion from paradise, the Flood, and crossing of the Red Sea; Milton made use of it when writing Paradise Lost.


Born

c.451 in Auvergne, Vienne, Gaul (in modern France)


Died

• c.525 of natural causes

• relics at Vienne, France



Saint Bertulph of Renty


Also known as

Berton, Bertou, Bertoul, Bertulf, Bertulphe, Bertulphus


Profile

Convert as a young man in Flanders, Belgium. Managed a farm in Renty, France for Count Wambert for several years. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy. Parish priest in Renty. Founded and led a monastery nearby until his death.


Born

c.640 in eastern Europe


Died

• c.705 of natural causes

• relics enshrined at Harelbeke, Belgium

• relics interred in an iron chest at Saint Peter's Abbey, Ghent, Belgium

• relics stolen in 939 but located and returned by Count Arnulf of Flanders and Bishop Wigbert of Thérouanne

• relics destroyed by Huguenots in 1578


Patronage

against storms




Saint Albinus of Brixen


Also known as

• Albinus of Säben-Brixen

• Albinus of Bressanone

• Albuin, Albuino, Albuinus



Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of Saint Agatha Hildegardis of Carinthia and Count Paul, Margrave of Carinthia. Bishop of Sabion, South Tyrol (in modern Italy) in 975, a see that was moved to Brixen, Italy.


Born

10th century Carinthia, Austria


Died

• 5 February 1005 in Brixen, Italy

• relics transferred to the cathedral in Bressanone, Italy in 1141


Patronage

• Bressanone, Italy

• Brixen, Italy, city of

• Brixen, Italy, diocese of



Saint Genuinus of Sabion


Also known as

Genuino, Ingenium, Ingenuin, Ingenuino, Ingenuinus, Ingwin, Jenewein


Additional Memorial

13 May (translation of relics)



Profile

Bishop of Sabion, a small town of the Italian Tyrol that has since disappeared. Attended the Synod of Marano in 588.


Born

6th century


Died

• c.605 in Sabiona, Italy of natural causes

• relics transferred to the main altar in the cathedral in Bressanone, Italy


Patronage

• mines

• miners

• diocese of Bolzano-Bressanone, Italy

• diocese of Brixen, Italy


Representation

with Saint Albinus of Brixen



Saint Calamanda of Calaf


Profile

Young woman martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian. A number of other stories have been attached to her including that she was one of the companions of Saint Ursula or that her father killed her for refusing an arranged marriage, but these are apparently stories in search of a character that were simply stuck on her later.


Born

Calaf or Anoia, Catalonia, Spain


Died

• arms hacked off so that she bled to death in 303 in Calaf, Spain

• buried in the church of San Jaume in Calaf


Canonized

by Pope Urban V (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

• against drought

• Calaf, Spain


Representation

young woman with no arms and a palm of martyrdom nearby



Saint Jesús Méndez-Montoya


Also known as

Gesú Méndez


Additional Memorial

21 May as one of the Martyrs of the Mexican Revolution



Profile

Priest in the diocese of Morelia, Mexico. During the persecutions of the Mexican Revolution, he hid in the villages of the peasants, living with the poorest, teaching catechism. Musician and music teacher. Martyr.


Born

10 June 1880 in Tarímbaro, Michoacán, Mexico


Died

shot three times on 5 February 1928 in Valtierrilla, Guanajuato, Mexico


Canonized

21 May 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Luca di Demenna


Also known as

Luca d'Armento


Profile

Monk in Sicily. When the Muslim Saracens invaded the region, he moved from house to house to avoid them. Founded the monastery of Saints Elias and Anastasio, Carbone, Italy and served as its first abbot. Luca based his approach to the monastic life on the Greek monks.



Born

10th century Sicily, Italy


Died

• 5 February 995 in the monastery of Saints Elias and Anastasio in Carbone, Italy of natural causes

• buried in the monastery church



Saint Agatha Hildegard of Carinthia


Also known as

Liharda



Profile

Lay woman, married to Count Paul of Carinthia (part of modern Austria. He was a jealous man who abused her for years before her prayers and devotion converted him to the faith and changed his ways. Mother of Saint Albinus of Brixen. Widow. Venerated in Carinthia as a model wife.


Born

Austrian


Died

1024 of natural causes



Saint Anthony of Athens


Also known as

Antonius


Profile

A slave purchased by a series of Muslims, each of which tried (and failed) to convert him from Christianity. One of them finally falsely denounced him as having converted to Islam and then back to Christianity, which was a capital offense. Martyr.


Born

Athens, Greece


Died

• the executioner tapped him lightly on the neck several times in hopes that Anthony would denounce Christianity; he wouldn't

• beheaded in 1777 in Constantinople



Blessed Françoise Mézière


Additional Memorial

21 January as one of the Blessed Martyrs of Laval



Profile

Lay woman in the diocese of Laval, France. Martyred in the French Revolution.


