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15 January 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜனவரி 15

 St. Nina


Feastday: January 15

Patron: of Georgia

Birth: 300

Death: 332



St. Nina (fl. III/IV Century) was born in Cappadocia. Tradition says she was a relative of St. George who travelled to Iberia (Georgia) to convert the people to Christianity. Scholars believe she was a slave to whom the name Nino (the Georgian form of Nina) was given; she has also been identified as Christiana. The quiet piety of her life and her preaching converted many people, and when she cured Queen Nana of a seemingly incurable disease, Nina converted the queen. When King Mirian also became a Christian, he sent to Constantinople for bishops and priests. Nina continued to preach throughout Georgia until her death at Bodke. A church dedicated to the memory of St. George was built on the site of her grave.


Not to be confused with Santo Niño.

Saint Nina (Georgian: წმინდა ნინო, ts'minda nino; Armenian: Սուրբ Նունե, Surb Nune; Greek: Αγία Νίνα, Agía Nína; sometimes St. Nune or St. Ninny) Equal to the Apostles and the Enlightener of Georgia (c. 296 – c. 338 or 340) was a woman who preached Christianity in the territory of Caucasian Iberia, of what is now part of Georgia. It resulted in the Christianization of the royal house of Iberia, with the consequent Christianization of Iberia.


According to most widely traditional accounts, she belonged to a Greek-speaking Roman family from Kolastra, Cappadocia, was a relative of Saint George,[1] and came to Georgia (ancient Iberia) from Constantinople. Other sources claim she was from Rome, Jerusalem or Gaul (modern France). According to legend, she performed miraculous healings and converted the Georgian queen, Nana, and eventually the pagan king Mirian III of Iberia, who, lost in darkness and blinded on a hunting trip, found his way only after he prayed to "Nino’s God". Mirian declared Christianity the official religion (c. 327) and Nino continued her missionary activities among Georgians until her death.


Her tomb is still shown at the Bodbe Monastery in Kakheti, eastern Georgia. St. Nino has become one of the most venerated saints of the Georgian Orthodox Church and her attribute, a grapevine cross, is a symbol of Georgian Christianity.



Early life

Many sources agree that Nino was born in the small town of Colastri, in the Roman province of Cappadocia, although a smaller number of sources disagree with this. On her family and origin, the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church have different traditions.


According to the Eastern Orthodox Church tradition, she was the only child of a famous family. Her father was Roman general Zabulon and her mother Sosana (Susan). On her father's side, Nino was related to St. George, and on her mother's, to the patriarch of Jerusalem, Houbnal I.


During her childhood, Nino was brought up by the nun Niofora-Sarah of Bethlehem.[2] Nino’s uncle, who was the patriarch of Jerusalem, oversaw her traditional upbringing. Nino went to Rome with the help of her uncle where she decided to preach the Christian gospel in Iberia, known to her as the resting place of Christ’s tunic. According to the legend, Nino received a vision where the Virgin Mary gave her a grapevine cross and said:


"Go to Iberia and tell there the Good Tidings of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and you will find favour before the Lord; and I will be for you a shield against all visible and invisible enemies. By the strength of this cross, you will erect in that land the saving banner of faith in My beloved Son and Lord."

Saint Nino entered the Iberian Kingdom in Caucasus from the Kingdom of Armenia, where she escaped persecution at the hands of the Armenian King Tiridates III. She had belonged to a community of virgins numbering 35,[3] along with martyr Hripsime, under the leadership of St. Gayane, who preached Christianity in the Armenian Kingdom. They were all, with the exception of Nino, tortured and beheaded by Tiridates. All 35 of the virgins were soon canonised by the Armenian Apostolic Church, including Nino (as St. Nune).


Contrasting with this, the Roman Catholic tradition, as narrated by Rufinus of Aquileia, says Nino was brought to Iberia not by her own will, but as a slave, and that her family tree is obscure.[4]


St Nino in Iberia


Saint Nino with her scroll and grapevine cross

Nino reached the borders of the ancient Georgian Kingdom of Iberia from the south about 320. There she placed a Christian cross in the small town of Akhalkalaki and started preaching the Christian faith in Urbnisi, finally reaching Mtskheta (the capital of Iberia). The Iberian Kingdom had been influenced by the neighbouring Persian Empire which played an important role as the regional power in the Caucasus. The Iberian King Mirian III and his nation worshiped the syncretic gods Armazi and Zaden. Soon after the arrival of Nino in Mtskheta, Nana, the Queen of Iberia requested an audience with the Cappadocian.


Queen Nana, who suffered from a severe illness, had some knowledge of Christianity but had not yet converted to it. Nino, restoring the Queen's health, won to herself disciples from the Queen's attendants, including a Jewish priest and his daughter, Abiathar and Sidonia. Nana also officially converted to Christianity and was baptized by Nino herself. Mirian, aware of his wife’s religious conversion, was intolerant of her new faith, persecuting it and threatening to divorce his wife if she did not leave the faith.[5] He secluded himself, however, from Nino and the growing Christian community in his kingdom. His isolation to Christianity did not last long because, according to the legend, while on a hunting trip, he was suddenly struck blind as total darkness emerged in the woods. In a desperate state, King Mirian uttered a prayer to the God of St Nino:


If indeed that Christ whom the Captive had preached to his Wife was God, then let Him now deliver him from this darkness, that he too might forsake all other gods to worship Him.[6]

As soon as he finished his prayer, light appeared and the king hastily returned to his palace in Mtskheta. As a result of this miracle, the King of Iberia renounced idolatry under the teaching of St Nino and was baptized as the first Christian King of Iberia. Soon, the whole of his household and the inhabitants of Mtskheta adopted Christianity. In 326 King Mirian made Christianity the state religion of his kingdom, making Iberia the second Christian state after Armenia.


After adopting Christianity, Mirian sent an ambassador to Byzantium, asking Emperor Constantine I to have a bishop and priests sent to Iberia. Constantine, having learned of Iberia’s conversion to Christianity, granted Mirian the new church land in Jerusalem[7] and sent a delegation of bishops to the court of the Georgian King. Roman historian Tyrannius Rufinus in Historia Ecclesiastica writes about Mirian's request to Constantine:


After the church had been built with due magnificence, the people were zealously yearning for God's faith. So an embassy is sent on behalf of the entire nation to the Emperor Constantine, in accordance with the captive woman's advice. The foregoing events are related to him, and a petition submitted, requesting that priests be sent to complete the work which God had begun. Sending them on their way amidst rejoicing and ceremony, the Emperor was far more glad at this news than if he had annexed to the Roman Empire peoples and realms unknown.[8]

In 334, Mirian commissioned the building of the first Christian church in Iberia which was finally completed in 379 on the spot where now stands the Svetitskhoveli Cathedral in Mtskheta.



A mosaic in Samtavro Monastery, Mtskheta

Nino, having witnessed the conversion of Iberia to Christianity, withdrew to the mountain pass in Bodbe, Kakheti. St Nino died soon after; immediately after her death, King Mirian commenced with the building of monastery in Bodbe, where her tomb can still be seen in the churchyard.


Nino and its variants remains the most popular name for women and girls in the Republic of Georgia. There are currently 88,441 women over age 16 by that name residing in the country, according to the Georgia Ministry of Justice. It also continues to be a popular name for baby girls.[9]


The Georgian name "Nino" is "Nune" or "Nuneh" in Armenian, thus St. Nino is known as St. Nune in Armenia. Her history as the only one of the 35 nuns of the company of Sts. Gayane and Hripsime to escape the slaughter at the hands of the pagan Armenian King Tiradates III in 301 is recounted in the book "The History of the Armenians" by Movses Khorenatzi (Moses of Khoren), which was written about the year 440.


Legacy

The Phoka Nunnery of St. Nino was established in rural Georgia by Abbess Elizabeth and two novices. They originally lived in a nearby house owned by Georgian Orthodox Church head Patriarch Ilia II, then in 1992 moved to the site of an 11th century church to restore it. The nunnery population in 2010 had grown to six nuns and one novice and the restoration had been completed. Along with their devotional life, the resident nuns are all artisans. Some working in enamel and mosaic crafts, others in making cheese, honey, chocolate, and jams. They integrate their skills with the local folk customs of cheesemaking and also produce textiles in the traditional Javakhetian style. The nuns also run a school for local children, mostly Armenians.[10]


The Sacred Monastery of Saint Nina is the home of a monastic community of Georgian Apostolic Orthodox Christian nuns in the Patriarchate of Georgia's North American Diocese. It is located in Union Bridge, Maryland, USA, and was established in September 2012.




St. Maximus of Nola



Feastday: January 15

Death: 250


Bishop of Nola, Italy, who ordained St. Felix of Nola. During the Roman persecutions, Maximus fled to the mountains where he suffered greatly. He died at Nola from the sufferings he endured.


 


For other people named Felix, see Felix (name).

Saint Felix of Nola (d. ca. 250) was a Christian presbyter at Nola near Naples in Italy. He sold off his possessions in order to give to the poor, but was arrested and tortured for his Christian faith during the persecution of the Roman emperor Decius (r. 249–51). He was believed to have died a martyr's death during the persecution of Decius or Valerian (ca. 253), but is now listed in the General Roman Calendar as a confessor of the faith, who survived his tortures.[1]


Legend

Felix was the elder son of Hermias, a Syrian centurion who had retired to Nola, Italy.[2] After his father's death Felix sold off most of his property and possessions, gave the proceeds to the poor, and pursued a clerical vocation. Felix was ordained by, and worked with, Saint Maximus of Nola.[3]


When bishop Maximus fled to the mountains to escape the persecution of the Roman emperor Decius, Felix was arrested and beaten for his faith instead. He escaped prison, according to legend being freed by an angel, so that he could help bishop Maximus. Felix found Maximus alone, ill, and helpless, and hid him from soldiers in a vacant building. When the two were safely inside, a spider quickly spun a web over the door, fooling the imperial forces into thinking it was long abandoned, and they left without finding the Christians. A subsequent attempt to arrest Felix followed, which he avoided by hiding in a ruined building where again spider web was spun across the entrance convinced the soldiers the building was abandoned. The two managed to hide from authorities until the persecution ended with the death of Emperor Decius in 251.[3]


After Maximus's death, the people wanted Felix to be the next bishop of Nola, but he declined, favoring Quintus, a "senior" priest who had seven days more experience than Felix. Felix himself continued as a priest. He also continued to farm his remaining land, and gave most of the proceeds to people even poorer than himself.[3]


Legend assigns to Felix a martyr's death either in the year 255 under Emperor Valerian (253–260) or, in another version, in the general persecution instigated by the Emperor Decius (249-251). According to Butler, Felix died in a good old age, on the fourteenth of January.[2]



Burial place of Felix of Nola in Cimitile

Much of the little information we have about Felix comes from the letters and poetry of Saint Paulinus of Nola, re. When at length peace was obtained, he returned home and in poverty lived a withdrawn life until old age, an unconquered confessor of the faith".[4]


Five churches have been built at, or near the place, where he was first interred, which was without the precincts of the city of Nola. His precious remains are kept in the cathedral; but certain portions are at Rome, Benevento, and some other places.[2] In time a new church in Nola was dedicated in the name of St Felix. People travelled from far away to see the burial place of this revered saint.


He should not be confused with another Saint Felix of Nola, of about a century later, whose feast is on 15 November.




St. Beauch (Bagug)


Feastday: January 15


martyred at Tina (Kau) in Kemet. Sentenced at Antinoe by order of Arrhianus.



† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 15)


✠ புனிதர் வனத்துச் சின்னப்பர் ✠

(St. Paul of Thebes)


முதல் வனவாச துறவி:

(The First Hermit)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 227

எகிப்து (Egypt)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 342

புனித வனத்து சின்னப்பர் துறவு மடம், எகிப்து

(Monastery of Saint Paul the Anchorite, Egypt)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபைகள்

(Oriental Orthodox Churches)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

புனித வனத்து சின்னப்பர் துறவு மடம், எகிப்து

(Monastery of Saint Paul the Anchorite, Egypt)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஜனவரி 15


சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை: 

இரண்டு சிங்கம், ஈச்ச மரம், காகம்


பாதுகாவல்: 

சென் ஃபேபுலோ நகர், பிலிப்பைன்ஸ்


முதலாம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்த புனிதர் வனத்து சின்னப்பர், வனவாசம் செய்த முதல் கிறிஸ்தவ துறவி ஆவார். தமது பதினாறு வயது முதல், நூற்றுப் பதின்மூன்று வயதுவரை பாலைவனங்களில் தனிமையில் துறவு வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்தவராவார்.


இவரது சரித்திரம், புனிதர் ஜெரோம் அவர்களால் கி.பி. சுமார் 375 அல்லது 376ம் ஆண்டுகளில் இலத்தீன் மொழியில் எழுதப்பட்டது. இவர் எகிப்து நாட்டின் "தெபெய்த்" (Thebaid of Egypt) என்னும் பழங்கால நகரில் பிறந்தவர் ஆவார். இவருக்கு ஒரு சகோதரி இருந்தார். அவர் திருமணமானவர் ஆவார். இவர்களுடைய பெற்றோர் ஏற்கனவே இறந்து போய்விட்டார்கள்.


கி. பி. 250ம் ஆண்டு, அரசர்கள் “தேசியஸ்” (Decius) மற்றும் “வலேரியனஸ்” (Valerianus) ஆகியோர் கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கு எதிரான வேத கலகத்தை தொடங்கியபோது, பவுலின் மைத்துனர் இவரது பங்கு சொத்துக்களை அபகரிக்கும் நோக்கில், இவரை கலகக்காரர்களிடம் காட்டிக்கொடுக்க எண்ணினார்.


இதனை அறிந்துகொண்ட பவுல் தன் உடைமை அனைத்தையும் சகோதரியிடமும் மைத்துனரிடமும் விட்டுவிட்டு "தெபேன்" பாலைவனத்துக்கு (Theban desert) ஓடிப்போனார். அங்கே ஒரு மலைக் குகையில் வாழ்ந்து வந்தார். அப்போது இவருக்கு வயது இருபத்திரண்டு. அக்குகைக்கு அருகே இருந்த ஈச்ச மரக்கனியை உண்டு, அருகிலிருந்த அருவியில் நீர் அருந்தி வாழ்ந்துவந்தார். அதன் பின்பு ஒரு காகம் கொண்டுவந்த ரொட்டியை தினமும் உண்டு வாழ்ந்தார்.


யாரும் அறியாத ஓர் இடத்தில் 70 ஆண்டுகளுக்கும் மேலாக கடும் தவம் மேற்கொண்டார். அங்கு அவரை இறைவன் பல வழிகளில் காத்து வந்ததாக பல கதைகள் உண்டு. காட்டில் அவர் வாழ்ந்த குகையிலேயே ஒரு புனிதராக உயிர் துறந்தார்.


புனிதர் ஜெரோம் தனது (Vitae Patrum) என்னும் சரித்திர நூலில் புனித வனத்து சின்னப்பரை அவரது 113ம் வயதில் சந்தித்ததையும், ஒரு பகல், ஒரு இரவு அவருடன் உரையாடியதையும் குறிப்பிட்டிருக்கிறார். அடுத்த முறை சந்திக்க சென்றபோது, இவர் இறந்து போயிருந்ததாகவும், இரு சிங்கங்களின் துணையோடு இவரை அடக்கம் செய்ததையும் குறிப்பிடுகிறார்.


