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12 August 2023

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஆகஸ்ட் 13

 St. Fachanan


Feastday: August 13


This saint's feast is observed liturgically throughout all Ireland and he is patron of the diocese of Ross, where he was probably the first bishop. He was born at Tulachteann, was one of the pupils of St. Ita, and founded the monastery of Molana on an island in the Blackwater, near Youghal. But his great achievement was the establishment of the monastic school of Ross, at what is now Rosscarbery, in county Cork, one of the most famous schools of Ireland, which flourished for three hundred years and survived in some form until the coming of the Normans. Fachanan (Fachtna) suffered for a time from blindness, from which he recovered at the intercession of St. Ita's sister, who was about to give birth to St. Mochoemog. St. Fachanan was revered as a "wise and upright man", with a great gift for preaching; St. Cuimin of connor said of him that he was "generous and steadfast, fond of preaching to the people and saying nothing that was base or displeasing to God". His feast day is August 13th.


Not to be confused with Saint Fachanan or Fachtna of Kiltoom.

Fachtna of Rosscarbery, known also as Fachanan, was the founder of the monastery of Rosscarbery (Ros Ailithir), County Cork. He died around 600.

Life

He established a monastery and school in the area now known as Rosscarbery towards the end of the sixth century.[1] His monastery became the principal monastery of west Cork, and later had a famous Scripture school known as the School of Ross. Brendan, the Navigator, taught in this school, which was crowded by students from every land.[2] It flourished for three hundred years and survived in some form until the coming of the Normans to Ireland. It was the centre from which the Diocese of Ross developed.

Fachtna, born at a place called Tulachteann, was one of the pupils of Saint Ita.[3] It is said that Fachtna was cured of an affection of his eyes by bathing them in the milk of Saint Mochoemoc's mother, Saint Ita's sister.[4] He then studied at Saint Finbarr's school at Loch Eirce (Gougane Barra). Before establishing the monastic school of Ross, he founded the monastery of Molana on an island in the Blackwater, near Youghal.[3]

In some Latin documents he is called Fachtna Facundus (Fachtna the Eloquent) and even spoken of as Sanctus Facundus. In Irish records he is generally referred to as Mac Mongach (Hairy Child), because he was reported to have been born with his head covered with hair. The interpretation of this phrase by James Ussher and others as meaning Son of Mongach was rejected by Mervyn Archdall.[3]


Veneration

His feast day was 14 August but, since in the General Roman Calendar that date is now occupied by the memorial of Saint Maximilian Kolbe, Saint Fachtna is now venerated, even in the Diocese of Ross, on 13 August.


Patronage

St. Fachtna is the Patron Saint of the Diocese of Ross, the cathedral of which is dedicated to him.


St. Francis of Pesaro


Feastday: August 13

Death: 1350



Franciscan tertiary of Pesaro, Italy He lived in a community and was known for his holiness. He founded the Confraternity of Mercy, a hospice, and was a miracle worker. Pope Pius IX confirmed his cult.


St. Francis was born in Pesaro in 1282 to a wealthy and devout family. After the death of his parents, he inherited a large estate. However, he chose to give away most of his inheritance to the poor and to live a simple life as a hermit. He built three hermitages and a chapel in honor of Our Lady. He also founded the Confraternity of Mercy, a hospice for poor travelers and pilgrims.


Bl. Otto Neururer


Feastday: August 13

Birth: 1882

Death: 1940

Beatified: Pope John Paul II


Otto Neururer (March 25, 1882 - May 30, 1940) was a Catholic priest.

He was born the twelfth child of a peasant family and felt early desire to become a priest. In 1895, Neururer was sent to the minor seminary in Bressanone Vinzentinum. After his graduation, Neururer joined the seminary of Bressanone. In 1907, he received the priestly ordination in Bressanone, then he worked as a teacher of religion in Innsbruck. In 1932, he became pastor in Götzens.

On December 15, 1938, he was arrested by the Gestapo and put in the prison in Innsbruck, then on 3 March 1939 in the Dachau concentration camp on 26 September in the Buchenwald concentration camp near Weimar brought. Still in camp, he served as pastor, and had a fellow prisoner to be baptized. When this became known, he died after 34 hours of torture.



St. Tikhon of Zadonsk


Feastday: August 13

Birth: 1724

Death: 1783



Russian monk and bishop. Born to a peasant family, he nevertheless received an excellent education and became a professor at Novgorod seminary. After spending a number of years as a monk (he entered the monastery in 1758), he served as bishop of Voronezh from 1763-1767, returning to the monastic life at the Zadonsk monastery from 1769. A deeply ascetical and mystical personality in the Eastern traditions, he was nevertheless much influenced by Western authors, including the Anglican bishop of Norwich Joseph Hall and the Lutheran theologian Johann Arndt. Tikhon was a prolific writer and was renowned both in active service and retirement for his abiding pastoral concerns and efforts on behalf of the poor and suffering.