Born

25 August 1745 in Mézangers, Mayenne, France


Died

5 February 1794 in Laval, Mayenne, France


Beatified

19 June 1955 by Pope Pius XII at Rome, Italy



Saint Kichi Franciscus


Also known as

• Caius Francis

• Gaius Francis



Profile

Layman soldier. Convert. Franciscan tertiary. When soldiers came to arrest the Franciscan friars, he insisted he was a Christian, too; they took him, and he shared their fate. Martyr.


Born

Kyoto, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Dominica of Shapwick


Also known as

Drusus


Profile

Irish princess. Following a pilgrimage to Rome, Italy, she was murdered with her brother, Saint Indract, and six others by heathen Saxon brigands. Because they were on a holy journey, and were killed by non-Christians, contemporaries considered them martyrs. Later legends swell the number of her martyred companions to 100.


Born

Irish


Died

• c.710 at Shapwick, England

• relics at Glastonbury, England


Saint Indract

Profile

Irish prince, noted for gentleness and piety. Following a pilgrimage to Rome, Italy, he was murdered with his sister, Saint Dominica, and six others by heathen Saxon brigands; because they were on a holy journey, and were killed by non-Christians, contemporaries considered them martyrs. Later legends incorrectly make Indract a friend of Saint Patrick, and swell the number of his martyred companions to 100.


Born

Irish


Died

• c.710 at Shapwick, England

• relics at Glastonbury, England



Saint Gabriel de Duisco


Profile

Convert, brought to the faith by Saint Gundisalvus Garcia. Franciscan tertiary. Catechist. Martyr.


Born

c.1578 at Ise, Japan


Died

crucified on 5 February 1597 at Tateyama (Hill of Wheat), Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX



Blessed John Morosini


Profile

Benedictine monk at Cuxá, Catalonian Pyranees. Founded the monastery of San Giorgio Maggiiore in Venice, Italy c.982, and served as its first abbot.


Born

at Venice, Italy


Died

1012 of natural causes


Beatified

never formally beatified, and there is no evidence of popular cultus, but always referred to as beatus



Saint Agricola of Tongres


Also known as

Agricolus, Agricolaus


Additional Memorial

15 May as one of the Bishops of Maastricht


Profile

Bishop of Tongres, Belgium in 384.


Born

4th century Netherlands


Died

• early morning of 18 July 401 of natural causes

• buried in the church of Our Lady in Huy, Belgium



Blessed Primo Andrés Lanas


Also known as

Trinidad


Profile

Monk. Member of the Hospitallers of Saint John of God. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

7 February 1877 in Maeztu, Alava, Spain


Died

5 February 1937 in Madrid, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Saint Vodoaldus of Soissons


Also known as

Vodale, Voel, Vodalis, Vodalus


Profile

Missionary from the British Isles to France. Hermit beside Saint Mary's convent at Soissons, France. Known as a miracle worker.


Born

Irish or Scottish


Died

725 near Soissons, France of natural causes



Blessed Christopher of Pavia


Profile

Franciscan Conventual Friar Minor at the Borgo San Sepolcro convent in Tuscany, Italy. He is listed in the Franciscan martryology, and buried in the convent, both obvious signs of piety, but no details about his life have survived.


Died

1532 of natural causes



Blessed Peter of Perugia


Profile

Franciscan Conventual Friar Minor at the Borgo San Sepolcro convent in Tuscany, Italy. He is listed in the Franciscan martryology, and buried in the convent, both obvious signs of piety, but no details about his life have survived.


Died

1532 of natural causes



Saint Saba the Younger


Profile

Brother of Saint Macarius. Monk. Worked with his brother to spread the monastic life through the Calabria and Lucania regions of Italy during a time when Muslim Saracen invaders were disrupting religious life.


Died

995 in the monastery of San Cesario, Rome, Italy



Saint Modestus of Carinthia


Also known as

Modestus of Salzburg


Profile

Benedictine monk. Spiritual student of Saint Virgilius at Salzburg, Austria. Bishop of Carinthia, Austria, and largely responsible for the region's evangelization.


Died

c.722 of natural causes



Blessed Eulalia de Pinos


Profile

Born to the nobility, Eulalia renounced wealth and worldly life, and joined the Mercedarians in Barcelona, Spain in the early 13th century, receiving the habit from Blessed Bernard of Corbara. Noted for her ministry to the poor.



Martyrs of Pontus


Profile

An unknown number of Christians who were tortured and martyred in assorted painful ways in the region of Pontus (in modern Turkey) during the persecutions of Maximian.



Saint Buo of Ireland


Profile

Monk. Missionary to the Norwegians on Iceland and the Faroe Islands.


Born

Irish


Died

c.900 of natural causes



Saint Isidore of Alexandria


Profile

Martyr.


Born

Egyptian


Died

Alexandria, Egypt



Saint Fingen of Metz


Profile

Monk. Abbot. Known for restoring old monasteries.


Born

10th century Ireland


Died

c.1005



Saint Dubtach Mac Dubhan


Profile

Ninth century priest.


Born

Ireland



Also celebrated but no entry yet


• Agnellus of Trent

• Domitian of Carinthia

• Geniale