இரண்டு சிங்கம், ஈச்ச மரம் மற்றும் காகம் இவரது சின்னமாக கருதப்படுகின்றன.


கத்தோலிக்கத் திருஅவை, இவரை, புனித வனத்துச் சின்னப்பர் (St. Paul the Hermit) என்ற அடைமொழியுடன் சிறப்பிக்கிறது.


இவரது நினைவுத் திருநாள் ஜனவரி 15ம் தேதி கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது.

St. Paul the Hermit




Feastday: January 15

Patron: of San Pablo City, Philippines

Birth: 229

Death: 342


Also known as Paul the First Hermit and Paul of Thebes, an Egyptian hermit and friend of St. Jerome. Born in Lower The baid, Egypt, he was left an orphan at about the age of fifteen and hid during the persecution of the Church under Emperor Traj anus Decius. At the age of twenty two he went to the desert to circumvent a planned effort by his brother in law to report him to authorities as a Christian and thereby gain control of his property. Paul soon found that the eremitical life was much to his personal taste, and so remained in a desert cave for the rest of his reportedly very long life. His contemplative existence was disturbed by St. Anthony, who visited the aged Paul. Anthony also buried Paul, supposedly wrapping him in a cloak that had been given to Anthony by St. Athanasius. According to legend, two lions assisted Anthony in digging the grave. While there is little doubt that Paul lived, the only source for details on his life are found in the Vita Pauli written by St. Jerome and preserved in both Latin and Greek versions.


Paul of Thebes, commonly known as Paul, the First Hermit or Paul the Anchorite, or in Egyptian Arabic as Anba Bola, Coptic: Ⲁⲃⲃⲁ Ⲡⲁⲩⲗⲉ; (c. 226/27 – c. 341) is regarded as the first Christian hermit, who was claimed to have lived alone in the desert of Egypt from the age of sixteen to the age of one hundred and thirteen years old. He is not to be confused with Paul the Simple, who was a disciple of Anthony the Great. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church as well as the Orthodox Church.[3][4]




Relics in Santa Maria in Porto, in Ravenna.

The Life of Saint Paul the First Hermit (Vitae Patrum (Vita Pauli primi eremitae)) was composed in Latin by Saint Jerome, probably in 375–376.[5] Paul of Thebes was born around 227 in the Thebaid of Egypt.[6]


Paul and his married sister lost their parents. In order to obtain Paul's inheritance, his brother-in-law sought to betray him to the persecutors.[5] According to Jerome's Vitae Patrum (Vita Pauli primi eremitae[7]), Paul fled to the Theban desert as a young man during the persecution of Decius and Valerianus around AD 250.[8]


He lived in the mountains of this desert in a cave near a clear spring and a palm tree, the leaves of which provided him with clothing and the fruit of which provided him with his only source of food until he was 43 years old, when a raven started bringing him half a loaf of bread daily. He would remain in that cave for the rest of his life, almost a hundred years.[6]



Paul of Thebes’ visit at Anthony the Great


Saint Anthony the Great and Saint Paul the Anchorite, Diego Velázquez, circa 1634

Paul of Thebes is known to posterity because around the year 342, Anthony the Great was told in a dream about the older hermit's existence, and went to find him.[9] Jerome related that Anthony the Great and Paul met when the latter was aged 113. They conversed with each other for one day and one night. The Synaxarium shows each saint inviting the other to bless and break the bread, as a token of honor. Paul held one side, putting the other side into the hands of Father Anthony, and soon the bread broke through the middle and each took his part. When Anthony next visited him, Paul was dead. Anthony clothed him in a tunic which was a present from Athanasius of Alexandria and buried him, with two lions helping to dig the grave.[9]


Father Anthony returned to his monastery taking with him the robe woven with palm leaf.[9] He honored the robe so much that he only wore it twice a year: at the Feast of Easter, and at the Pentecost.[6]


Veneration

His feast day is celebrated on January 15 in the West, on January 5 or January 15 in the Eastern Orthodox Churches, and on 2 Meshir (February 9) in the Oriental Orthodox Churches. Anthony described him as "the first monk".


Monastery of Saint Paul the Anchorite (Deir Anba Bola) is traditionally believed to be on the site of the cave where Paul lived and where his remains are kept.[10] The monastery is located in the eastern desert mountains of Egypt near the Red Sea. The Cave Church of St. Paul marks the spot where Anthony, "the Father of Monasticism", and Paul, "the First Hermit", are believed to have met.[11]


He is also the patron saint of the Diocese of San Pablo (Philippines) and is the titular of the Cathedral of the said Diocese in San Pablo, Laguna, Philippines.


The Order of Saint Paul the First Hermit[12] was founded in Hungary in his honour in the 13th century. He is usually represented with a palm tree, two lions and a raven.




Blessed Nikolaus Gross



Profile

Miner. Father of seven. Member of the Christian miners' labour union at age 19, and secretary at 22. Member of the Zentrum Christian Party at age 20. Worked on Westdeutschen Arbeiterzeitung, (West German Workers' Newspaper), the newspaper of the Catholic Workers' Movement, at age 22, and became its director at age 24.


Non-violent opponent of Nazism from its beginnings. Worked with distinguished Catholic intellectuals who opposed the regime. From Cologne, Germany he exposed the lies and harmful effects of Nazi propaganda, and he worked for the revolt of consciences against Hitler. Declared an enemy of the state, his newspaper was shut down in 1938, but at great risk, he continued to publish an underground edition.


Nikolaus tried to organize resistance among Catholic workers in preparation for the planned assassination of Hitler on 20 July 1944. Though neither he nor the members of his group were implicated in the assassination attempt, Nikolaus was arrested on 12 August 1944 for treason, and sentenced to death by a People's Court on 15 January 1945. Martyr.


Born

30 September 1898 at Niederwenigern, Ruhr region, Germany


Died

• executed 23 January 1945 at the Berlin-Plotzensee, Germany prison

• body cremated, and the ashes scattered


Beatified

7 October 2001 by Pope John Paul II at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy



துறவி மவ்ரூஸ் Maurus OSB


பிறப்பு 

500

இறப்பு 

6 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, 

இத்தாலி

பாதுகாவல்: நோய்களிலிருந்து


இவர் தனது வாழ்நாள் முழுவதும் நூர்சியா நகரிலிருந்த புனித பெனடிக்ட் துறவற சபையினருடன் தொடர்பு கொண்டிருந்தார். உரோமையை ஆட்சி செய்த அரசன் ஒருவரின் மகன், மவ்ரூஸிடம் நெருக்கமான உறவு கொண்டிருந்தார். அரசரின் மகன் தனது குழந்தை பருவத்திலிருந்தே மவ்ரூஸிடம் வளர்ந்தார். தனது கல்வியையும் மவ்ரூஸிடமே கற்றார். 


மவுரூஸ் 529 ஆம் ஆண்டு பெனடிக்ட் துறவற மடத்தில் சேர்ந்து குருவானார். மோண்டேகசினோவில் Montedassino இருந்த பெனடிக்ட் துறவற மடத்தில் வாழ்ந்தார். அம்மடம் மிகப் புகழ்வாய்ந்து காணப்பட்டது. அம்மடத்தில் ஒரு சிறிய அறையில் இவர் வாழ்ந்தார். எப்போதும் இடைவிடாமல் செபம் செய்து மிக ஏழ்மையான வாழ்வை வாழ்ந்தார். இவர் உடுத்துவதற்கு கூட தேவையான உடையின்றியும் போதுமான அளவு உணவு உட்கொள்ளாமலும் மிகக் கடினமான வாழ்வை வாழ்ந்தார். இவர் தனது செப வாழ்வைக் கொண்டு, துறவற இல்லம் ஒன்றை கட்டினார். அம்மடம் நாளடைவில் செப இல்லமாக மட்டுமே பயன்படுத்தப்பட்டது. 


இவர் எவராலும் இயலாத அளவிற்கு கீழ்படிதலான வாழ்வை வாழ்ந்தார். இவருடன் வாழ்ந்த மற்ற குருக்கள் அனைவரும் இவரை ஏழ்மை, கீழ்படிதல் என்னும் வார்த்தைப்பாட்டிற்கு முன் மாதிரியாக கொண்டு வாழ்ந்தனர். இவர் இறந்தபிறகு எங்கு அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார் என்று கண்டறியப்படவில்லை

Saint Maurus



Also known as

Mauro


Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of Equitius, a senator, and Giulia. Disciple of Saint Benedict of Nursia at age 12. Studied with Saint Placid. Deacon. Benedictine monk. Assisted Saint Benedict at Subiaco, Italy, and at Monte Cassino in 528. Founder and abbot of the abbey at Glanfeuil, France in 543; it was later renamed for him. Could heal by prayer, and there are multiple stories of him bringing the dead back to life. At the moment of the death of Saint Benedict, Maurus received a vision of his old teacher travelling a street that led to heaven.


Born

512 in Rome, Italy


Died

• 15 January 584 of natural causes

• relics re-discovered in 845

• relics transferred to St-Pierre-des-Fosses in 868 to avoid Norman invaders

• relics interred in the church of St-Germain-des-Prés, Paris, France

• relics destroyed in 1793 during the anti-Catholic excesses of the French Revolution




Blessed Gabriel of Ferrara



Also known as

• Gabriele Ferrari

• Camillo


Profile

Born to the nobility, the Count of Ferrara, Italy. Trained as a surgeon, he practiced medicine in Milan, Italy and served as personal physician to the Duke of Urbino, Italy. He joined the Brothers of Mercy, a hospital order, in 1591, taking the name Gabriel and making his vows in 1595. Wrote the Nuova Selva di Cirurgia in 1596, which became a standard for teaching surgery in Italian and German. Transferred to a Brothers monastery and hospital on Tiber Island in Rome, Italy in 1598, he became prior of the house in 1599. Provincial of his Order in 1602, and worked in its general administration. Vicar-General of the Brothers of Mercy in the German provinces from 1605 to 1627, he was entrusted with founding houses and hospitals throughout the region. After successfully treating King Sigismund III of Poland in 1608, in 1609 he founded a hospital in Kraków, Poland, and then later elsewhere in Poland, Lithuania and Belarus. After successfully treating Emperor Matthias of Austria, he founded a hospital in Taborstrasse in Vienna, Austria in 1614. After successfully treating Archduke Ernst of Styria, saving his arm from amputation, he founded a hospital in Graz, Austria in 1615. Brother Gabriel served as a field surgeon in the Thirty Years War, and worked with imperial troops at the battle at Jasna Gora near Prague in 1620; this led to his leadership of a hospital in Prague in 1621. Helped found a hospital in Neuburg an der Donau in modern Germany in 1622. Archduke Ernst’s brother, the Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II, supported Gabriel, and in 1624 provided support to the Brothers of Mercy in Austria. Founded the hospital in Trieste, Italy in 1625. At his death, he left behind a network of houses bringing the Brothers to piety, and hospitals caring for the poor.


Born

c.1543 in Milan, Italy as Camillo


Died

• 15 January 1627 in Vienna, Austria of natural causes

• relics enshrined in the church of the Brothers of Mercy on Taborstrasse in Vienna



Saint Macarius of Egypt



Also known as

• Macarius the Elder

• Macarius the Great

• Macarius the Thébaïde

• Makarios the...


Profile

Shepherd in the desert region of Skete. Falsley accused of assaulting a woman, but was acquitted. Hermit. Spiritual student of Saint Anthony the Abbot. Founder of a monastic community in Skete. Ordained at age 40. His sanctity drew followers, and his desert community numbered thousands at his death. Fought Arianism, and was exiled for it. Several Libyan desert monasteries still bear the name Macarius.


Born

c.300 at Upper Egypt


Died

390 of natural causes


Representation

• old hermit with long, white hair wearing a girdle of leaves with two lions near him

• hermit expelling the devil with a cross

• with Saint Onuphrius the Great and Saint Peter of Athos



† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 15)


✠ புனிதர் அர்னால்ட் ஜன்ஸ்ஸென் ✠

(St. Arnold Janssen)


குரு/ நிறுவனர்:

(Priest and Founder)


பிறப்பு: நவம்பர் 5, 1837

கோச், ஜெர்மனி

(Goch, Germany)


இறப்பு: ஜனவரி 15, 1909 (வயது 71)

ஸ்டீல், நெதர்லாந்து

(Steyl, Netherlands)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Catholic Church)


முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 19, 1975

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல்

(Pope Paul VI)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 5, 2003

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல்

(Pope John Paul II)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஜனவரி 15


புனிதர் அர்னால்ட் ஜன்ஸ்ஸென், ஒரு ஜெர்மன்-டச்சு கத்தோலிக்க (German-Dutch Catholic priest) குருவும், மிஷனரியும் (Missionary) ஆவார். அவர் கத்தோலிக்க மிஷனரி ஆன்மீக சபையான (Catholic Missionary Religious Congregation) "தெய்வீக வார்த்தை சமூகம்" (Society of the Divine Word) நிறுவினார், இது "தெய்வீக வார்த்தை மிஷனரிகள்" (Divine Word Missionaries) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படுகிறது, அத்துடன் பெண்களுக்கான இரண்டு சபைகளையும் அவர் நிறுவினார். கி.பி. 1889ம் ஆண்டு, நெதர்லாந்தின் (Netherlands) "ஸ்டீல்" (Steyl) நகரில், "தூய ஆவியாரின் மிஷனரி சகோதரியர் ஊழியர்கள்" எனும் பெண்களுக்கான ஆன்மீக சபையை நிறுவினார். மற்றும், கி.பி. 1896ம் ஆண்டு, "தூய ஆவியானவர் வணக்க சகோதரிகள்" (Holy Spirit Adoration Sisters) எனும் பெண்களுக்கான ஆன்மீக சபையை அதே நகரில் நிறுவினார்.


அர்னால்ட் ஜன்ஸ்ஸென், மேற்கு ஜெர்மனியின் (Western Germany), "டட்ச்" எல்லைக்கு (Dutch border) அருகாமையிலுள்ள "ரைன்லாண்ட்" (Rhineland) பிராந்தியத்தின் "கோச்" (Goch) நகரில், பதினோரு சகோதரர்களுல் ஒருவராக பிறந்தார். அவர் ஒரு ஆழ்ந்த, எளிய கத்தோலிக்க விசுவாசத்தை வளர்த்துக் கொண்டார். தமது பிறந்த இடத்திற்கு அருகில் உள்ள "கெயஸ்டாங்க்" (Gaesdonck) என்னுமிடத்திலுள்ள கத்தோலிக்க அகஸ்டினியம் உயர்நிலைப்பள்ளியில் (Catholic Augustinianum High School) கல்வி கற்றார். பின்னர், கல்லூரியில் பயின்று பட்டம் பெற்ற இவர், பின்னர் இறையியல் பயின்று, கி.பி. 1861ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம், 15ம் நாளன்று, குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு பெற்றார்.