Blessed Mark of Aviano


Also known as

• Carlo Domenico Cristofori

• Marco D'Aviano

• Marco of Aviano


Profile

Son of Marco Pasquale Cristofori and Rosa Zanoni. Educated at home and at the Jesuit school in Gorizia, Italy. He was especially fascinated with stories of the saints. At age 16 he left home to walk to Crete, where Venice was at war with the Ottoman Turks; he planned to preaching Christianity to Muslims and take his chance on martyrdom. After a few days of hiking, he stopped at the Capuchin house in Capodistria (modern Kopar, Slovenia), seeking food and shelter. The brothers took him in, fed him, prayed with him, and advised him to return home, which he did.


His time at the monastery affected Carlo deeply, and in 1648 he became a Capuchin novice at Conegliano, Italy. He made his formal vows in 1649, taking the name Mark. Ordained on 18 September 1655 at Chioggia, Italy. He lived several years in the cloister, but in 1664 he was called to missionary duty, preaching throughout Italy. Elected superior of the Belluno, Italy house in 1672. Elected superior of the Oderzo, Italy house in 1674.


On 8 September 1676, while preaching at a monastery in Padua, Italy, Mark prayed over Sister Vincenza Francesconi, who had been bed-ridden for 13 years; she was miraculously healed. Word spread, and while he continued preaching, Mark was soon beseiged by people seeking miracles; many were healed, and many were brought to the faith.


His fame led his to become counselor on religious and political matters to Leopold I, emperor of Austria for nearly two decades. Papal legate and Apostolic Nuncio to Austria for Pope Blessed Innocent XI. He secured the release of Vienna from the Ottoman Turks on 12 September 1683. Travelled with the army from 1683 to 1689 as advisor and chaplain to soldiers of all ranks. He helped negotiate the liberation of Buda on 2 September 1686, and of Belgrade on 6 September 1688. He worked as a peacemaker throughout Europe, bringing unity to warring Catholic powers, educating them on the threat posed by the Ottoman's - and never letting them forget that all wise counsel was given by God.


Legend has it that when the Ottomans fled before the European army, they left behind a lot of their strong, bitter coffee. The Christian soldiers, to make this liberated coffee more palatable, mixed it with honey and milk; they named the drink after Mark's Order, the Capuchins, and thus cappuccino was created.


Born

17 November 1631 at Aviano, Italy as Carlo Domenico Cristofori


Died

13 August 1699 of cancer in Vienna, Austria


Beatified

27 April 2003 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Jakob Gapp


Also known as

• Jacob Gapp

• Jakub Gapp



Profile

Seventh child in the working class family of Martin Gapp and Antonia Wach. Received a basic education in his native town, then entered the Franciscan high school in Hall in 1910. Austrian soldier on the Italian front from May 1915 till he was wounded in 1916; received the silver medal of Courage Second Class. On 4 November 1918 he became a prisoner of war in Riva del Garda; released on 18 August 1919.


After the War, he entered the Marianist novitiate at Greisinghof, Upper Austria in 1921. Assigned to the Marian Institute in Graz as a teacher and sacristan for four years, while preparing for the seminary. Made his profession at Antony, France on 27 August 1925. In September 1925 Jakob entered the International Marianist Seminary in Fribourg, Switzerland. Ordained by Bishop Marius Besson at Saint Nicholas Cathedral in Fribourg on 5 April 1930.


Back in Austria he worked as a teacher, director of religious education, and chaplain in Marianist schools till 1938. Economic conditions were terrible; Father Gapp collected food and other necessities from students, and gave his own heating coal to the poor.


Nazism was on the rise in Germany and Austria. Father Gapp saw the incompatibility of Nazism and Christianity, and began preaching this truth. When German troops arrived in Austria in March 1938, he left Graz. His superiors sent him home as they believed his anti-Nazi preaching would bring on the wrath of the Reich; but his institutions were already marked for destruction.


In Tirol he enjoyed the last moments of peace in his life. He was an assistant pastor in Breitenwang-Reutte for two months when the Gestapo, in October 1938, ordered him not to teach religion. Father Gapp taught uncompromising love for all men and women without reference to nationality or religion, and that "God is your God, not Adolf Hitler." In a sermon on 11 December 1938 he defended Pope Pius XI against the attacks of the Nazis, and directed the faithful of the parish to read Catholic literature instead of Nazi propaganda. He was advised to leave the country.


He escaped to Bordeaux, France, where he worked as a chaplain and librarian. In May 1939 he went to Spain where he served in the Marianist communities at San Sebastian, Cadiz and Valencia. The Gestapo followed him, and in 1942 he received word of two people across the border in France who claimed to be Jews fleeing from Nazis in Berlin, Germany, and who wanted instruction in Catholicism. When he crossed into France to minster to them, they abducted him.


Father Gapp was arrested on 9 November 1942 in Hendaye, France, and brought to Berlin. On 2 July 1943 he was condemned to death for speaking against the Reich. Burial of his remains were denied as the Nazis feared he would be seen as a martyr, and his grave become a site of silent demonstration and rebellion. On the afternoon of 13 August 1943 he was advised he would executed that night. He wrote two moving farewell letters, and was martyred.