வெளிநாடுகளில் மறைப்பணியாற்றும் ஆர்வம் கொண்டிருந்த ஜன்ஸ்ஸென், சிறிது காலம் ஜெர்மனியின் போச்சோல்ட் (Bocholt) நகரிலுள்ள உயர்நிலைப் பள்ளியில், இயற்பியல் (Physics) மற்றும் மறைக்கல்வி (Catechism) கற்பிக்கும் ஆசிரியராகப் பணிபுரிந்தார்.


கி.பி. 1867ம் ஆண்டு, ஜெர்மனி (Germany ) மற்றும் ஆஸ்திரியாவுக்கான (Austria) "அப்போஸ்டலேட் டெஸ் கெபெட்ஸ்" (Apostolate des Gebeds) எனும் அமைப்பின் இயக்குநரானார். பின்னர், வியன்னாவுக்கு (Vienna) அருகிலுள்ள "மட்லிங்க்" (Mödling) நகரில், ஒரு அறிவியல் நிறுவனத்தை நிறுவினார்.


அவர் ஏற்கனவே, 1874ம் ஆண்டு, "திருஇருதயத்தின் சிறிய தூதர்" (Little Messenger of the Sacred Heart) எனும் ஜெர்மன் மொழி இதழை நிறுவினார், இதனால், விசுவாசிகளை ஜெபத்திலும், மறைப்பணிக்கான ஆதரவிலும் சேர்க்க முயன்றது.


கி.பி. சுமார் 1872ம் ஆண்டு முதல், 1878ம் ஆண்டு வரையான, புரூஷியா இராச்சியத்தின் (Kingdom of Prussia) அரசாங்கத்திற்கும் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபைக்கும் இடையிலான மோதல், (Kulturkampf) என்று அழைக்கப்பட்டது. இது, எவ்வாறாயினும், அவரது முயற்சிகளுக்கு இடையூறாக இருந்தது.


ஜன்ஸ்ஸென், தனது குருத்துவ பள்ளியை (Seminary) தொடங்க நெதர்லாந்தின் (Netherlands) ஸ்டீல் (Steyl) நகரில் நிலத்தை வாங்கினார். கி.பி. 1875ம் ஆண்டு, "திருத்தூதர் தூய மிக்கேல் மறைப்பணி இல்லம்" (St. Michael the Archangel Mission House) எனும் பெயரில் அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்டது. சில ஆண்டுகளிலேயே, பல குரு மாணவர்கள், குருக்கள், மற்றும் அருட்சகோதரர்கள் அங்கு மறைப்பணியாளர் (மிஷனரி) சேவைக்கு தயாராகி வந்தனர். முதல் இரண்டு மிஷனரிகளாக, "ஜோசப் ஃப்ரீனாடெமெட்ஸ்" (Joseph Freinademetz) மற்றும் "ஜான் அன்சர்" (John Anzer) ஆகிய இரண்டு குருக்கள், சீனாவுக்கு (China) அனுப்பப்பட்டனர்.


கி.பி. 1889ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், எட்டாம் நாளன்று ஒன்றும், கி.பி. 1896ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதம், 8ம் நாளன்று ஒன்றுமாக, பெண்களுக்கான இரண்டு ஆன்மீக சபைகளையும் ஜன்ஸ்ஸென் நிறுவினார்.


கி.பி. 1975ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 19ம் தேதி, திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல் (Pope Paul VI) அவர்களால் முக்திப்பேறு பட்டமளிக்கப்பட்ட இவரை, திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல் (Pope John Paul II) அவர்கள், 2003ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 5ம் நாளன்று, புனிதராக உயர்த்தி அருட்பொழிவு செய்வித்தார்.

Saint Arnold Janssen



Profile

Arnold felt an early call to the priesthood, and was ordained in August 1861. Well educated, he taught science and catechism for twelve years. Chaplain and director of the Ursuline convent at Kempen in 1873. Director of the diocesan Apostleship of Prayer in 1874. Editor of a journal about missionary work in 1873.


He established the religious congregation Society of the Divine Word in Steyl, Netherlands in 1875; it received papal approval in 1901. The Society, which soon had houses in the Netherlands, Austria, and Germany, was composed of missionary priests who worked in Tonga, New Guinea, Japan, Paraguay, and throughout North America.


In 1889, Arnold founded the Missionary Sisters, Servants of the Holy Ghost to assist the priests in their mission. The Sisters serve as teachers in mission lands, especially of young girls. With the help of Blessed Maria Virgo, Arnold formed the sisters a contemplative branch named Sister Servants of the Holy Spirit of Perpetual Adoration who devote themselves to adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, and prayer for the success of missionary efforts. These sisters are nicknamed Pink Sisters because of the color of their habit.


Born

5 November 1837 at Goch, North Rhein-Westphalia, Germany


Died

15 January 1909 in Steyl, Netherlands of natural causes


Canonized

5 October 2003 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Romedio of Nonsberg



Also known as

• Romedio of Hohenwart

• Romedio of Salzburg

• Romedio of Sanzeno

• Romedio of Thaur

• Romedius of...


Additional Memorial

1st Sunday in October (translation of relics)


Profile

Born to the nobility, the family of the Counts of Thaur in modern Austria. He learned to read using the Bible and stories of the saints. As an adult, he gave away his fortune to support churches in the Tyrol, turned a family castle into a monastery, and then went on pilgrimage to the tombs of the Apostles; legend says that a bear killed his horse, and in remorse, the bear carried him for the rest of the trip. Cave hermit at Sanzeno on Nonsberg near Salzburg.


Born

Austria


Died

• Salzburg, Austria of natural causes

• relics interred in Sanzeno, Italy

• some relics transferred to Thaur, Austria


Canonized

24 July 1907 by Pope Pius X (cultus confirmation)




Saint Francis Ferdinand de Capillas



Additional Memorials

• 28 September as one of the Martyrs of China

• 6 November as one of the Dominicans Martyrs of the Far East


Profile

Joined the Dominicans in Valladolid, Spain. Ordained in Manila, Philippines in 1631. Missionary and parish priest in Cagayan, Philippines. Missionary to China for several years. He made so many converts in Fu-kien that local officials arrested him as a spy. Accused of espionage, political intrigue, witchcraft, disregarding ancestor worship and anything else they could think of, and then tortured; he converted several of his jailers to Christianity. Considered the proto-martyr of the Martyrs of China.


Born

11 August 1607 in Baquerín de Campos, Palencia, Old Castile, Spain


Died

beheaded on 15 January 1648 in Fu'an, Fujian, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II




Saint John Calabytes



Also known as

• John Calabites

• John Calibita

• John Chalybita

• John Kalabytes

• John the Hut-Dweller

• Giovanni...


Profile

Born wealthy. Ran away from home as a child, and became a monk at Gomon on the Bosphorus at age 12. When he finally returned home as a beggar at age 18, his family did not recognize him. However, the did recognized that he was a holy man, and the family allowed him to live as a hermit in a small hut (a calybe in Greek) near their front door. Only on his death were they were informed of his real identity. His story has led to his being a symbol of homelessness, and how we may not recognize the humanity in the poor and homeless in our midst.


Born

at Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey)


Died

c.450 of natural causes


Representation

• beggar with a Gospel in his hand

• beggar revealing his identity to his parents on his death bed



Saint Placid



Also known as

Placidus


Additional Memorial

5 October on some calendars (confusion with an earlier martyr of similar name)


Profile

Son of a patrician senator named Tertulus. Sent as a boy to study with Saint Benedict of Nursia at Subiaco, Italy, he became one of Benedict earliest followers. Friend of Saint Maurus, who saved him from drowning. Accompanied Benedict to Monte Cassino in 529, it being built on land given to Benedict by Tertulus. Known through the second Dialogue of Saint Gregory the Great.


Many legends grew up around Placid, and his story became mixed with a martyr name Placitus who was apparently a monk, and possibly an abbot, who was killed with 30 brother monks by Muslim invaders at Messina, Italy, but that appears to have been a completely different person and era.


Representation

being saved from drowning by Saint Maurus




Saint Ephysius of Sardinia



Also known as

• Ephysius of Cagliari

• Efisio, Efeso, Ephise, Ephysus


Addtional Memorial

1 May (some confraternity calendars)


Profile

In Rome, Italy, Ephysius gained the favour of emperor Diocletian who made him governor of the island of Sardinia. Convert to Christianity. Diocletian then had him stripped of office, tortured and murdered. Martyr.


Born

in Palestine


Died

• beheaded in 303 on Sardinia, Italy

• relics transferred to Pisa, Italy


Patronage

• Cagliari, Italy

• Pisa, Italy

• Sardinia, Italy




Saint Ita of Killeedy



Also known as

• Ita of Clúaincredal

• Ita of Hy-Connall

• Ita of Ireland

• Ita of Munster

• Ita of Waterford

• Deirdre, Dorothy, Meda, Mida, Ytha, Ide, Mide


Profile

Born to the Irish nobility, possibly a member of the royal family. She refused to marry, and eventually received her father's blessing to live a celibate life. Founded the convent at Hy Conaill, County Limerick, Ireland which attracted large numbers of nuns. Founded a school for boys in Killeedy; one of her students was Saint Brendan. Second only to Saint Brigid in popular Irish devotion. Many extravagant miracles have become associated with her including healing a man who had been decapitated, and living solely off food delivered from heaven.


Born

at Drum, County Waterford, Ireland


Died

c.570 of natural causes


Patronage

diocese of Limerick, Ireland




Saint Botonto



Profile

On 28 December 1841, the relics of eight martyrs, including an ampule of blood, dating to the time of Diocletian, were found near the cemetery of Sant'Agnese outside Rome, Italy. All we know about them comes from an inscription that translates to “Botonto, who lived three years and two months, (is here) in peace.” Judging by the burial, the people were apparently noble, and probably Greek in origin, but we know nothing else about them.


Born

c.300


Died

• c.303 in Rome, Italy

• interred near the cemetery of Sant'Agnese on the Via Nomentana, Rome

• relics re-discovered on 28 December 1841

• relics donated to King Carlo Albert of Savoy by Pope Gregory XVI

• relics enshrined in a wax effigy on the right side of the San Francesco altar in the church of the Santa Maria al Monte at the convent of Monte dei Cappucini in Turin, Italy on 15 January 1843



Blessed Angelus of Gualdo Tadino



Profile

Born to a poor family. Benedictine. As a youth he walked barefoot to Compostela, northern Spain, became a Camaldolese lay-brother, and lived forty years as a hermit walled up in his cell. His life was distinguished by simplicity, innocence, gentleness.


Born

c.1265 at Gualdo Tadino, Nocera, Italy


Died

• 15 January 1325 of natural causes

• interred in the church of Saint Benedict in Gualdo Tadino, Italy

• relics transferred to a chapel in the local abbey church in 1343 by Blessed Alessandro Vincioli

• relics transferred to a new altar in the basilica of Saint Benedict on 16 April 1443


Beatified

• 1633 by Pope Urban VIII (cultus confirmed)

• 3 August 1825 by Pope Leo XII (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

Gualdo Tadino, Italy




Blessed Peter of Castelnau


Profile

Known in lay and religious life for his intelligence, piety, and devotion. Archdeacon of Maguelone in 1199. Cistercian monk at Fontfroide c.1202. Papal legate and inquisitor in 1203 under Pope Innocent III. Assigned to work with the heretic Albigensians, to bring them back to the church. He embarked on a great evangelization campaign through southern France; Saint Dominic de Guzman worked in this effort. Martyred by Albigensians, probably with the support of Count Raymond VI of Toulouse who hoped to use the Albigensian crisis to increase his political power. Peter's murder sparked the Albigensian Crusade against the heretics in southern France.


Born

near Montpellier, France


Died

stabbed with a lance in 1208 near Saint Gilles Abbey by Albigensian heretics




Blessed Tit Liviu Chinezu



Also known as

Titu, Titus


Profile

Ordained a priest in the Romanian Greek-Catholic Rite on 31 January 1930. Chosen auxiliary bishop of Fagaras si Alba Iulia, Romania and Titular Bishop of Regiana in 1949 and consecrated in secret. Martyred in the Communist persecutions.


Born

1904 in Maioresti (Huduc), Mures, Romania


Died

15 January 1955 in of hypothermia in Sighetu Marmatiei prison, Maramures, Romania


Beatified

2 June 2019 by Pope Francis




Saint Bonitus of Clermont


Also known as

Bonet, Bonnet, Bont


Profile

Chancellor to King Sigebert III of Austrasia. Appointed governor of Marseilles by King Thierry III in 667. Bishop of Clermont, France in 689. He resigned the see when doubts arose about the validity of his election. Bonitus spent his later years as a holy hermit at the Benedictine abbey of Manglieu, Clermont. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy.


Born

623 in Auvergne, France


Died

• c.710 in Lyon, France of natural causes while on the road returning to Clermont, France from Rome, Italy

• relics in the cathedral of Clermont




Saint Cosmas the Melodist




Also known as

• Cosmas the Hymnographer

• Cosma


Profile

Born to a very poor family. Educated by an Italian monk who had been taken prisoner by his people. Monk at the San Saba monastery near Bethlehem. Bishop of Mayuma near Gaza in the Holy Lands in 743 where he served the rest of his life. Known as one of the most gifted hymnist of his era.


Born

706 in Jerusalem


Died

760




Blessed Giacomo Villa


Also known as

Jaime


Profile

Son of Lucantonio and Mustiola Villa. He was a pious child, and as a young man repaired an old hospital and used it to care for the sick poor. Studied civil law in Siena, Italy. Priest. Franciscan tertiary. When a noble in Chiusi, Italy illegally took property belonging to the city hospital, Giacomo took the case; he won it and all appeals. The noble then had Giacomo killed in revenge.


Died

axed to death on 15 January 1304 in Citta della Pieve, Italy


Beatified

by Pope Pius VII (cultus confirmation)



Saint Ceolwulph


Also known as

Ceolwulf


Profile

Eighth century king of Northumbria in England. Patron and supporter of Venerable Bede who dedicated his Ecclesiastical History to Ceolwulph. In later life Ceolwulph abdicated and became a monk at Lindisfarne Abbey, possibly as a way to prevent a war over his throne.


Born

England


Died

• 764 of natural causes

• relics translated to Nohram-on-Tweed, England in 830

• some relics later transferred to Durham, England




Saint Alexander of Goman


Profile

Monk. Abbot. Founder of the Acremetre (Greek: without sleep), monks of Asiatic origin. He converted Saint Rabulas, the governor of Edessa, by a miracle. In the desert he converted thirty robbers, and changed their den into a monastery. Founded a monastery on the Euphrates. With 300 monks, he settled at Gomon in Bithynia, and divided them into six choirs to sing the Divine Office, so that it might ascend ceaselessly, night and day.


Died

c.440



Saint Emebert of Cambrai


Also known as

Ablebert, Emebertus, Einbert


Profile

Son of Count Witger and Saint Amalburga; brother of Saint Gudule and Saint Reineldis. He was early drawn to the religious life. MonkBishop of Cambrai, France. Known for his personal piety and the example he set for his flock.


Died

• c.710 of natural causes

• buried at the church of Our Lady and Saint Aldegondis in Maubeuge, France, but his grave has since been lost



Saint Lleudadd of Bardsey


Also known as

• Lleudadd of Enli

• Lleudadd of Bardsey Island

• Laudat, Laudatus, Leuddade, Lawdog, Llawddog, Llendadd


Additoinal Memorial

1 January (as one of the Breton Missionaries to Great Britain)


Profile

Monk. Abbot of Bardsey, Gwynedd, Wales. Worked with Saint Cadfan in Brittany.


Born

Welsh


Died

6th century Wales of natural causes




Blessed Conan of Margam


Also known as

Conanus, Cunanus


Profile

Cistercian monk. Third abbot of the Margam monastery in Wales in 1156, he served there until his death, 37 years later. Contemporaries referred to Conan as “a scholar and wise abbot”, and wrote that the monastery was more famous for its charity than any other in Wales.


Born

early 12th century Wales


Died

1193 in Wales of natural causes




Blessed Diego de Soto



Profile

Mercedarian monk. Spiritual student of Saint Serapion of Algiers. Master of novices. Sent to Granada to redeem prisoners held captive by Muslims, he was imprisoned, tortured, starved and killed for his faith. Martyr.


Born

Toledo, Spain


Died

1237 in prison in Granada, Spain




Saint Pansofius of Alexandria


Profile

Son of the imperial pro-consul of Alexandria, Egypt. When Pansofius came into his inheritance, he gave away his entire fortune to the poor and lived as a hermit outside the city for over 20 years. During the persecutions of Decius, Pansofius' reputation for sanctity led to his arrest and execution. Martyr.


Died

c.250 in Alexandria, Egypt




Saint Secondina of Anagni



Profile

Convert, baptized by Saint Magnus of Anagni. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Born

Anagni, Italy


Died

• c.250

• interred in the cathedral of Anagni, Italy




Saint Blaithmaic of Iona

Also known as

Blathmac, Blaithmale


Profile

Born a prince, the son of an Irish king. Monk. Abbot. Missionary to England and Scotland, hoping to work with the pagan Danes then invading. Martyred by them.


Born

Ireland


Died

823 on the altar steps at Iona Abbey, Scotland




Saint Isidore the Egyptian


Also known as

Isidore of Alexandria


Profile

Desert hermit. Priest in charge of a Alexandria pilgrims hospice. Opposed Arianism, supported Saint Athanasius, and was persecuted by Arians. Friend of Saint John Chrysostom.


Born

Egyptian


Died

404




Saint Arsenius of Reggio Calabria


Also known as

• Arsenius of Armo

• Arsenio...


Profile

Hermit famous for his austere lifestyle and deep prayer life.


Died

904 in Armo, Italy of natural causes




Saint Teath


Also known as

Tetha


Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of Saint Brychan of Brecknock in Wales. She is mentioned in 13th century documents. A Cornwall church bears her name. No details of her life have survived.


Patronage

Saint Teath, Cornwall, England




Blessed James the Beggar

Also known as

• James Limosnero

• Jacobo...


Profile

Supporter and advocate for the poor and oppressed in the 13th century.


Died

Città della Pieve, Umbria, Italy



Saint Tarsicia of Rodez


Also known as

Tarsitia


Profile

Granddaughter of King Clotaire II of the Franks. Sister of Saint Ferreolus of Uzès. Lived as a hermit near Rodez, France.


Died

c.600 of natural causes




Saint Secundina of Rome


Profile

Young woman martyred in the persecutions of Decius. Her guards were converted to Christianity by her testimony of faith before the judges.


Died

flogged to death c.250 in Rome, Italy




Saint Britta


Also known as

Bridget, Brigid, Brigida, Brigitta, Brigitte, Britte


Profile

Fourth century nun. Martyred with Saint Maura. Their story was lost, and their relics were discovered by Saint Euphronius.


Patronage

martyrs




Saint Isidore of Scété


Profile

Desert hermit. Priest of Scété, Egypt. Worked to bring angry or negligent brother desert monks back to proper devotion.


Died

c.394



Blessed Geoffrey of Peronne


Profile

Friend of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux. Prior of Clairvaux Abbey. Refused the bishopric of Tournai, Belgium.


Died

1147 of natural causes




Saint Llewellyn


Also known as

Llywelyn


Profile

Monk at Welshpool and Bardsey, Wales. Friend of Saint Gwrnerth.


Born

Welsh


Died

6th century Wales of natural causes




Saint Eugyppius


Profile

Ordained in Rome, Italy. Worked with Saint Severinus in Noricum (part of modern Austria), and wrote a biography of him.


Born

North Africa


Died

c.511




Saint Malard of Chartres


Profile

Bishop of Chartres, France. Attended the Council of Chalons-sur-saone in 650.


Died

latter 7th century



Saint Gwrnerth


Profile

Monk at Welshpool and Bardsey in Wales. Friend of Saint Liewellyn.


Born

Welsh


Died

6th century Wales of natural causes




Saint Maura


Profile

Fourth century nun. Martyred with Saint Britta. Their story was lost, but their relics were discovered by Saint Euphronius.


Patronage

martyrs




Saint Sawl


Profile

Welsh chieftain. Father of Saint Asaph.


Born

Welsh


Died

6th century




Saint Probus of Rieti


Profile

Bishop of Rieti, Italy.


Died

c.571

#புனித_ஐடா (475-570)


ஜனவரி 15


இவர் (#ItaOfKilleedy) அயர்லாந்து நாட்டைச் சார்ந்தவர். அரச குடும்பத்தைச் சார்ந்த இவரை இவரது தந்தை ஒருவருக்கு மணம் முடித்துக்கொடுக்க நினைத்தார்; ஆனால் இவர், தான் துறவற வாழ்வை மேற்கொள்ளப் போவதாகச் சொன்னதும், அதற்கு அவர் மறுப்பேதும் சொல்லாமல் சம்மதம் தெரிவித்தார். 


இதன் பிறகு இவர் தனிமையான ஓர் இடத்திற்கு வந்து, துறவுமடம் ஒன்றை நிறுவினார். அவ்விடத்திற்குப் பலரும் வந்து சேர்ந்தார்கள். அவர்களுக்கு இவர் சிறந்த முன்மாதிரியாய் இருந்து, அவர்களைச் சிறந்த விதமாய்த் துறவற வாழ்வில் வளர்த்து வந்தார்.


இவர் ஆண்களுக்கென ஒரு பள்ளிக்கூடத்தையும் தொடங்கினார்.  இப்படி கல்விப்பணியையும் ஆன்மிகப் பணியையும் ஒரு சேரச் செய்துவந்த இவர் பல வல்ல செயல்களைச் செய்து வந்தார். 


ஒருமுறை தலைவெட்டப்பட்ட ஒருவரை இவர் தனது வல்லமையால் மீண்டுமாக ஒன்று சேர்த்தார்.  இவர் உணவிற்காக இறைவனை நோக்கி மன்றாடுகிறபோது, விண்ணகத்திலிருந்து உணவு கிடைக்கும் என்று இவரைப் பற்றி ஒரு செய்தி சொல்லப்படுகிறது.


இவ்வாறு இறைவனுக்கு உகந்த வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்து வந்த இவர், கிபி 570 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.‌

14 January 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜனவரி 14

 St. Deusdedit


Feastday: January 14

Death: 664


Benedictine archbishop of Canterbury, England. He was a Southern Saxon, originally called Freithona. In 653, Deusdedit succeeded Honorius, becoming the first Anglo-Saxon to become a primate of England. He died, probably on October 28, during a plague.

.



Blessed Petrus Donders



Also known as

Peter, Peerke


Profile

Son of Arnold Denis Donders and Petronella van den Brekel. Peter grew up poor, rarely getting to school, working at home and in a local factory with his brother Martin, and dreaming of becoming a priest. With the help of local priests and a wealthy patron, he enter the seminary at the College of Herlaar at age twenty-two, initially working as a servant while he studied. At age twenty-six her applied to the Franciscans, Jesuits and Redemptorists, but was turned down by each. Ordained on 5 June 1841 after nearly ten years of work.


Missionary to the Dutch colony in Surinam, Dutch Guiana, arriving in Paramaribo on 16 September 1842. Evangelized and ministered to plantation slaves, constantly in touch with his superiors to complain of the terrible treatment of the workers. He baptized at least 1200 in his first couple of years, and worked among the sick during an epidemic in 1851. Transferred to the leper colony of Batavia in 1856. There he ministered to both the body and soul of the 600 or so patients. His constant harassment of the colonial authorities resulted in much better care for the patients.


When the Redemptorists arrived in Surinam in 1866 to take charge of the mission, Peter joined the Order, becoming a 57 year old novice in 1866, and making his final vows on 24 June 1867. He then returned to Batavia with a crew of Redemptorists ready to help the lepers. With the added help, Father Peter expanded his work, and began to evangelize the Indians in the region. He learned their languages and had made a good start on the work when his health failed. His superiors transferred him to easier assignments, but as the end approached, Peter returned to Batavia where he worked with the patients until his end.


Born

27 October 1805 at Tilburg, North Brabant, Netherlands


Died

• 14 January 1887 at Batavia, Saramacca, Surinam of natural causes

• buried there


Beatified

• 23 May 1982 by Pope John Paul II

• on 11 April 1978, the Congregation for the Causes of Saints declared miraculous the cure of Louis John Westland from osteomyelitis by Blessed Peter's intercession


† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 14)


✠ நோலா நகர் புனிதர் ஃபெலிக்ஸ் ✠

(St. Felix of Nola)


குரு:

(Priest)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 3ம் நூற்றாண்டின் ஆரம்பம்

நோலா, கம்பானியா, இத்தாலி

(Nola, Campania, Italy)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 250

நோலா, கம்பானியா, இத்தாலி

(Nola, Campania, Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

மரபுவழி திருச்சபை


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஜனவரி 14


பாதுகாவல்: நோலா, இத்தாலி


நோலா நகர் புனிதர் ஃபெலிக்ஸ், இத்தாலி (Italy) நாட்டின் பண்டைய "நேப்பிள்ஸ் மற்றும் சிசிலி" (Naples and Sicily) இராச்சியங்களின் தலைநகரான "நேப்பிள்ஸ்" (Naples) நகரில் வசித்திருந்த கிறிஸ்தவ குரு ஆவார். அவர், ஏழைகளுக்குக் கொடுக்கும் பொருட்டு தமது உடைமைகளை விற்றார். ஆனால், ரோமப் பேரரசன் "டேசியஸ்" (Roman emperor Decius) என்பவனது ஆட்சி காலத்தில் கைது செய்யப்பட்டு, கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்திற்காக துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டார். அவர், ரோமப் பேரரசன் "டேசியஸ்" அல்லது "வலேரியன்" ஆகியோரது துன்புறுத்தலின்போது ஒரு  மறைசாட்சியாக மரித்துவிட்டார் என்று நம்பப்படுகிறது. ஆனால், வாழும் காலத்தில் சித்திரவதைகளை அனுபவித்த இவர், கத்தோலிக்கர்களின் பொது நாள்காட்டியில் (General Roman Calendar), விசுவாசத்தின் ஒப்புரவாளராக (Confessor of the Faith) பட்டியலிடப்பட்டுள்ளார்.


ஃபெலிக்ஸ், சிரியா நாட்டில், ரோம இராணுவத்தில் (Syrian Centurion) பணியாற்றி, இத்தாலியிலுள்ள நோலா நகரில் ஓய்வு பெற்ற "ஹெர்மியாஸ்" (Hermias) என்பவரது மகன் ஆவார்.  தமது தந்தையின் மரணத்திற்குப் பிறகு, ஃபெலிக்ஸ் தமக்குள்ள சொத்துக்கள் மற்றும் உடைமைகள் அனைத்தையும் விற்று, அதன் வருமானத்தை ஏழைகளுக்கு அளித்தார். தாம் ஆன்மீக வாழ்க்கை முறையை பின்பற்றினார். ஆயர் (Bishop) தூய "மேக்சிமஸ்" (Saint Maximus of Nola) என்பவரால் குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு அளிக்கப்பட ஃபெலிக்ஸ், அவருடனேயே பணியாற்றினார்.


ரோம பேரரசர் "டேசியஸின்" (Decius) கிறிஸ்தவ துன்புறுத்துதல்களுக்குப் பயந்து, ஆயர் மேக்சிமஸ் மலைகள் மீது ஒடி ஒளிந்தபோது, அரச படைகளால் ஃபெலிக்ஸ் கைது செய்யப்பட்டார். மற்றும் அதற்கு பதிலாக அவருடைய விசுவாசத்திற்கு அடித்து துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டார். புராணங்களின்படி, ஒரு தேவதூதரால் விடுவிக்கப்பட்ட அவர், சிறைச்சாலையில் இருந்து தப்பியோடினார். அதனால் ஆயர் மேக்சிமஸுக்கு உதவ அவரால் முடிந்தது. ஆயர் மேக்சிமஸை, தனியாகவும், நோயுற்றவராகவும், உதவியற்றவராகவும் கண்ட ஃபெலிக்ஸ், ஒரு காலியாக இருந்த ஒரு கட்டிடத்தில் அரச வீரர்களிடமிருந்து அவரை மறைத்து வைத்தார்.


இருவரும் பாதுகாப்பாக உள்ளே இருந்தபோது, ஒரு சிலந்தி சடுதியில் செயல்பட்டு, அவர்களிருந்த அறையின் கதவை மறைத்தவாறு ஒரு வலையைப் பின்னியது. முட்டாளாக்கப்பட்ட அரச படையினர், சிந்தித்தவாறே, இது கைவிடப்பட்ட மிகவும் பழைய கட்டிடம் என்றவாறு, ஒளிந்திருந்த கிறிஸ்தவர்களை கண்டுபிடிக்க இயலாமல் திரும்பிச் சென்றனர். ஃபெலிக்ஸ்ஸை கைது செய்வதற்கான ஒரு தொடர்ச்சியான முயற்சி தொடர்ந்து மீண்டும் நடந்தது. ஆனால், முன்பு போலவே அந்த சிலந்தி செயல்பட்டு அவரை மறைத்தது. கி.பி. 251ம் ஆண்டு, பேரரசன் டேசியஸ் இறந்து, கிறிஸ்தவ துன்புறுத்தல்கள் முடிவடையும் வரையில் இருவரும் மறைந்திருந்தனர்.


ஆயர் மேக்சிமஸின் மரணத்திற்குப்பின், ஃபெலிக்ஸ் அடுத்த நோலாவின் ஆயர் ஆக மக்கள் விரும்பினர். ஆனால், அவர் தம்மை விட ஏழு நாட்கள் அனுபவம் கொண்ட ஒரு மூத்த குரு "குயிண்டஸ்" (Quintus) என்பவர் இருப்பதால் ஆயர் பதவியை மறுத்தார். ஃபெலிக்ஸ் ஒரு குருவாகவே தொடர்ந்தார். அவர் தனது மீதமுள்ள நிலத்தை உழுது விவசாயம் செய்து, அதில் விளைந்தவற்றை தம்மைவிட ஏழை மக்களுக்கு வழங்கினார்.


புராணங்களின் கூற்றின்படி, ஃபெலிக்ஸ் கி.பி. 255ம் ஆண்டு, பேரரசன் "வலேரியன்" (Emperor Valerian) என்பவனால், அல்லது, பேரரசன் டேசியன் (Emperor Decius) என்பவனால் கி.பி. 250ம் ஆண்டு மறைசாட்சியாக படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.