Born

26 July 1897 at Wattens, Tyrol, Austria


Died

• guillotined at 7.08pm 13 August 1943 at Plotzensee Prison, Berlin, Germany

• remains used for research at the Anatomical-Biological Institute of the University of Berlin


Beatified

24 November 1996 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Maximus the Confessor


Also known as

• Maximus of Constantinople

• Maximus Confessor

• Maximus the Theologian

• Maximus Homogoletes



Profile

Born to the Byzantine nobility. Chief secretary to Emperor Heraclius, a post he resigned to become a monk at Chrysopolis. Spiritual student of Saint Sophronius. Abbot of Chrysopolis. His community broke up in 626 due to Persian invasion. Maximus fled to Alexandria, Egypt, then to Carthage, and then Rome, Italy. Worked with Pope Martin I against Monothelist heresy, and attended the Lateran Council of 649.


Falsely accused of treason due to his defense of orthodox Christianity, he was arrested and forcibly returned to Constantinople. He spent years in prison misery, and at age 82 received his final sentence: he was flogged, his tongue cut out, his right hand cut off, he was exhibited in the streets as an example to the people, and was sent into exile at Skhemeris on the Black Sea, where he died soon after. He is best remembered today for his mystical, ascetical, and theological writings, and for his steadfast belief that the purpose of all history was the Incarnation.


Born

c.580 at Constantinople


Died

• 13 August 662 at Batum near the Black Sea of natural causes

• strange lights reported hovering near his tomb



Blessed Michael Joseph McGivney


Profile

Son of Irish immigrants. Studied at the Saint-Hyacinthe's Seminary in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada beginning in 1868; finished his studies at Saint Mary's Seminary in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1873. Before he could be ordained, however, his father died, and Michael returned home to support the family. Ordained on 22 December 1877 by Archbishop Joseph Gibbons at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Assistant pastor at Saint Mary's Church, New Haven, archdiocese of Hartford, Connecticut. With a small group of parishioners, he founded the Knights of Columbus on 2 February 1882; today the organization has nearly two million members and contributes tens of millions of dollars to charity each year.



Born

12 August 1852 in Waterbury, Connecticut


Died

• 14 August 1890 at Thomaston, Connecticut of pneumonia, possibly related to tuberculosis

• re-interred in Saint Mary's Church, New Haven Connecticut in 1982


Beatified

• 31 October 2020 by Pope Francis

• the beatification recognition was celebrated at the Cathedral of Saint Joseph in Hartford, Connecticut

• the beatification miracle involved the in-utero healing of a baby who's fluid retention was causing swelling that would have damaged his heart




Saint John Berchmans


Also known as

Jan Berchmans



Profile

Son of a shoemaker, and one of five children, three of whom entered religious life. John had great devotion to his position as an altar boy. He spent much of his time caring for his mother, who was in poor health. Jesuit noviate in 1616, deciding to become a Jesuit after reading the life of Saint Aloysius Gonzaga. Student at the Jesuit College at Malines, Belgium. Studied philosophy in Rome. John had a dream of helping and teaching multi-lingual migrants, and he studied all the chief languages of Europe. He wanted to work in China after ordination. He died of unknown causes following his participation in a public debate defending the faith, and while clutching his rosary, crucifix, and rules of his order; he did not live to be ordained.


John Berchmans was not noted for extraordinary feats of holiness or austerity, nor did he found orders or churches or work flashy miracles. He made kindness, courtesy, and constant fidelity an important part of his holiness. The path to holiness can lie in the ordinary rather than the extraordinary.


Born

13 March 1599 at Driest, Brabant, Belgium


Died

• 12 August 1621 at Rome, Italy

• relics at Saint Ignatius Church, Rome


Canonized

15 January 1888 by Pope Leo XIII




Saint Cassian of Imola


Also known as

Cassiano



Profile

Schoolmaster at Imola, Italy who taught hand-writing, and sometimes talked about Christianity. During one of the imperial persecutions he was ordered to sacrifice to pagan gods; he refused. He was turned over to his pagan students who were ordered to execute him; they did. Martyr.


Died

• tied to a post, tortured and stabbed to death with iron styles, the device used as a pencil on wax tablets, at Imola, Italy c.304

• buried in the catacombs in Rome, Italy

• a sepulchre was built over his place of burial later in the 4th century

• in the 5th century, a basilica was built in place of the sepulchre

• relics transferred to the crypt of the cathedral in Imola in 1175

• relics enshrined in a silver and copper reliquary in Imola c.1405

• from 1577 to 1914, the relics were annually processed through Imola

• some relics (4 pieces of the post to which he was tied) transferred to Bressanone, Italy in 1684


Patronage

• parish clerks

• secretaries

• stenographers

• students

• teachers

• Mexico City, Mexico

• Las Galletas, Tenerife, Spain

dioceses

• Bolzano-Bressanone, Italy

• Brixen, Italy

locations in Italy

• Bibbiena • Comacchio • Imola • Laterina • Macherio • San Casciano dei Bagni • San Casciano in Val di Pesa • San Cassiano a Vico • San Cassiano di Controne • San Cassiano di Moriano • Trecate




Saint Radegunde

புனிதர் ரேட்கண்ட் 

இளவரசி/ அரசி/ நிறுவனர்:

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 520

துரிங்கியன் பழங்குடியினர்

இறப்பு: ஆகஸ்ட் 13, 587 (வயது 66–67)

தூய திருச்சிலுவை மடம், போய்ட்டேர்ஸ், அகிட்டைன், ஃபிரேங்க்ஸ் அரசு

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஆகஸ்ட் 13 

பாதுகாவல்: 

இயேசு கல்லூரி (Jesus College), கேம்ப்ரிட்ஜ் பல்கலைகழகம் (Cambridge) 

புனிதர் ரேட்கண்ட், ஒரு துரிங்கியன் இளவரசியும் (Thuringian Princess), ஃபிரேங்கிஷ் அரசியும் (Frankish Queen), போய்ட்டேர்ஸ் (Poitiers) நகரிலுள்ள “திருச்சிலுவை துறவு மடத்தை” (Abbey of the Holy Cross) நிறுவியவருமாவார். ஃபிரான்ஸ் (France) மற்றும் இங்கிலாந்து (England) நாடுகளிலுள்ள பல்வேறு ஆலயங்களின் பாதுகாவலரான இவர், கேம்ப்ரிட்ஜ் (Cambridge) பல்கலையின் இயேசு கல்லூரியின் (Jesus College) பாதுகாவலருமாவார். 


ரேட்கண்ட், ஜெர்மன் (German) நாட்டிலுள்ள, துரிங்கியன் (Thuringian) நிலத்தின் மூன்று அரசர்களில் ஒருவரான “பெர்டாச்சார்” (Bertachar) என்பவரது மகளாவார். ரேட்கண்ட்டின் மாமனான “ஹெர்மன்ஃபிரிட்” (Hermanfrid) என்பவர், “பெர்டாச்சாரை” (Bertachar) சண்டையிட்டு கொன்றுவிட்டு, ரெட்கண்ட்டை கைப்பற்றினான். ஃபிரேன்கிஷ் (Frankish King) அரசன் “தியோடெரிக்” (Theuderic) என்பவனுடன் இணைந்த பிறகு, தமது இன்னொரு சகோதரனான “படேரிக்” (Baderic) என்பவனையும் சண்டையிட்டு தோற்கடித்தான். இருப்பினும், அவரது சகோதரர்களை நசுக்கி, துரிங்கியாவின் கட்டுப்பாட்டை கைப்பற்றிய “ஹெர்மன்ஃபிரிட்”, அரசன் “தியோடெரிக்குடன்” (Theuderic) தத்துவார்த்தத்தைப் பகிர்ந்து கொள்வதற்கான உடன்படிக்கைக்கு மறுப்பு தெரிவித்தான். 

கி.பி. 531ம் ஆண்டு, “தியோடெரிக்”, தமது சகோதரன் “முதலாம் க்லோடேய்ர்” (Clotaire I) என்பவருடன் துரிங்கியா திரும்பினார். இருவரும் இணைந்து ஹெர்மன்ஃபிரிட்’டை தோற்கடித்து, அவரது இராச்சியத்தை வெற்றிகொண்டார்கள். ரேட்கண்ட்டை பொறுப்பேற்றுக்கொண்ட “முதலாம் க்லோடேய்ர்,” அவரை அங்கிருந்து திரும்ப “மெரோவிங்கியன் கௌல்” (Merovingian Gaul) அழைத்துச் சென்றார். ரேட்கண்ட், “முதலாம் க்லோடேய்ரின்” ஆறு மனைவியர் (Wives) அல்லது “திருமணமாகாமல் சேர்ந்து வாழும் பெண்களில்” (Concubines) ஒருவராவார். குழந்தைகள் பெற்றுக்கொள்ளாத ரேட்கண்ட்டின் தர்மசிந்தனை குறிப்பிடப்படுவதாகும். 

கி.பி. 550ம் ஆண்டு, துரிங்கியன் அரச குடும்பத்தின் எஞ்சிய கடைசி ஆண் உறுப்பினர், ரேட்கண்ட்டின் சகோதரர் ஆவார். “முதலாம் க்லோடேய்ர்” அவரையும் கொலை செய்தார். தமது இராச்சியத்தை விட்டு ஓடிப்போன ரேட்கண்ட், திருச்சபையின் பாதுகாப்பை கோரினார். “நோயோன்” (Noyon) ஆயரிடம், தம்மை ஒரு திருத்தொண்டராக (Deaconess) நியமிக்க வலியுறுத்தினார். கி.பி. 560ம் ஆண்டு, போய்ட்டேர்ஸ் (Poitiers) நகரில், “செயின்ட் க்ரோய்க்ஸ்” (Monastery of Sainte-Croix) துறவு மடத்தை நிறுவினார். அங்கே, நோயாளிகள்மீது அக்கறை செலுத்தினார். ரேட்கண்ட், பழம், மீன், முட்டை, இறைச்சி ஆகியவனவற்றை தவிர்த்து, அவரையினங்களையும் காய்கறிகளையுமே உண்டார். செபித்தல் மூலம் நோயாளிகளை குணமாக்கும் அற்புத சக்தி கொண்டிருந்தார் என்று பரவலாக நம்பப்பட்டார். 