சுமார் ஒரு நூற்றாண்டின் பின்னர் வாழ்ந்திருந்த மற்றுமொரு  புனிதர் ஃபெலிக்ஸ் (Saint Felix of Nola) என்பவருடன் இவரை எண்ணி குழப்பிக்கொள்ள கூடாது. அவரது நினைவுத் திருநாள் நவம்பர் மாதம், 15ம் நாளாகும். இவரது நினைவுத் திருநாள் ஜனவரி மாதம், 14ம் நாள் ஆகும்.

Saint Felix of Nola



Also known as

• Felix the Martyr

• Felix of Inpincis

• Felice, Flin


Profile

Elder son of Hermias, a Syrian soldier who had retired to Nola, Italy. After his father's death, Felix sold off most of his property and possessions, gave the proceeds to the poor, and pursued a clerical vocation. Ordained by, and worked with Saint Maximus of Nola.


When Maximus fled to the mountains to escape the persecution of Decius, Felix was arrested and beaten for his faith instead. Legend says he was freed by an angel so he could help his sick bishop. Felix hid Maximus from soldiers in a vacant building. When the two were safely inside, a spider quickly spun a web over the door, fooling the imperial forces into thinking it was long abandoned, and they left without finding the Christians. The two managed to hide from authorities until the persecution ended with the death of Decius in 251.


After Maximus' death, Felix was chosen as bishop of Nola, but declined, favoring Quintus, a “senior” priest who had seven days more experience than Felix. He worked to farm his remaining land, and gave most of the proceeds to people even poorer than himself. Much of the little information we have about Felix came from the letters and poetry of Saint Paulinus of Nola, who served at a porter at the door of a church dedicated to Saint Felix, and who gathered information about him from churchmen and pilgrims.


Though Felix died of natural causes, he is normally listed as a martyr because of the torture, imprisonment, and privations he experienced in the persecutions.


Born

3rd century at Nola, near Naples, Italy


Died

• c.255 of natural causes

• buried at Nola, Italy

• for centuries his tomb was the site of pilgrimages


Patronage

• against eye disease

• against eye trouble

• against false witness

• against lies

• against perjury

• domestic animals

• eyes

• Nola, Italy


† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 14)


✠ அருளாளர் தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை ✠

(Blessed Devasahayam Pillai)


மறைசாட்சி:

(Martyr)


பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 27, 1712

பள்ளியாடி, நட்டாலம், கன்னியாகுமரி மாவட்டம், திருவாங்கூர் அரசு, இந்தியா

(Palliyadi, Nattalam, Kanyakumari District, Kingdom of Travancore, India)


இறப்பு: ஜனவரி 14, 1752 (வயது 39)

ஆரல்வாய்மொழி, திருவாங்கூர் அரசு, இந்தியா

(Aralvaimozhy, Kingdom of Travancore, India)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை இலத்தீன் ரீதி

(Catholic Church Latin Rite)


முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: டிசம்பர் 2, 2012

திருத்தந்தை பதினாறாம் பெனடிக்டின் பெயரால், 

கர்தினால் ஆஞ்செலோ அமாத்தோ 

புனித ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சவேரியார் பேராலயம், கோட்டாறு மறைமாவட்டம்

(St. Xavier's Church, Kottar, Tamil Nadu by Cardinal Angelo Amato (On behalf of Pope Benedict XVI)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

புனித ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சவேரியார் பேராலயம், கோட்டாறு மறைமாவட்டம்

(Cathedral of St. Francis Xavier, Kottar)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஜனவரி 14


சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை: சங்கிலியால் கட்டப்பட்டவாறு


அருளாளர் தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை (Blessed Devasahayam Pillai) இன்றைய குமரி மாவட்டத்தின் நட்டாலம் கிராமத்தில் கி.பி. 1712ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 23ம் நாள், நாயர் குல இந்து குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்து, கத்தோலிக்க கிறிஸ்தவ சமயத்தைத் தழுவி மறைச்சாட்சியாக உயிர்துறந்தார். அவரது இயற்பெயர் நீலகண்ட பிள்ளை ஆகும். கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையில் திருமுழுக்கு பெற்றபோது அவருக்கு "கடவுளின் கருணை" என்னும் பொருள்படும் "லாசரஸ்" (Lazarus) என்னும் பெயர் வழங்கப்பட்டது. அதுவே தமிழில் "தேவசகாயம்" என்று வழங்கப்படுகிறது.


இவர் கி.பி. 1752ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 14ம் நாள், ஆரல்வாய்மொழியில் உள்ள காற்றாடி மலை என்னும் இடத்தில் அன்றைய திருவாங்கூர் ஆட்சியாளர்களின் ஆணைப்படி சுட்டுக் கொல்லப்பட்டார்.


தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை இறந்த இடம் இன்று தேவசகாயம் மவுண்ட் என்றும், ஆரல் குருசடி என்றும் அழைக்கப்படுகிறது.


அவர் இறந்த இடத்திற்குச் சென்று மக்கள் இறைவேண்டல் நடத்தத் தொடங்கினார்கள். இவ்வாறு, அதிகாரப்பூர்வமாக "மறைச்சாட்சி" என்னும் பட்டம் அவருக்கு வழங்கப்படுவதற்கு முன்னரே பொதுமக்கள் பார்வையிலும் செயல்பாட்டிலும் அவர் மறைசாட்சியாகவே கருதப்பட்டார். கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை அதிகாரப்பூர்வமாக அவரை மறைசாட்சி என்றும் "முத்திப்பேறு பெற்றவர்" (அருளாளர் - Blessed) என்றும் கி.பி. 2012ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 2ம் நாள் பிரகடனம் செய்தது.


இந்நிகழ்ச்சி கோட்டாறு மறைமாவட்டத்துக்கு உட்பட்ட நாகர்கோவில் கார்மேல் மேனிலைப்பள்ளி வளாகத்தில் சிறப்பாக நடந்தேறியது.


பிறப்பு:

மறை சாட்சி தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை இன்றைய குமரி மாவட்டத்திலுள்ள நட்டாலம் என்னும் கிராமத்தில் கி.பி. 1712ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 23ம் நாளன்று நாயர் குலத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவரின் இயற்பெயர் நீலகண்ட பிள்ளை என்பதாகும். சிறுவயதிலேயே சமஸ்கிருதம், கலை ஆகியவற்றை படித்து அறிந்தார். வளர்ந்ததும், வில் வித்தை, வர்ம கலைகள், போருக்கான ஆயுதங்களைப் பயன்படுத்தும் முறைகளையும் படித்து அறிந்தார்.


அதன் பின்னர் இவர் மார்த்தாண்ட வர்மாவின் அரண்மனையான பத்மநாபபுரம் கோட்டையில் பணியில் அமர்த்தப்பட்டார். அதன் பின்பு இவருக்கும் கன்னியாகுமரி மாவட்டத்தில் திங்கள் சந்தைக்கு அருகே உள்ள மேக்கோடு என்னும் ஊரைச் சேர்ந்த பர்கவியம்மாளுக்கும் திருமணம் நடைபெற்றது.


மனமாற்றம்:

கி.பி. 1741ம் ஆண்டு, குளச்சல் துறைமுகத்தைப் பிடிக்க வந்த டச்சு படைகள் மார்த்தாண்ட வர்மாவின் படைகளால் தோற்கடிக்கப்பட்டன. டச்சு கடற்படைத் தலைவரான கத்தோலிக்க மதத்தைச் சார்ந்த “பெனடிக்டஸ் டி லெனோய்” (Benedictus De Lennoy), அவருடைய படைகளுடன் சிறை பிடிக்கப்பட்டார். இந்த வெற்றியின் நினைவாக நாட்டப்பட்ட தூண் இன்றும் குளச்சல் பகுதியில் இருக்கிறது.


நாளடைவில் இந்த “பெனடிக்டஸ் டி லெனோய்” நீலகண்ட பிள்ளையின் நண்பரானார். ஒருநாள் நீலகண்ட பிள்ளை மிகுந்த சோகமாய் இருப்பதை கண்ட அவர் நலம் விசாரித்தார் . அப்போது நீலகண்ட பிள்ளை குடும்பத்தில் நிறைய துக்க காரியங்கள் நிகழ்ந்து கொண்டிருப்பதாகவும், தங்கள் கால் நடைகள் இறந்து போவதாகவும். பயிர்கள் நாசமடைந்து போவதாகவும், பொருளாதார ரீதியாகப் பெரும் நஷ்டம் ஏற்பட்டுள்ளதாகவும் தெரிவித்தார்.


அப்போது திருவிவிலியத்தில் உள்ள யோபுவின் கதையை சொல்லி, “பெனடிக்டஸ் டி லெனோய்” அவருக்கு கிறிஸ்தவத்தை அறிமுகப்படுத்தினார். நாளடைவில் கிறிஸ்தவத்தின் மீது நல்ல நம்பிக்கை வந்ததும் திருமுழுக்குப் பெற்று கிறிஸ்தவராக நீலகண்ட பிள்ளை விருப்பம் கொண்டார். திருநெல்வேலி மாவட்டத்தின் வடக்கன்குளம் கத்தோலிக்க தேவாலயத்தின் பங்குத்தந்தையாகப் பணிபுரிந்த “ஜியோவன்னி பட்டிஸ்டா புட்டரி” (Rev. Father: Giovanni Battista Buttari) நீலகண்ட பிள்ளைக்குத் திருமுழுக்கு வழங்கி, "தேவசகாயம்" என்னும் பொருள் தருகின்ற "இலாசரஸ்" (Lazarus) என்னும் பெயரைச் சூட்டினார்.


கத்தோலிக்க மதத்திற்கு மாறியதும் தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை பலரிடமும் இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவை பற்றிப் போதித்து, பலரை கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்திற்கு மனம் மாற்றினார். அவரின் மனைவியும் ஞானப்பூ எனும் பெயருடன் திருமுழுக்கு பெற்று கத்தோலிக்க கிறிஸ்தவர் ஆனார்.


இறப்பு:

இவர் இந்து சமய பாரம்பரிய நாயர் குடும்பங்களில் இருந்த மூட நம்பிக்கைகளை எதிர்த்தார். எனவே இவருக்கெதிராகப் பல பொய் குற்றச்சாட்டுகள் அரசாங்க அதிகாரிகளால் சுமத்தப்பட்டன. பலரும் அவரை மீண்டும் இந்து மதத்திற்கு மதம் மாறும்படி நிர்ப்பந்தித்தார்கள். மேலும் மிகக் கடுமையாக எச்சரிக்கப்பட்டார். கிறிஸ்துவுக்காகத் தனது உயிரையும் கொடுக்க சித்தமான தேவசகாயம், தமது கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்தில் உறுதியாக இருந்தார்.


இதனால் கோபம்கொண்ட ராஜா மார்த்தாண்ட வர்மா, அவரை மரண தண்டனைக்காகச் சிறையில் அடைத்தார். அவருடைய உடம்பில் கரும்புள்ளியும், செம்புள்ளியும் குத்தப்பட்டன. கைகள் பின்புறமாகக் கட்டப்பட்டு கழுத்தில் எருக்கம்பூ மாலை அணிவிக்கப்பட்டு எருமை மாட்டின் மீது பின்னோக்கி அமரவைத்து, அவரைக் கேவலப்படுத்தும்படியாகவும், கிறிஸ்தவத்திற்கு மாறினால் இப்படித்தான் மற்றவருக்கும் இருக்கும் என்பதற்கு பாடமாகவும், அவரை ஊர் ஊராக அழைத்துச் சென்றார்கள்.


கி.பி. 1752ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 14ம் நாள், தென் திருவாங்கூர் மன்னராக ஆட்சி செய்த மார்த்தாண்ட வர்மா காலத்தில், குமரி மாவட்டத்தில், ஆரல்வாய்மொழியில் உள்ள காற்றாடி மலை என்னும் இடத்தில் தேவசகாயம் சுட்டுக் கொல்லப்பட்டார். தான் இறப்பதற்கு முன்பாகத் தன்னை சந்தித்த குருவிடமிருந்து நற்கருணை பெற்றுகொண்டார். தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளையின் உடல் காட்டில் எறியப்பட்டது. குமரி மாவட்ட கத்தோலிக்க மக்கள் அவரது உடல் பகுதிகளை எடுத்து, நாகர்கோவிலில் உள்ள கோட்டாறு புனித சவேரியார் ஆலயத்தில் அடக்கம் செய்தனர்.


மறைசாட்சி பட்டம் அளிக்கும் விழா:

2012ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம் 2ம் நாள், தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டுள்ள கோட்டாறு மறைமாவட்ட சவேரியார் முதன்மை ஆலயத்தை அடுத்துள்ள கார்மேல் மேனிலைப்பள்ளி வளாகத்தில் நடைபெற்ற சிறப்பு நிகழ்ச்சியின்போது தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை "மறைச்சாட்சி" (martyr) என்று அதிகாரப்பூர்வமாக அறிவிக்கப்பட்டார். அப்போது அவருக்கு "முக்திப்பேறு பெற்றவர்" (Blessed) என்னும் பட்டமும் அளிக்கப்பட்டது. இது தொடர்பாகத் திருத்தந்தை பதினாறாம் பெனடிக்ட் வெளியிட்ட அறிக்கையைத் திருத்தந்தையின் பிரதிநிதியாகச் செயல்பட்ட கர்தினால் ஆஞ்செலோ அமாத்தோ வாசித்தளித்தார்.


கர்தினால் ஆஞ்செலோ அமாத்தோ, இச்சிறப்பு நிகழ்ச்சிக்குத் தலைமைதாங்குவதற்காக ரோமிலிருந்து கோட்டாருக்கு வருகை தந்தார். அந்நிகழ்ச்சியில் தமிழகத்திலிருந்தும், இந்தியாவின் பிற பகுதிகளிலிருந்தும், பிற நாடுகளிலிருந்தும், பல கத்தோலிக்க சமயத் தலைவர்களும், ஒரு இலட்சத்திற்கும் மேற்பட்ட மக்களும், கலந்துகொண்டனர். தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளை பக்தி, கிறிஸ்தவர் அல்லாத பிற சமயத்தினர் நடுவிலும் நீண்ட காலமாக இருந்து வருவதைத் தொடர்ந்து பல சமயத்தினர் சிறப்பு விழாவில் பங்கேற்றனர்.


அருளாளர் தேவசகாயம் பிள்ளைக்கு மறைசாட்சி பட்டம் அளிக்கும் நிகழ்வை முன்னிட்டு, கோட்டாறு மறைமாவட்ட சவேரியார் முதன்மை பேராலயத்தில் இவருடைய கல்லறை புதுப்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. 2012ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 2ம் நாள், அக்கல்லறையைச் சந்தித்து அங்கு இறைவேண்டல் நிகழ்த்திட ஆயிரக்கணக்கான மக்கள் கூடினர்.

Blessed Devasahayam Pillai



Also known as

Lazarus, Neelakandan, Neelam, Nilakandan, Nilam


Profile

Devasahayam was raised a high-caste Hindu, knew Sanskrit, Tamil and Malayalam, and was trained martial arts and archery. He was married, and held a civil service job in the royal treasury. Beginning in 1741, he learned about Catholicism from a French prisoner of war, converted to the faith, and was baptized on 14 May 1745 in the diocese of Kottar, India, taking the name Devasahayam, the Tamil equivalent of the meaning of the name Lazarus.