அவரது துறவு மடம், கிறிஸ்துவின் உண்மையான திருச்சிலுவையின் மிச்சத்திற்கான பெயரிடப்பட்டது. இவர், உண்மையான திருச்சிலுவையின் மிச்சமொன்றினை, “பைசண்டைன் பேரரசர்” (Byzantine Emperor) “இரண்டாம் ஜஸ்டினிடமிருந்து” (Justin II) பெற்றதாக கூறப்படுகிறது. போய்ட்டேர்ஸ் (Poitiers) ஆயரான (Bishop of Poitiers) “மரோவியஸ்” (Maroveus) அதனை துறவு மடத்தில் ஸ்தாபிக்க மறுத்தும், ரேட்கண்ட்டின் வேண்டுகோளின்பேரில், “டூர்ஸ்” ஆயரான “யூஃப்ரோனியஸ்” (Eufronius of Tours) என்பவரை, அரசன் “சிக்பெர்ட்” (Sigebert) அனுப்பி அதனை ஸ்தாபிக்கச் செய்தார்.  

ஆறாம் நூற்றாண்டின் கிறிஸ்தவ துறவியான “ஜூனியன்” (Junian of Maire), ரேட்கண்டின் நெருங்கிய நண்பராவார். நண்பர்களான இவர்கள் இருவருமே கி.பி. 587ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம், 13ம் தேதி, ஒரே நாளில் மரித்ததாக கூறப்படுகிறது. 

Also known as

Radegund, Rhadegund, Radegonde, Radigund, Radegundes



Profile

Princess of Thuringia. Queen of France. Daughter of the pagan king Berthachar of Thuringia. She was given at age 12 to Clotaire I as a hostage after he conquered her father's army in 531. The girl converted to Christianity during her captivity, and 540 she was married against her will to Clotaire who then badly mistreated her, partly for being childless. In 555 she finally left him and took the veil from Saint Medard. Deaconess at Noyon, France. She founded the convent of the Holy Cross, Poiters, France; among the many relics in its chapel was a piece of the True Cross. She placed the house under the Rule of Saint Caesarius of Arles, and lived there her remaining 30 years; it became a center of scholarship. Spiritual student of Saint John of Chinon. Friend of Saint Fortunatus, who composed his hymn Vexilla Regis in her honor. She was very active in the affairs of the Church and civil politics, and gained a repuation as a peacemaker. Jesus College in Cambridge was originally dedicated to her.


Born

518 in Erfurt, Saxony


Died

• 13 August 587 in Poitiers, France of natural causes

• relics burned by Calvinists in 1562




Saint Wigbert of Fritzlar


Profile

Became a monk as a very young man, possibly at Glastonbury Abbey. Missionary who worked with Saint Boniface. He arrived in Germany c.734. Abbot of the monastery of Hersfeld, Hesse. Spiritual teacher of Saint Sturmi of Fulda. Abbot of Ohrdruf, Thuringia in 737. He later retired to Hersfeld where he spent his remaining days as a prayerful monk. Known as a very quiet man, and a miracle worker.



Born

c.675 in England


Died

• c.746 at Hersfeld, Germany of natural causes following a long illness

• buried at Fritzlar, Germany

• relics moved to Büraburg Castle in 774 to save them from invading Saxons

• relics transferred to Hersfeld abbey in 780

• relics re-interred in a church built for them in the abbey in 850

• the church burned in 1037

• surviving relics re-interred in the new church in 1144

• the church burned in 1761, destroying the remaining relics




Saint Hippolytus of Rome


Also known as

• Hippolytus of Porto

• Ippolito...


Profile

Third century imperial Roman soldier assigned to guard Christian prisoners. Converted by them to the faith. Martyred for assisting at the burial of some his martyred charges.



Due to a clerical error, Hippolytus was inadvertently listed on some calendars as two people, Hippolytus of Rome and Hippolytus of Porto. The second entry had the feast day of 22 August. This problem was corrected in the calendar revision of 1969.