Lazarus drew the ire of and fell into confrontation with authorities because he mixed with lower castes, something not acceptable for higher-caste people. He was arrested on 23 February 1749 for his faith, he was tortured and abused, and then for three years was hauled from village to village as an example of what would happen to Christian converts. He spent the time in prayer and teaching any who would listen, and priests would sneak him Communion in his cell. Martyr.


Born

23 April 1712 in Nattalam, Tamil Nadu, India


Died

• shot by firing squad 14 January 1752 in Aralvaimozhi, Tamil Nadu, India

• body thrown onto a rock pile and left for wild animals

• remains recovered and buried in front of the altar of the Church of Saint Francis in Kottar, India


Beatified

2 December 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI


Canonized

the canonization miracle involved a 24-week fetus who stopped moving and whose heart stopped beating in India in 2013; the mother, who was Catholic and had a devotion to Blessed Lazarus, began praying for his intercession for the baby; within an hour, she felt the baby kicking, tests showed that the heart beat had resumed, and the infant was later born with no complications


on 21 February 2020 by Pope Francis promulgated a decree of this miracle




Saint Nino of Georgia



Also known as

• Apostle of Georgia

• Chrétienne, Christiana, Enlightener, Nano, Nina, Ninny, Nino, Nune, Nuneh, Nunia


Profile

Slave. Not originally from Georgia, she may have been brought there by her master when he emigrated, she may have been the spoils of war, or she may have fled her own war-racked homeland and become enslaved after her move to more peaceful Georgia.


She cured a dying child by placing her hair shirt on him, and praying over him. News of this miracle reached the Queen of Georgia, who was suffering an unspecified but untreatable malady. She sent for Nino who replied, “I am a slave. My place is not in a palace.” The Queen went to Nino, who cured her by prayer.


The royal family offered her any reward; she asked that they convert. The recently healed queen was willing, but King Mirian was not. However, soon after, while on a hunt, he found himself surrounded by wild animals. He made one of those well-known deals with God, offering to convert if he survived. The animals left, and in 325 the king asked Constantine for priests and bishops to spread the faith throughout Georgia.


This good work begun, Nino retired to live as a prayerful recluse on a mountainside at Bodbe Monastery, Kakheti, Georgia.


Born

various sources place this as Cappadocia (most sources), Rome, Jerusalem, or Gaul (modern France)


Died

• c.320 at Bodbe Monastery, Kakheti, Georgia of natural causes

• buried in the Cathedral of Mtskheta, Georgia


Patronage

• Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Christiana

• Georgia


Representation

• Georgian cross

• grapevine cross




Blessed Alfonsa Clerici



Profile

The eldest of ten children born to Angelo and Maria Romano Clerici; hers was a poor but pious family with two of her brothers becoming monks, one sister a Sister of the Precious Blood. Received a Master's degree from the College of the Sisters of the Precious Blood in Monza, Italy. Taught in Lainate, Italy from 1880 to 1883. During her time in college and her work as a teacher, Alfonsa had felt a call to religious life, but her work helped support her family, and she stayed with it. She finally answered the call, and on 15 August 1883 joined the Sisters of the Most Precious Blood in Monza. Teacher at the College in Monza. Director of the College on 22 November 1898.


Born

14 February 1860 in Lainate, Milan, Italy


Died

• 13:30 on 14 January 1930 in Vercelli, Italy of a cerebral haemorrhage suffered on the night of 12 to 13 January 1930 while at prayer

• buried in Vercelli

• in 1965 she was re-interred in the cemetery chapel of the College of the Sisters of the Precious Blood in Monza, Italy


Beatified

• 23 October 2010 by Pope Benedict XVI

• beatification recognition celebrated in the Piazza of San Eusebio, Diocese of Vercelli, Italy with Archbishop Angelo Amato as chief celebrant

• the beatification miracle involved the healing of a nearly-fatal heart condition of Mr Nedo Frosini following the prayers of his wife, Carla Demi Frosini, for the intervention of Blessed Alfonsa




Blessed Godfrey of Cappenberg



Also known as

• Godfrey of Ilbenstadt

• Godfrey of Kappenberg

• Gaufrid, Geoffrey, Geoffroy, Geofroi, Gioffredo, Godefrid, Godefridus, Godefroid, Godfrey, Goffredo, Goffrey, Gofrido, Gotfrid, Gothofred, Gottfrid, Gottfried, Jeffrey


Profile

Descendant of Charlemagne through his father, of the dukes of Swabia through his mother. Wealthy count in Westphalia with extensive lands. Layman, married to a noble woman. After being brought to an active faith by his friend Saint Norbert of Xanten, Godfrey turned his castle into a Premonstratensian abbey, and in the face of violent family opposition, gave his lands and wealth over to Norbert for use by the Church. He, his brother and his servant, Blessed Giselbert of Cappenberg, then joined the order as monks; Godfrey's wife and two sisters tooks vows as nuns in a convent he founded for them nearby. Built several hospitals and other houses. Was studying for the priesthood when he died.


Born

1097 at Cappenberg Castle, Westphalia, Germany


Died

• 13 January 1127 at the abbey of Ilbenstadt, Germany of natural causes

• relics in churches in Ilbenstadt and Cappenberg, Germany



Saint Sava



Also known as

• Rastko Nemanjic

• Sabas, Sabbas


Profile

Prince of Serbia, the son of King Stephen I Nemanya. He took the name Sava (Sabas) when he became a monk at Mount Athos. His father later surrendered his crown and became a monk, too, and together they founded the monastery at Chilanari as a house for Serbs. Sava returned home in 1207 when a quarrel between his brothers, Stephen II and Vulkan, broke into civil war. Sava brought monks with him, founded several monasteries, and began the reformation and education of his country, where religion and education had fallen to a low estate. Metropolitan of a new Serbian hierarchy by Emperor Theodore II Laskaris at Nicaea, being reluctantly consecrated by Patriarch Manuel I in 1219. Crowned his brother Stephen II as King of Serbia in 1222. He finished the uniting of his people that had been begun by his father. Translated religious works into Serbian, and gave his people a native clergy and hierarchy. Dispatched to the Holy Land on an ecclesiastical mission, Sava died on the way home.


Born

1176 as Rastko Nemanjic


Died

14 January 1235 at Tirnovo, Bulgaria of natural causes


Patronage

Serbia, Serbs



மறைப்பணியாளர் போர்டேனோனே நகர் ஓடேரிக் Oderich von Pordenone


பிறப்பு 

1286, 

போர்டேனோனே Pordenone, இத்தாலி

இறப்பு 

14 ஜனவரி 1331, 

உடினே Udine, இத்தாலி

முத்திபேறுபட்டம்: 1755 திருத்தந்தை 14 ஆம் பெனடிக்ட்


இவர் இளம் வயதிலிருந்தே மறைப்பரப்புப் பணியை ஆற்றினார். மெசபத்தோனியா, எகிப்து மற்றும் புனித நாட்டிற்கு சென்று மறைப்பணி புரிந்தார். மற்றும் இந்திய நாட்டிற்கு சென்று அங்கும் மறையை பரப்பினார். இந்திய நாட்டிற்கு கப்பலில் பயணம் செய்த போதும் கடற்கரையில் அமைந்துள்ல ஊர்களிலெல்லாம் பணியாற்றினார். பின்னர் சீனா சென்று பல இன்னல்களின் இடையிலேயும் மனந்தளராமல் பணியாற்றினார். ஏறக்குறைய 17 ஆண்டுகள் மறைப்பணியாற்றிய இவர் ஏராளமான துன்பங்களை அனுபவித்தார். பின்னர் 1331 ஆம் ஆண்டு மறைப்பரப்பு நாடுகளிலிருந்து இத்தாலி வந்தடைந்தார். 


தனது தாய் நாடான இத்தாலியிலும் மிகச்சிறந்த முறையில் மறைப்பணியாற்றினார். பின்னர் சில ஆண்டுகள் கழித்து தனது உடன்பிறந்த சகோதரரின் உதவியுடன் தான் மேற்கொண்ட அனைத்து பயணங்களைப்பற்றியும் தான் ஆற்றிய பணிகளைப் பற்றியும் விரிவாக எழுதினார். இவர் தனது மறைப்பரப்புப் பணியை ஆற்றுவதற்கு திருத்தந்தை 22 ஆம் யோஹானஸ் உடனிருந்து ஊக்குவித்து உதவினார். மறைப்பணிக்காக தன் உயிரை ஈந்த இவர் தன் பணிகளைப்பற்றி திருத்தந்தையுடன் உரையாடிக் கொண்டிருக்கும்போது இறந்தார்.

Blessed Odoric of Pordenone



Also known as

• Odoric Mattiussi

• Odoric Mattiuzzi

• Oderic, Oderik, Odorico, Odoryk


Profile

Joined the Franciscans in 1300. Hermit. Priest. Preacher in northern Italy, drawing large crowds to his services. Missionary through the Near and Far East, preaching in Persia, China, Java, Ceylon, and Tibet from 1316 to 1330. First European to reach the capital of the Dalai-Lama. Known as a miracle worker in China. Died en route to Avignon, France to report his findings to the Pope. The written description of his travels were used as a manual for geographers of his day.


Born

1285 at Villanova, Friuli, Italy as Odoric Mattiussi


Died

14 January 1331 at Udine, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

2 July 1775 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmed)




Saint Fulgentius of Ecija



Also known as

• Fulgentius of Astigi

• Fulgentius of Cartagena

• Fulgencius, Fulgencio


Profile

Born to the nobility, son of Severianus and Theodora, a couple known for their piety. Brother of Saint Isidore of Seville, Saint Leander of Seville, and Saint Florentina. Bishop of Ecija, Andalusia, Spain, and a leader of the Spanish Church. Attended the Second Council of Seville in 619.


Born

Cartagena, Spain


Died

• c.633 of natural causes

• buried in the cathedral of Seville, Spain


Patronage

• Cartagena, Spain, diocese of

• San Fulgencio, Spain




Saint Engelmaro


Profile

Born to a poor peasant family. Hermit in the forest near Passau, Germany. As his reputation for piety and wisdom spread, the people of the region came to him for advice. Murdered by a man who was envious of Engelmaro's popularity.


Born

Bavaria, Germany


Died

• night of 13 to 14 January 1100 near Passau, Germany

• the killer hid the body in a snow drift

• the body was discovered during the spring thaw

• relics transferred to the Promenstatensian church in Windberg, Germany in 1331

• a custom developed in Winberg called "searching for Engelmaro" where the villagers go "in search" of the body of Engelmaro, find it (the relics), and then take the relics in procession from the forest back to the town


Patronage

• cattle

• good weather

• harvests

• peasants



Saint Macrina the Elder



Also known as

• Macrina of Caesarea

• Macrina of Neo-Caesarea

• Macrina the Senior


Profile

Grandmother of Saint Basil the Great, Saint Gregory of Nyssa, Saint Peter of Sebaste, and Saint Macrina the Younger, and apparently raised Basil. Spiritual student of Saint Gregory Thaumaturgus. She and her husband lived in hiding in a forest at Pontus for seven years during the persecutions of Diocletian, nearly starving several times. Widowed.


Died

c.340


Patronage

• against poverty

• poor people

• widows




Saint Datius of Milan


Also kno


wn as

Dacius, Dasius, Dazio


Profile

Born to the nobility, a member of the Alliati family. Known for his learning and his personal piety. Bishop of Milan, Italy c.530. Ordered the history of the Church in Milan known as Historia Datiana. Imprisoned and exiled by Arian Ostrogoths for defending orthodox Christianity. Relocated to Constantinople where he supported Pope Vigilius against Emperor Justinian in the Three Chapters Controversy of 545. Attended the Council of Constantinople in 551 which condemned the Patriarch Mennas.


Died

552 in Constantinople of natural causes



Saint Potitus



Also known as

Potito


Profile

Son of a rich pagan. Convert. Exorcised a demon from the daughter of Emperor Antoninus who then had Potitus arrested, tortured and executed for being a Christian. Martyr.


Born

Sofia, Bulgaria


Died

• beheaded with a sword in the diocese of Naples, Italy

• buried in the swampy area of the river Carapelle

• some relics enshrined in Ascoli Satriano, Italy


Patronage

• Cerignola-Ascoli Satriano, Italy, diocese of

• Tricarico, Italy




Saint Odo of Novara



Also known as

Odon


Profile

Carthusian monk. Priest. Prior at Geyrach, Slavonia. Following difficulities with his bishop, he resigned his position to become chaplain for several decades to the convent at Tagliacozzo, Italy.


Born

c.1105 at Novara, Italy


Died

1200 at Tagliacozzo, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

1859 by Pope Blessed Pius IX (cultus confirmed)




Blessed Amadeus of Clermont


Profile

Lord of Hauterives, Drôme, France. Father of Blessed Amadeus of Lausanne. With 16 of his men, he retired to become a Cistercian monk at Bonnevaux Abbey, and then he and his son moved to Cluny Abbey, both in France. Founded monasteries at Léoncel, Mazan, Montperout, and Tamis.


Born

Hauterives, Drôme, France


Died

c.1150 at the monastery at Bonnevaux, France of natural causes




Saint Barbasymas


Also known as

Barba'shmin, Barbascemin, Barbasceminus


Profile

Bishop of Seleucia and Ctesiphon, Greece in 342. Arrested and tortured with sixteen priests in the persecutions of King Shapur II; the names of his companions have not come down to us. Barbasymas was offered a cup filled with gold coins if he would worship the Persian god; he declined. Martyred with the sixteen priests.


Died

beheaded in 346 in Persia




Blessed Pablo Merillas Fernández


Also known as

Carlos of Alcubilla de Nogales


Profile

Franciscan Capuchin priest. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

17 July 1902 in Alcubilla de Nogales, Zaragoza, Spain


Died

14 January 1937 in El Escorial, Madrid, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis




Saint Eufrasio of Clermont


Also known as

• Eufrasio of Arvenia

• Euphrasius


Profile

Bishop of Arvenia, Aquitaine (modern Clermont-Ferrand, France). Saint Gregory of Tours wrote in praise of him.


Died

c.515 of natural causes



Blessed William de Sanjulia



Profile

Mercedarian friar and evangelist.


Died

buried in Mercedarian priory church at Barcelona, Spain




Blessed Rainer of Arnsberg


Profile

Premonstratensian monk. Canon of the monastery of Mariënweerd at Utrecht, Netherlands.


Born

early 12th century Netherlands


Died

14 January 1184 of natural causes




Saint Caldeoldus of Vienne


Also known as

Caldéold, Cadéol, Eolad


Profile

Archbishop of Vienne, France from 653 to 664. Promoted monasticism in his diocese.


Died

664 of natural causes




Saint Glycerius of Antioch


Also known as

Glicerio, Glykerios, Glicerius


Profile

Deacon. Tortured and martyred for his faith.


Died

drowned in Antioch, Syria




Saint Euphrasius the Martyr


Also known as

Eufrasio


Profile

Bishop. Martyred by Arian Vandals.


Died

in North Africa



Saint Fermin of Mende


Also known as

Firmin


Profile

Bishop of Mende, France.




Saint Successus of Africa


Profile

Martyr. No other information has survived.