Died

• dragged or torn to death by horses outside Rome, Italy

• collected body fragments were buried along the Via Tiburtina, Rome



Saint Benildus

புனித பெனில்திஸ் 

பிறப்பு: பிரான்ஸ் ஜூன் 14, 1805

பிப்ரவரி 10, 1820 

இறப்பு: ஆகஸ்ட் 13,1862

1948 ஆம் ஆண்டு ஏப்ரல் 4 ஆம் தேதி புனிதப்படுத்தப்பட்டது

அக்டோபர் 29, 1967 அன்று புனிதர் ஆக்கப்பட்டது 

இவர் பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டைச் சார்ந்தவர். இவரது குடும்பம் ஒரு சாதாரண விவசாயக் குடும்பம். 

இவர் தனது தொடக்கக் கல்வியை தெலசால் அருள்சகோதர்கள் நடத்தி வந்த பள்ளிக்கூடத்தில் கற்றார். இவரிடம் விளங்கிய அறிவாற்றலைக் கண்டு வியந்த அங்கிருந்த அருள் சகோதரர்கள் இவரைப் 14 வயதிலேயே மாணவர்களுக்குப் பாடம் எடுக்க இசைவு தந்தனர். 

இருபதாவது வயதில் தெலசால் அருள் சகோதரர்கள் சபையில் சேர்ந்த இவர், தனது நாற்பத்து ஒன்றாம் சாகஸ் என்ற இடத்திலிருந்த ஓர் இல்லத்தின் தலைவரானார். 

சாகஸ் என்ற இடம் ஒரு சாதாரண சிற்றூர். இவ்வூரில் கல்வியில் பின்தங்கிய மாணவ மாணவிகள் பலர் இருந்தார்கள். அவர்களுக்கு இவர் மாலை நேர வகுப்பு எடுத்து அவர்கள் கல்வியில் சிறந்தோங்கச் செய்தார். 

இவர் மாணவர்களுக்கு பாடம் கற்றுக் கொடுத்த நேரம் போக, மற்ற நேரங்களில் நோயாளர்களைச் சந்தித்து அவர்களிடம் ஆறுதலாகப் பேசினார்; மாணவர்களுக்கு மறைக்கல்வியும் எடுத்தார். இதனால் சாகஸ் என்ற அந்தச் சிற்றூர் கல்வியில் மட்டுமல்லாது ஆன்மிகத்திலும் சிறந்து விளங்கியது. 

இவர் இறக்கும் போது, இவரிடம் கல்வி கற்ற 200க்கும் மேற்பட்ட மாணவர்கள் அருள்பணியாளர்களாக மாறி இருந்தார்கள். 

இவருக்கு 1967 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுலால் புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது. 


Also known as

• Benilde

• Peter Romancon

• Pierre Romancon


Additional Memorial

29 January (De La Salle Brothers)


Profile

Educated by the De La Salle Brothers. An excellent student, he was a part-time teacher by age 14. Joined the De La Salle Brothers at age 14, entering his noviate on 10 February 1820, and taking the name Benildus. Teacher at several schools. Director of a community at Saugues in southern France in 1841. He founded a school there, and remained with it the rest of his life. Taught classes and catechism, visited the sick, and attracted many to the religious life; over 200 of his students became De La Salle brothers. Known for his sanctity, effective teaching, generosity to students, Brothers, and townspeople, and for the excellent reputation of his school.


Born

14 June 1805 at Thuret, France as Pierre Romancon


Died

13 August 1862 at Saugues, France of natural causes


Canonized

29 October 1967 by Pope Paul VI



Blessed Juan Agramunt y Riera


Also known as

Juan of the Sacred Hearts



Profile

Son of Jose Agramunt and Antonia Riera. Began his Piarist novitiate in August 1922, making his solemn vows on 15 February 1928. Priest, ordained on 28 December 1930. Taught at Albacete, Spain. Transferred to the College of Castellón de la Plana in September 1935. When the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War began, he went into hiding at the home of his parents in Almazora, Spain, but was arrested by anti–Catholic militants on 7 August 1936. Martyr.


Born

14 February 1907 in Almazora, Castellón, Spain


Died

shot during the night of 13 to 14 August 1936 in Pla de Museros, Almazora, Castellón, Spain


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Pierre Gabilhaud


Profile

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



Born

26 July 1747 in Point-Saint-Martin, Haute-Vienne, France


Died

13 August 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Gertrude of Altenberg


Profile

Daughter of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and Louis IV, landgrave of Thuringia. Educated at Altenberg Abbey. Cistercian nun at Altenberg. Chosen abbess when very young, and led the house for 50 years.



Born

1227


Died

1297 of natural causes


Beatified

• 1311 by Pope Clement VI (cultus confirmed and limited to the Altenberg monastery)

• 11 July 1729 by Pope Benedict XIII (cultus confirmation and extended to the entire Order)



Saint Herulph of Langres

Also known as

• Herulph of Ellwangen

• Hariolfus of...

Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of the Count of Ellwangen (part of modern Germany). Benedictine monk at the abbey of Saint Gall in Switzerland. Founded Ellwangen Abbey, diocese of Augsburg, Germany, in 764. Bishop of Langres.


Died

785 of natural causes



Blessed William Freeman

Profile

Priest in the Vicariate Apostlic of England. Martyred in the persecutions of Queen Elizabeth I for the crime of being a priest.


Born

Menthorpre, North Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged on 13 August 1595 in Warwick, Warwickshire, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Nerses Glaietsi

Also known as

• Chnorhali

• Nerses the Gracious


Profile

Uncle of Saint Nerces Lambronazi. Worked for the union of the Greek and Armenian churches, and of the Armenian church with Rome. Bishop of the Armenians in 1166. Noted poet in his native language.


Born

1102


Died

1173



Saint Radegund

Profile

Poor servant girl in 13th century Augsburg, Germany who made a personal vow of devotion to God. Known for her piety and charity to those even poorer than herself, she developed a ministry to lepers and other outcasts in her rural area.



Died

attacked by wolves while en route to care for some sick people



Saint Antiochus of Lyons


Also known as

Andeol of Lyon


Profile

When Saint Justus of Lyon left France to become a hermit in Egypt, Father Antiochus was sent to talk him into coming back. He failed. When he returned home, Antiochus was chosen as the new bishop of Lyons.


Died

5th century






Saint Concordia of Rome


Profile

Martyr.

Saint Concordia was born in Rome in the early 3rd century. She was a devout Christian and a wet nurse. She was employed by a wealthy Roman family, and she was the nurse of their son, Hippolytus. Hippolytus was also a Christian, and he and Concordia grew close.



In 258, the Roman Emperor Valerian issued an edict that ordered the arrest and execution of all Christians. Hippolytus was arrested and taken to prison. Concordia went to the prison to visit him, and she was arrested as well.


The two martyrs were brought before the Roman prefect, who demanded that they renounce their faith. Concordia and Hippolytus refused, and they were sentenced to death. Concordia was whipped and then beheaded. Hippolytus was tied to wild horses and dragged to his death.


The bodies of Saint Concordia and Saint Hippolytus were thrown into the Tiber River. However, they were later recovered by Christians and buried in a cemetery in Rome.

Died

beheaded outside Rome, Italy




Saint Anastasius the Monk

Profile

Friend and spiritual student of Saint Acacius. Monk. Imprisoned and exiled for failure to adopt the Monothelite heresy. Martyr.

 Saint Anastasius the Monk who is celebrated on August 13. He was a friend and spiritual student of Saint Acacius, the Patriarch of Constantinople. He was a priest and papal legate who was imprisoned and exiled for failure to adopt the Monothelite heresy. He died in prison in 662 AD.


Here are some additional details about Saint Anastasius the Monk:


He was born in Syria in the 6th century.

He was ordained a priest and became a papal legate.

He was sent to Constantinople to negotiate with the Byzantine emperor on behalf of the Pope.

He refused to adopt the Monothelite heresy, which was the belief that Christ had only one will.

He was imprisoned and exiled for his beliefs.

He died in prison in 662 AD.

Died

c.662 from the abuse suffered while imprisoned



Saint Helen of Burgos


Also known as

Helena

Saint Helen of Burgos is a Christian saint who was martyred in Burgos, Spain, in 304 AD during the persecution of Christians by Diocletian. She is venerated as a martyr and a patron saint of Burgos.



According to the tradition, Helen was a noble virgin who was inspired by the constancy of Centolla, another Christian woman who was being tortured for her faith. Helen approached Centolla and praised her courage, and the two women were eventually martyred together.


The bodies of Helen and Centolla were buried in Burgos, and their tomb became a place of pilgrimage. In the 13th or 14th century, their bodies were exhumed and placed in a new shrine in Burgos Cathedral.


Saint Helen is celebrated on August 13th. She is often depicted in art with a cross, a crown of thorns, or a palm branch, symbols of her martyrdom.



Died

c.304 at Burgos, Spain



Saint Cassian of Todi


Profile

Fourth-century convert, brought to the faith by Saint Pontian of Todi. Bishop of Todi, Italy. Martyred in the persecutions of Maximian Herculeus.


Died

relics in Todi, Italy



Saint Junian of Mairé


Profile

Founded the monastery at Mairé, France. Later in life he retired to live as a hermit in Chaulnay, France.


Died

587



Saint Ludolf

Also known as

Ludolph


Abbot of New Corvey Abbey in Westphalia, Germany from 971 to 983.

a Saint Ludolf who has a feast day on August 13. He was a German Benedictine monk and abbot of New Corvey Abbey in Westphalia, Germany. He was born in 937 in Brunswick, Germany, and died in 983.


Ludolf was a friend and advisor of Emperor Otto I the Great. He was also a scholar and wrote several books, including a Life of Christ, which was a popular devotional work.

Died

983



Martyred Claretians of Barbastro


The Martyred Claretians of Barbastro were a group of 51 Claretian religious men who were killed during the Spanish Civil War in 1936. They were beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1992.



The Claretians were a religious order founded by Saint Anthony Mary Claret in the 19th century. They were dedicated to spreading the Gospel and to helping the poor and marginalized.