Saint Felix of Rome


Profile

Priest in Rome, Italy. No other information has survived.




Saint Paul of Africa


Profile

Martyr. No other information has survived.




Martyrs of Mount Sinai



Profile

A group of 38 monks on Mount Sinai who were martyred by pagan desert Bedouins. We know little about them, have but the names of four of them – Isaias, Jesaja, Sabas and Theodolus.


Died

martyred by Bedouins




Martyrs of Raithu


Profile

A group of 43 monks in the Raithu Desert near Mount Sinai, Palestine, near the Red Sea. They were martyred for their faith by desert Bedouins. Their names have not come down to us.


Died

martyred by Bedouins

13 January 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜனவரி 13

 Bl. Yvette


Feastday: January 13

Patron: of brides, large families, and widows

Birth: 1158

Death: 1228



Blessed Yvette has not been canonized, but she is considered a saint. Blessed Yvette (Jutta of Huy), Widow (Feast day - January 13) Endowed with extraordinary charisms, Yvette was a product of the development of mysticism in the Low Countries in the thirteenth century. In this she joined a select number of young women Christians such as Juliana of Cornillion, Eve of St. Martin, Isabel of Huy, Mary of Oingnies, Ida of Leau, Ida of Nivelles, Ida of Loviano, Christiana of St.-Trend, Lutgard of Tongres, and Margaret of Ypres.


She was born of a wealthy family of Huy near Liege in 1158 and when very young was married off by her parents. Five years and three children later, she was a widow at the youthful age of eighteen. There was no dearth of suitors, drawn by her uncommom beauty, but Yvette would have none of them. She dedicated herself for eleven years to caring for lepers out of surpassing love for God.


For the last thirty-six years of her life, the holy woman lived as an anchoress and had many mystical experiences. Her prayers and miracles made her famous. She succeeded in bringing her father and one of her two remaining children back to the Faith and solicitously aided the countless people who flocked to consult her in her hermitage. She died on January 13, 1228.


Yvette of Huy (1158 – 13 January 1228) was a venerated Christian prophet and anchoress. Born in Huy, Belgium, she was also known as Ivette, Ivetta, Jufta or Jutta.[1][2]


Life

She was born into a wealthy but not particularly religious family, close to the bishop of Liège, and from an early age tried to live a religious life from her home.[1] Her father was a tax collector.[3] Yvette was forced into an arranged marriage aged thirteen and had three children (one died while still an infant) before she was widowed at eighteen. She used the opportunity to retire to a leper derelict hospital in Statte, close to Huy, on the heights of the river Meuse to tend to the inmates, and more fully follow her religious calling.[1]


She left her two sons in the care of their grandfather. Ten years later, she became an anchoress and was enclosed in a chapel cell near the colony in a ceremony conducted by the abbot of Abbaye Notre-Dame d'Orval. From there she offered guidance to pilgrims who considered her a prophetess in the apostolic sense of having insight into the divine. She summoned priests and even the dean of the local church to her presence and confronted them about their behaviour. She was responsible for the conversion of her father and one of her two surviving sons. After a time, her power threatened the male clergy and canons. She was denounced.[3] Yvette died on 13 January 1228 in Huy, Belgium.


Her life was recorded by the Premonstratensian Hugh of Floreffe.



Feast of the Baptism of the Lord



Also known as

Baptism of Christ


Memorial

• 1st Sunday after Epiphany (declared by Pope Paul VI)

• formerly celebrated on Epiphany


Profile

Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by Saint John the Baptist.



† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 13)


✠ பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ் நகர் புனிதர் ஹிலாரி ✠

(St. Hilary of Poitiers)


ஆயர், ஒப்புரவாளர், மறை வல்லுநர்:

(Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 310

பிக்டாவியம், கௌல் (தற்போதைய பொய்ட்டியர்ஸ், ஃபிரான்ஸ்)

(Pictavium, Gaul (Modern-day Poitiers, France)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 367

பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ்

(Poitiers)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion)

லூதரன் திருச்சபை

(Lutheran Church)

ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Oriental Orthodoxy)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஜனவரி 13


பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ் நகர புனிதர் ஹிலாரி, “பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ்” (Bishop of Poitiers) மறை மாவட்ட ஆயரும், திருச்சபையின் “மறை வல்லுனரும்” (Doctor of the Church) ஆவார். இவர் "ஆரியன் இனத்தவரின் சுத்தியல்" (Hammer of the Arians) என்றும், "மேற்கின் அதானாசியஸ்" (Athanasius of the West) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படுகின்றார். இலத்தீன் மொழியின்படி, இவரது பெயருக்கு “மகிழ்ச்சி” அல்லது “சந்தோசம்” என்றும் பொருள்படும்.


பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ் நகரில் நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் ஆரமபத்தில் பிறந்த இவருடைய பெற்றோர் வேறுபட்ட சபையின் "பாகன்" இனத்தவர் ஆவர். கிரேக்க மொழி உள்ளிட்ட பாகன் கல்வி இவருக்கு தரப்பட்டது. பின்னர் இவர் கற்ற பழைய மற்றும் புதிய ஏற்பாடுகளைப் பற்றிய கல்வி, இவர் கொண்டிருந்த "3ம் நூற்றாண்டில் பிலாண்டினஸ் பின்பற்றுபவர்கள் உருவாக்கிய ஒரு தத்துவ மற்றும் சமய அமைப்பு" (Neo-Platonism) கிறிஸ்தவத்திற்காக கைவிட நேர்ந்தது. பின்னர் அவர், தமது மனைவி, மற்றும் பாரம்பரியப்படி, “புனித அப்ரா” (Saint Abra) எனும் தமது மகளுடன் திருமுழுக்கு பெற்று திருச்சபையில் இணைந்தார்.


அக்காலத்தில், கி.பி. சுமார் 350ம் ஆண்டு, அல்லது 353ம் ஆண்டு, பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ் நகர மக்கள் ஹிலாரியை மிகவும் மதித்தனர். அவர்கள் அவரை தமது ஆயராக மறைமுகமாக தேர்ந்துகொண்டனர். அக்காலத்தில், மேற்கத்திய திருச்சபையை ஆரியனிசம் (Arianism) கைப்பற்றும் அச்சுறுத்தல் இருந்தது.


இந்த இடையூறுகளைத் தடுக்க ஹிலாரி நடவடிக்கை மேற்கொண்டார். “சடுர்நினஸ்” ((Saturninus) எனும், "ஆர்லஸ்" என்ற மறைமாவட்டத்தின் ஆரியன் ஆயர், (The Arian Bishop of Arles) மற்றும் அவரது ஆதரவாளர்களான "யுர்சாசியஸ் மற்றும் வலேன்ஸ்" (Ursacius and Valens) ஆகிய மரபுவழி திருச்சபைக் கிறிஸ்தவர்களின் "கல்லிசன் தலைமைக் குருக்களைக்கொண்டு" (Gallican hierarchy) திருச்சபையைக் காக்க அவர் முதல் நடவடிக்கை எடுத்தார்.


இதே காலகட்டத்தில், ஆரியர்கள் தமது எதிர்ப்பாளர்களை நசுக்க வேண்டி செய்யும் துன்புருத்தல்களைக் கண்டித்து, பேரரசர் “இரண்டாம் காண்ஸ்டன்ஷியசுக்கு" (Emperor Constantius II) ஹிலாரி ஒரு கண்டன கடிதம் எழுதினர். சரித்திர வல்லுனர்கள் இதனை, நடைமுறையில் சில பாகங்களே உள்ள (Book Against Valens) என்று குறிப்பிடுகின்றனர். இம்முயற்சிகள் ஹிலாரிக்கு முதலில் வெற்றியைத் தரவில்லை.


வனவாசத்திற்கான காரணங்கள் மறைத்தே வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தன என்றாலும், ஹிலாரி ஏறத்தாழ நான்கு வருடங்கள் வெளிநாட்டில் செலவிட்டார். அதானாசியுஸின் கண்டனம் மற்றும் (Nicene) மீதான விசுவாசத்தை அவர் ஏற்க மறுத்ததாலேயே அவர் நாடு கடத்தப்பட்டதாக தகவல்கள் உறுதி செய்கின்றன.


நான்கு வருட வெளிநாட்டு வாசத்தின் பின்னர், 361ம் ஆண்டு, சொந்த மறைமாவட்டம் திரும்பிய ஹிலாரி, முதல் இரண்டு அல்லது மூன்று வருடங்களின் பெரும்பகுதியை உள்ளூர் மத குருமார்களை சமாதானப்படுத்துவதில் செலவிட்டார்.


சுமார் 360ம் ஆண்டு, ஹிலாரியின் ஊக்குவிப்பால் "டூர்ஸ்" மறைமாவட்டத்தின் பதவியேற்கவிருந்த ஆயர் மார்ட்டின் (Martin, the future bishop of Tours), "லிகுக்" (Ligugé) என்ற இடத்தில் ஒரு துறவு மடம் ஒன்றினை நிறுவினார்.


புனிதர் ஜெரோம் (St. Jerome) அவர்களின் கூற்றுப்படி, கி.பி. 367ம் ஆண்டு, பாய்ட்டியர்ஸ் நகரில் ஹிலாரி மரித்தார்.

Saint Hilary of Poitiers



Also known as

• Athanasius of the West

• Doctor of the Divinity of Christ

• Hammer against Arianism

• Ilario di Poitiers

• Malleus Arianorum


Profile

Born to wealthy polytheistic, pagan nobility, Hilary's early life was uneventful as he married, had children (including Saint Abra), and studied on his own. Through his studies he came to believe in salvation through good works, then monotheism. As he studied the Bible for the first time, he literally read himself into the faith, and was converted by the end of the New Testament.


Hilary lived the faith so well he was made bishop of Poitiers, France from 353 to 368. Hilary opposed the emperor's attempt to run Church matters, and was exiled; he used the time to write works explaining the faith. His teaching and writings converted many, including Saint Florence of Poitiers, and in an attempt to reduce his notoriety he was returned to the small town of Poitiers where his enemies hoped he would fade into obscurity. His writings continued to convert pagans.


He introduced Eastern theology to the Western Church, fought Arianism with the help of Saint Viventius, and was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church in 1851.


Born

315 at Poitiers, France


Died

368 of natural causes


Patronage

• against rheumatism

• against snakes

• against snake bites

• backward children

• children learning to walk

• mothers

• sick people

• 4 cities




Blessed Francesco Maria Greco



Profile

Born to a pious family, the son of a pharmacist, he received early religious training from his mother. Though his father hoped Francesco would take over the family business, the boy felt a call to the priesthood, studied in Naples, Italy, and was ordained in the archdiocese of Cosenza-Bisignano, Italy on 17 December 1881. Parish priest at the church of Saint Nicholas in Acri, Italy through 1887; while there he organized the construction of the Caritas hospital. Diocesan archpriest in 1888. Professor of theology. Believing that anyone who understood the faith would follow the faith, Monsignor Francesco concentrated on teaching, evangelizing and catechizing the young, and setting up training for new catechists. In 1892-1893, with Sister Maria Teresa de Vincenti, he founded the Little Workers of the Sacred Hearts who continue their good work with today with the poor and abandoned in Albania, Argentina, Africa, Jamaica, Italy, India, the Holy Lands and the United States.


Born

26 July 1857 in Acri, Cosenza, Italy


Died

• 13 January 1931 in Acri, Cosenza, Italy of bronchitis

• re-interred on 19 May 1961 following an exhumation as part of the canonization process


Beatified

• 21 May 2016 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at Cosenza, Italy, Cardinal Angelo Amato chief celebrant

• the beatification miracle involved bringing Nina Pancaro out of a coma in which she had lapsed following a severe illness and surgery; while comatose, she was visited by a dream of Father Francesco who healed her and woke her up


Patronage

Little Workers of the Sacred Hearts





Saint Kentigern



Also known as

• Kentigern of Glasgow • Kentigern Garthwys • Kentigern Mungo • Kentigern of Elwy • Cantigernus, Chentingerno, Cyndeyrn, Kentigernus, Kintigern, Mahoe, Mochaoi, Mochua, Mungho, Mungo


Profile

Grandson of the British prince Lothus; son of Saint Theneva. Hermit. Monk. Missionary to Scotland, beginning at Cathures. Bishop of the Strathclyde Britons in the area of modern Glasgow in 540. He taught and led there for 13 years, living in great austerity. Exiled in 553 during an anti-Christian uprising by local pagans, he fled to Menevia, Wales, where he stayed with Saint David of Wales. He founded a monastery at Llanelwy, and served as its first abbot. He returned to Scotland in 573, evangelizing the areas of Galloway and Cumberland. He returned to Glasgow in 581 and led his people there for his remaining 22 years. Apostle to northwest England and southwest Scotland.


Glasgow's Coat of Arms includes a bird, a fish, a bell and a tree, the symbols of Kentigern.


• The Bird commemorates the pet robin owned by Saint Serf, which was accidentally killed by monks who blamed it on Saint Kentigern. Saint Kentigern took the bird in his hands and prayed over it, restoring it to life.


• The Fish was one caught by Saint Kentigern in the Clyde River. When it was slit open, a ring belonging to the Queen of Cadzow was miraculously found inside it. The Queen was suspected of intrigue by her husband, and that she had left with his ring. She has asked Saint Kentigern for help, and he found and restored the ring in this way to clear her name.


• The Bell may have been given to Saint Kentigern by the Pope. The original bell, which was tolled at funerals, no longer exists and was replaced by the magistrates of Glasgow in 1641. The bell of 1641 is preserved in the People's Palace.


• The Tree is symbol of an incident in Saint Kentigern's childhood. Left in charge of the holy fire in Saint Serf's monastery, he fell asleep and the fire went out. However he broke off some frozen branches from a hazel tree and miraculously re-kindled the fire.


Born

c.518 at Culross, Fife, Scotland


Died

• 13 January 603 in Glasgow, Scotland of natural causes

• relics in the crypt of the Kentigern cathedral, Glasgow


Patronage

• Glasgow, Scotland

• salmon




Saint Remigius of Rheims



Also known as

• Apostle of the Franks

• Remigius of Reims

• Remi, Remigio, Remigiusz, Romieg, Rémi, Rémy


Profile

Born to the Gallo-Roman nobility, the son of Emilius, count of Laon, and of Saint Celina; younger brother of Saint Principius of Soissons; uncle of Saint Lupus of Soissons. A speaker noted for his eloquence, he was selected bishop of Rheims (in modern France) at age 22 while still a layman, and served his diocese for 74 years. He evangelized throughout Gaul, working with Saint Vaast. Spiritual teacher of Saint Theodoric. Converted Clovis, king of the Franks, baptising him on 24 December 496; this opened the way to the conversion of all the Franks and the establishment of the Church throughout France. Blind at the time of his death.


Born

c.438


Died

• 13 January 533 of natural causes

• interred on 15 January 533

• relics transferred to the Basilica Saint-Rémy 1 October 1049


Canonized

1049 by Pope Saint Leo IX


Patronage

• against epidemics

• against fever

• against plague

• against religious indifference

• against snakes

• against throat pain

• France

• Rheims, France, archdiocese of

• Rheims, France, city of



#மிலன்நகர்_அருளாளர்_வெரோனிக்கா


(1445-1497)


ஜனவரி 13


இவர் (#BlVeronicaOfMilan) இத்தாலியில் உள்ள பினஸ்கோ என்றொரு சிற்றூரில் பிறந்தவர். 