In 1936, the Spanish Civil War broke out. The Claretians in Barbastro were targeted by the Republican forces because they were seen as representatives of the Catholic Church. They were arrested and taken to prison, where they were subjected to torture and abuse.


• Blessed Agustín Viela Ezcurdia

• Blessed Alfons Miquel Garriga

• Blessed Alfons Sorribes Teixidó

• Blessed Antolín Calvo y Calvo

• Blessed Antoni Dalmau Rosich

• Blessed Atanasio Vidaurreta Labra

• Blessed Eduardo Ripoll Diego

• Blessed Esteve Casadevall Puig

• Blessed Eusebi Maria Codina Millà

• Blessed Felipe de Jesús Munárriz Azcona

• Blessed Francesc Roura Farró

• Blessed Francisco Castán Meseguer

• Blessed Gregorio Chirivas Lacamba

• Blessed Hilario Llorente Martín

• Blessed Jaume Falgarona Vilanova

• Blessed Joan Baixeras Berenguer

• Blessed Joan Codinachs Tuneu

• Blessed José Amorós Hernández

• Blessed José Blasco Juan

• Blessed José Figuero Beltrán

• Blessed José Pavón Bueno

• Blessed Josep Maria Badía Mateu

• Blessed Josep Ormo Seró

• Blessed Josep Ros Florensa

• Blessed Juan Díaz Nosti

• Blessed Juan Echarri Vique

• Blessed Juan Sánchez Munárriz

• Blessed Leoncio Pérez Ramos

• Blessed Lluís Escalé Binefa

• Blessed Lluís Lladó Teixidor

• Blessed Lluís Masferrer Vila

• Blessed Manuel Buil Lalueza

• Blessed Manuel Martínez Jarauta

• Blessed Manuel Torras Sais

• Blessed Miquel Masip González

• Blessed Nicasio Sierra Ucar

• Blessed Pedro García Bernal

• Blessed Pere Cunill Padrós

• Blessed Rafael Briega Morales

• Blessed Ramon Illa Salvia

• Blessed Ramon Novich Rabionet

• Blessed Salvador Pigem Serra

• Blessed Sebastià Riera Coromina

• Blessed Sebastián Calvo Martínez

• Blessed Secundino Ortega García

• Blessed Teodoro Ruiz de Larrinaga García

• Blessed Tomàs Capdevila Miró

• Blessed Wenceslau Clarís Vilaregut


Died

2 August through 18 August 1936 in Barbastro, Huesca, Spain


Beatified

25 October 1992 by Pope John Paul II




Martyred in the Spanish Civil War

Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. 

• Blessed Francesc Castells Areny

• Blessed Inocencio García Díez

• Blessed José Bonet Nadal

• Blessed José Boher y Foix

• Blessed José Juan Perot y Juanmarti

• Blessed Jose Tàpies y Sirvant

• Blessed Josep Alsina Casas

• Blessed Luciano Hernández Ramírez

• Blessed Maria de Puiggraciós Badia Flaquer

• Blessed Mateo Despóns Tena

• Blessed Modesto García Martí

• Blessed Pascual Araguàs y Guàrdia

• Blessed Pedro Martret y Molet

• Blessed Silvestre Arnau y Pascuet


 Our Lady, Refuge of Sinners

The title "Refuge of Sinners" goes back to the 8th century, when it was used by Saint Germanus of Constantinople. He said that Mary is "the refuge of sinners, the hope of the despairing, the comfort of the afflicted."

Mary is a refuge for sinners because she understands our weaknesses. She knows what it is like to sin, because she herself was without sin. She also knows how to forgive, because she was the one who interceded for us with her Son, Jesus Christ.

Mary is a hope for the despairing because she always gives us hope. She knows that God loves us, even when we don't love ourselves. She also knows that God can forgive us, no matter what we have done.

Mary is a comfort for the afflicted because she is always there for us. She listens to our prayers and she intercedes for us with her Son. She also gives us strength to carry on, even when things are tough.

If you are feeling lost or alone, turn to Our Lady, Refuge of Sinners. She will always be there to help you.

The feast day of Our Lady, Refuge of Sinners is celebrated on August 13



 Irene of Hungary

Irene of Hungary, a Byzantine empress by marriage to John II Komnenos, is celebrated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church on August 13. She is also known as Irene Piroska of Hungary.

Irene was born in Hungary in 1088, the daughter of King Ladislaus I of Hungary. She was married to John II Komnenos in 1105. She was a devout Christian and a wise and compassionate ruler. She also worked to promote peace and reconciliation between the Byzantine Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary.

Irene died in 1134 and was buried in the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople. She was canonized by the Eastern Orthodox Church in 1200.


 William Freeman

William Freeman was an English Roman Catholic priest who was martyred in 1595. He is celebrated as a saint in the Catholic Church on August 13.

Freeman was born in Manthorp, near York, England, in about 1558. He studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, and was ordained a priest in 1587. He worked as a missionary priest in England, and was arrested in 1595. He was tried for treason and hanged, drawn, and quartered at Warwick.