இவரது குடும்பம் விவசாயக் குடும்பம். அதனால் இவர் தன் வீட்டுத் தோட்டத்தில் வேலை பார்த்து வந்தார். குடும்பத்தில் நிலவிய வறுமையின் காரணமாக இவரால் பள்ளிக்குச் சென்று படிக்க முடியவில்லை. 


இதுவொரு பக்கம் என்றால், இன்னொரு பக்கம் இவர் ஆண்டவர்மீது ஆழமான நம்பிக்கை கொண்டு வாழ்ந்து வந்தார். இவர் இயேசு மற்றும் மரியாவினுடைய காட்சிகளை அடிக்கடி கண்டார். ஒருமுறை மரியா இவருக்குத் தோன்றி, நல்ல எண்ணத்தோடு வாழ வேண்டும் என்றும், அடுத்தவரைப் பற்றிப் புறங்கூறக் கூடாது என்றும், இயேசுவின் பாடுகளைப் பற்றித் தியானிக்க வேண்டும் என்றும் சொல்லிவிட்டு சென்றார். 


இவருக்கு 22 வயது நடக்கும்போது பொது நிலையினருக்காக புனித அகுஸ்தினினின் சபையில் சேர்ந்து, மக்களிடமிருந்து யாசித்து உண்டு வந்தார். மேலும் இவர் சபையின் வளர்ச்சிக்காகப் பலரிடமும் உதவி வேண்டிச் சென்றார். 1494 ஆம் ஆண்டு இயேசு இவருக்கு ஒரு காட்சி கொடுத்தார். அக்காட்சியில் இயேசு இவரிடம் திருத்தந்தை ஐந்தாம் அலெக்சாண்டரிடம் ஒரு செய்தியைச் சொல்ல அனுப்பி வைத்தார். அவ்வாறு இவர் திருத்தந்தையிடம் சென்று, இயேசு சொன்ன செய்தியைச் சொல்லிவிட்டுத் திரும்பும் வழியில் இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.


இவருக்கு திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பெனடிக்ட்  1749 ஆம் ஆண்டு அருளாளர் பட்டம் கொடுத்தார்.

Blessed Veronica of Milan



Also known as

Veronica of Binasco


Additional Memorial

28 January (Augustinian calendar)


Profile

Grew up in a poor peasant family in a small village, doing chores and working the fields. She had no formal education, and tried unsuccessfully to teach herself to read at night. She began to have religious ecstasies, visions of the life of Christ, and was taught her catechism by the Virgin Mary. Our Lady explained it in the form of three mystical letters, one that signified purity of intention, the second abhorrence of complaining, and the third a reminder to daily meditate on the Passion. Augustinian lay-sister at the convent of Saint Martha, Milan, Italy, at age 22, being instructed for three years before she was allowed to join. Assigned to beg alms in the street for the support of the house. She suffered alternating bouts of intense physical pain and religious ecstacies for years. She received a vision of Christ in 1494, and was given a message for Pope Alexander VI; she made a journey to Rome, Italy to deliver it. Following a six-month illness, she died on the date she had prophesied.


Born

c.1445 at Binasco, Italy, a small village near Milan


Died

13 January 1497 in Milan, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 1517 by Pope Leo X (cultus confirmed)

• 1672 by Pope Clement X (devotion extended to the entire Augustinian Order)

• 1749 by Pope Benedict XIV (added to Roman Martyrology)


Patronage

Binasco, Italy



Blessed Ivetta of Huy



Also known as

• Ivetta of Liege

• Ivette, Juette, Jufta, Jutta, Yvette


Profile

Born to family that was wealthy but indifferent to the faith. Forced into an arranged marriage at age 13. Mother of three, though one died in childhood. Widowed at age 18. She turned away all suitors to care for lepers for eleven years while she raised her children. Had an ongoing dispute with her father over her charitable spending, which he considered excessive. With her children grown, she retired from the world to become an anchoress her remaining years. Had mystical gifts including the ability to read hearts and visions of distant events. Miraculously received Communion. Converted her father and one of her children.


Born

1158 at Huy, Belgium


Died

13 January 1228 at Huy, Belgium, of natural causes


Patronage

• brides

• parents of large families

• widows






Saint Agrecius of Trier



Also known as

• Agricius of Trier

• Agritius of Trèves

• Agrice, Aguy


Profile

Nothing reliable is recorded about his life before his service to the Church. Patriarch of Antioch. Friend and advisor to empress Saint Helena. Named bishop of Treves, Gaul (modern Trier, Germany) by Pope Sylvester I; served for 20 years. Attended the Council of Arles in 314. Built many churches in the diocese, and made provision for the Relics of Trier, which were collected by Saint Helena during her travels through the Holy Lands. Saint Maximus and Saint Paulinus taught in Agrecius's schools, and he was acquainted with Saint Athanasius. Because of his association with several saints and with the relics of others, he became the subject of much pious fiction.


Born

Syrian


Died

335 of natural causes




Saint Vivenzio of Blera


Also known as

Viventius


Additional Memorials

• Easter Monday (pilgrimage to his hermitage)

• 2nd Sunday in May (pilgrimage to his hermitage)

• 11 December (Blera, Italy)


Profile

Priest. Bishop of Blera, Italy from 457 to 484. Noted for his vocal opposition to the pagan and corrupt local nobility. Some of them bribed Vivenzio's servants to put women's clothing in his chambers in order to accuse him of illicit relations. Vivenzio denied any wrong-doing, then moved to a nearby cave in order to do penance for the sins of his accusers. He lived there for seven years in prayer and fasting, eventually going blind; when he needed to see again in order to implement an instruction he received from God in a dream, his sight was restored.


Patronage

Blera, Italy



Blessed Francisca Inés Valverde González



Also known as

• Victoria Valverde González

• Vittoria Valverde Gonzalez

• Sister Victoria


Profile

Nun. Member of the Calasanzian Institute, Daughters of the Divine Shepherdess. Superior of the convent-school in Martos, Spain. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

20 April 1888 in Vicálvaro, Madrid, Spain


Died

13 January 1937 in the cemetery of Casillas de Martos, Jaén, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis




Saint Berno of Cluny


Profile

For a man whose work has had such an impact, surprisingly little is known about him. May have been a member of a noble and wealthy family, but records are obscure. Benedictine monk at Saint Martin's monastery, Autun, France. Abbot of the Baume Abbey where he rebuilt, restored and reinvigorated the monastery. Spiritual director of Saint Odo of Cluny. Founded the monastery of Gigny, Bourg-Dieu, Massay, and served as its abbot. Planned, founded, and built the monastery of Cluny whose reform has had enormous influence throughout western Christendom. He served as its first abbot from 910 to 926.


Born

mid-9th century in Burgundy, France


Died

927 of natural causes




Blessed María Francisca Espejo y Martos




Also known as

• Francisca of the Incarnation

• Francisca Espejo Martos


Profile

Trinitarian nun. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

2 February 1873 in Martos, Jaén, Spain


Died

• 13 January 1937 in Casilla de Martos, Jaén, Spain

• incorrupt body enshrined at the monastery of the Holy Trinity in Casilla de Martos


Beatified

28 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI




Saint Ðaminh Pham Trong Kham


Also known as

Domenico Pham Trong (An) Kham


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Married lay Dominicans in the apostolic vicariate of Central Tonkin (modern Vietnam). Tortured and executed in the persecutions of emperor Tu-Duc rather than stomp on a cross as ordered. Martyr.


Born

c.1780 in Quan Cong, Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Died

13 January 1859 in Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Giuse Pham Trong Ta


Also known as

Giuseppe Pham Trong (Cai) Ta


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Married lay Dominicans in the apostolic vicariate of Central Tonkin (modern Vietnam). Tortured and executed in the persecutions of emperor Tu-Duc rather than stomp on a cross as ordered. Martyr.


Born

c.1800 in Quan Cong, Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Died

13 January 1859 in Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Luca Pham Trong Thìn


Also known as

Luca (Cai) Thin


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Married lay Dominicans in the apostolic vicariate of Central Tonkin (modern Vietnam). Tortured and executed in the persecutions of emperor Tu-Duc rather than stomp on a cross as ordered. Martyr.


Born

c.1819 in Quan Cong, Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Died

13 January 1859 in Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Emil Szramek



Also known as

Emilio


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Martyrs of World War II


Profile

Priest in the archdiocese of Katowice, Poland. Imprisoned, tortured and martyred in the anti-Christian persecutions of the Nazis.


Born

29 September 1887 in Tworków, Slaskie, Poland


Died

13 January 1942 in the prison camp of Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Hildemar of Arrouaise


Also known as

Heldemar, Hilmar


Profile

Court chaplain to William the Conqueror in England. Hermit in the forest of Arrouaise, Artois (in modern France) in 1090. His reputation for sanctity attracted disciples, and with them he founded the Augustinian monastery at Arrouaise. Martyr.


Born

Tounai, Belgium


Died

murdered c.1097 by a priest posing as an Augustinian novice at Arrouaise, Arras, France




Saint Hermylus



Also known as

Ermil, Ermilio, Hermellus, Hermylas, Hermyllus, Hermilio


Profile

Deacon at Singidunum (modern Belgrade, Serbia). Martyred with his servant, Saint Stratonicus, in the persecutions of Licinius.


Died

drowned in the River Danube in 315




Saint Elian of Brittany


Also known as

Allan, Eilan


Profile

Related to Saint Ismael, Saint Oudoceus, Saint Melorius, Saint Tugdual and Saint Judictel. Sixth century missionary to Cornwall, England. Llanelian in Anglesey and Llanelian in Denbigshire are named for him.


Born

in Brittany (in modern France)




Saint Glaphyra


Profile

A slave, belonging to Constantia, the wife of the emperor Licinius. To safeguard her vow of chastity, she ran to Saint Basil of Amasea. She was arrested and sentenced to death for being a runaway slave. She is considered a martyr because her running away was a direct result of her faith and personal vows.


Died

c.324




Saint Enogatus of Aleth


Also known as

Eniguet, Eniguette, Enogad, Enogat, Enougad, Enougat, Tenou-cat, Tnoucat


Additional Memorial

15 November (all the bishops of St-Malo)


Profile

Monk. Abbot of Saint Meen Abbey. Bishop of Aleth, Brittany, France.


Died

631 of natural causes




Saint Stratonicus




Also known as

Stratonico


Profile

Servant to Saint Hermylus at Singidunum (modern Belgrade). Martyred with Hermylus in the persecutions of Licinius.


Died

drowned in the River Danube in 315




Saint Peter of Capitolíade


Profile

Priest. For preaching Christianity in territory held by the Saracen prince Walid, he was mutilated and executed. Martyr.


Died

hands, feet and tongue cut off, then crucified on 13 January 715 at the Capitolíade, Batanea, Syria




Blessed Stephen of Liège

Profile

Canon of Saint Denis, Liège, Belgium. Benedictine monk at Saint Vannes monastery, Verdun, France. Founded the monastery of Saint Laurence at Liège, and served as its first abbot.


Died

1061 of natural causes



Saint Leontius of Caesarea


Also known as


Angel of Peace


Profile

Bishop of Caesarea. Worked in the Council of Nicaea in 325. Highly praised in the writings of Saint Athanasius of Alexandria.


Died

337 of natural causes






Blessed Matteo de Lana



Also known as

Matthew


Profile

Mercedarian monk at the monastery of Santa Maria degli Ulivi.




Blessed Ida of Argensolles

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Benedictine nun at Saint Leonard's, Liege, Belgium. Abbess of the Cistercian Argensolles Abbey, diocese of Soissons, France.


Died

1226 of natural causes




Saint Gumesindus


Also known as

Gumismundus, Gumersindus, Gumesindo


Profile

Priest. Martyred in the persecutions of Abderrahman II.


Born

Spanish


Died

852 at Cordoba, Spain



Saint Viventius


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Hermit. Priest. Travelled from Palestine to Europe. Worked with Saint Hilary of Poitiers to oppose Arianism.


Born

Samaritan


Died

400 of natural causes




Saint Erbin of Cornwall


Also known as

Erbyn, Erme, Ervan, Hermes


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Fifth century relative of a Cornish chieftain. Churches are dedicated to him in Cornwall.



Saint Servusdei


Also known as

Servusdeus


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Monk. Martyred in the persecutions of Abderrahman II.


Born

Spanish


Died

852 in Cordoba, Spain




Saint Designatus of Maastricht


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Fifth century bishop of Maastricht, Netherlands.


Died

437



Saint Elian ap Erbin


Profile

No information has survived.


Born

5th century Welsh




Saint Andrew of Trier


Profile

Bishop of Trier, Germany. Martyr.


Died

235




Forty Martyred Soldiers at Rome


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Forty soldiers martyred in the persecutions of Gallienus.


Died

martyred in 262 on the Via Lavicana, Rome, Italy



காப்பன்பெர்க் துறவி கோட்ஃப்ரீட் Gottfried von Cappenberg


பிறப்பு 

1097, 

காப்பன்பெர்க், ஜெர்மனி

இறப்பு 

13 ஜனவரி 1127, 

இல்பென்ஷ்டட் Ilbenstadt, ஜெர்மனி


இவர் தனது 25 வயதுவரை சாதாரண வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்தபோதும் மிகவும் பக்தியானவராக திகழ்ந்தார். இவர் அர்ன்ஸ்பெர்க்கை Arnsberg சார்ந்த யூட்டா Jutta என்ற பெண்ணை திருமணம் செய்து வாழ்ந்தார். திருமணமானபோதும் அவரின் சகோதரர் ஓட்டோ Otto என்பவருடன் சேர்ந்து வாழ்ந்தார். தன் சகோதரருடன் சேர்ந்து மறைப்பரப்புப் பணியில் ஈடுபட்டு, ஊர் ஊராகச் சென்று மறையுரை ஆற்றினார். 1120 ஆம் ஆண்டு சாண்டன் Xanten நகர் நோர்பெர்ட் Norbert நிறுவிய சபைக்கு பெருமளவில் உதவினார். 


பின்னர் அச்சபையில் சேர்ந்து தானும் ஓர் துறவியானார். 1122 ஆம் ஆண்டு கோட்பிரிட் அச்சபையின் நிரந்தர உறுப்பினரானார். மிகச் சிறந்த மறையுரையாளரான இவர் ஓட்டோவுடன் இணைந்து அச்சபையை பரப்பினார். கோட்பிரீட் தன் மனைவி யூட்டாவையும் இறைவழியில் செல்ல வழிகாட்டினார். அவரை வைத்து பெண்களுக்கான பாடல்குழு ஒன்றை ஏற்படுத்தினார். பின்னர் நிரந்தரமாகவே இவ்வுலக வாழ்விலிருந்து விடுபட்டு தன்னை முழுமையாக இறைவனுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்தார். இவர் தனது 30 ஆம் வயதிலேயே இறந்தாலும் இறைப்பணியை மக்களின் மத்தியில் வேரூன்ற செய்தார். எண்ணிலடங்கா துறவற மடங்கலை கட்டி எழுப்பிய இவர் வாழும்போதே புனிதராக கருதப்பட்டார்.