புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

25 March 2023

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மார்ச் 27

 Blessed Panacea de'Muzzi of Quarona


Also known as

• Panacea de Muzzi

• Panacea of Quarona

• Panassia, Panexia





Profile

Panacea's mother died when the girl was an infant. When she was old enough, Panacea worked as shepherdess. Her father re-married, but her step-mother, Margherita di Locarno Sesia, quickly developed a hatred of the girl, partly because she would not work as ordered, and partially because Panacea was a pious little girl and Margherita hated religion. The conflict culminated when Margherita murdered Panacea while the girl was at prayer.


Local festivals celebrating her memory traditionally include puff pastries names beatines made according to ancient recipes.


Born

c.1378 at Quarona, diocese of Novara, Italy


Died

• stabbed with a spindle on a spring evening in c.1383

• buried in Ghemme, Novara, Italy


Beatified

• considered a martyr by the local people, a popular devotion developed almost immediately

• cultus confirmed on 5 September 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX


Patronage

• Ghemme, Novara, Italy

• shepherdesses

• shepherds


Representation

young girl being beaten by an older woman



Saint Rupert of Salzburg

 சல்ஸ்பர்க் மாநில புனிதர் ரூபர்ட் 

மடாதிபதி மற்றும் ஆயர்:

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 660

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 27, 710

சல்ஸ்பர்க், ஆஸ்திரியா

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 27

பாதுகாவல்:

சல்ஸ்பர்க் மாநிலம், ஆஸ்திரியா, உப்பு சுரங்க பணியாளர்

சல்ஸ்பர்க் மாநில புனிதர் ரூபர்ட், "வோர்ம்ஸ்" (Worms) மறைமாவட்ட ஆயரும், "சல்ஸ்பர்க்" (Salzburg) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் முதல் ஆயரும், "சல்ஸ்பர்க்" (Salzburg) புனிதர் பீட்டர் துறவு மடத்தின் மடாதிபதியும் ஆவார். இவர், "ஃப்ராங்க்ஸ்" அரசன் (King of the Franks) "மூன்றாம் சைல்டபர்ட்டின்" சம காலத்தவர் ஆவார். ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்கம் மற்றும் கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபைகளின் புனிதரும், ஆஸ்திரிய மாநிலம் "சல்ஸ்பர்கின்" (Salzburg) பாதுகாவலரும் ஆவார்.

தூய பாரம்பரியங்களின்படி, ரூபர்ட் "பிரான்கிஷ் மெரோவிஞ்சியன்" அரச (Frankish royal Merovingian family) குடும்பத்தின் வழித்தோன்றலாவார். ஆரம்பத்தில், பாண்டித்தியமும் பக்தியுமுள்ள ஆயராக ரூபர்ட் ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளப்பட்டிருக்கிறார். ஆனால், இறுதியில் 'பாகனிஸ' எதிர்ப்பாளர்கள் ரூபர்ட்டை நிராகரித்தனர். அவரை "வோர்ம்ஸ்" (Worms) நகரை விட்டு வெளியேறுமாறு பலவந்தப்படுத்தினர்.

"பவரியாவின் பிரபு தியோடோ" (Duke Theodo of Bavaria) ரூபர்ட்டை பவரியா (Bavaria) வந்து கத்தோலிக்கத்தை பரப்ப்புவதில் உதவி செய்யுமாறு வேண்டினார்.

ரூபர்ட் "அல்டோட்டிங்" (Altötting) எனுமிடத்திற்கு சென்றார். அங்கே உள்ளூர் மக்களை கத்தோலிக்கத்திற்கு மனம் மாற்றினார். "டனூப்" (Danube river) ஆற்றில் பயணித்து அநேக நகரங்களுக்கும் கிராமங்களுக்கும் கோட்டைகளுக்கும் சென்றார். விரைவிலேயே "ஆவார்ஸ்" எனும் "கௌகாஸிய" (Avars) இனத்தவர் அரசாண்ட "டனூப்" நதியின் தென்கரையோரமுள்ள "பன்னோனியன்" (Pannonian lands) நிலப்பகுதிகளில் கத்தோலிக்க மறையை பரப்பினார்.

"ஆவார்" பிரதேசங்களில் உண்டான போர் சூழல், ரூபர்ட்டை தமது மறைப்பணியின் திட்டங்களை கைவிட செய்தன. அதற்கு பதிலாக, அவர் பாழ்பட்டுப் போன ரோம நகரான "ஜுவாவும்" (Juvavum) சென்றார். அந்நகரை தமது தளமாக ஆக்கிகொண்ட ரூபர்ட், நகரின் பெயரை "ஸல்ஸ்பர்க்" ("Salzburg") என்று மாற்றினார். ஏற்கனவேயிருந்த பண்டைய கிறிஸ்தவ பாரம்பரியங்களை கட்டமைத்தார். புனிதர் பீட்டரின் (St. Peter's Abbey) துறவு மடத்தினை புனரமைத்தார். "ஸல்ஸ்பர்க்" (Salzburg Cathedral) பேராலயம் கட்டுவதற்கான அடித்தளங்களை உண்டாக்கினார். அது, பின்னர் அவரது பின்வந்த ஆயரான "வெர்ஜிலியசின்" (Vergilius) காலத்தில் நிறைவுற்றது. "நொன்பர்க்" (Nonnberg) என்னுமிடத்தில் அருட்சகோதரியருக்கான "பெனடிக்டைன்" (Benedictine nunnery) துறவு மடத்தினை நிறுவினார். அம்மடத்தின் முதல் மடாதிபதி அவரது மருமகள் "புனிதர் எரேன்ட்ரூட்" (Saint Erentrude) ஆவார்.

ரூபர்ட் கல்வி மற்றும் அநேக பிற சீர்திருத்தங்களை அறிமுகப்படுத்தினார். "பவரியாவின் பிரபு தியோடோ" அவர்களிடமிருந்து "பிடிங் மற்றும் ரெய்சென்ஹல்" (Piding and Reichenhall) ஆகிய இடங்களைச் சுற்றியுள்ள தோட்டங்களை தானமாகப் பெற்றார். அங்கே, அவர் உள்ளூர் உப்புப் பணிகளை மேம்படுத்தினார்.

கி.பி. 710ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 27ம் நாளன்று ரூபர்ட் மரித்த தினம், கிறிஸ்து உயிர்த்தெழுந்த ஞாயிறு பெருவிழா (Easter Sunday) தினம் என்று கூறப்படுகின்றது.

Also known as

• Rupert of Worms

• Apostle of Salzburg

• Apostle to Austria

• Apostle to Bavaria

• Apostle to Carinthia

• Hrodbert, Hrodperht, Hrodpreht, Robert, Roudbertus, Rudbertus, Ruprecht



Profile

Relative of Saint Ermentrude. Benedictine. Bishop of Worms, Germany. Evangelist to southern Germany. In 696 Theodo, Duke of Bavaria, gave him the ruined town of Iuvavum, which Rupert rebuilt. There he founded the monastery of Saint Peter, serving as its first abbot, and a Benedictine convent. Worked with Saint Chuniald, Saint Vitalis of Salzburg, and Saint Gislar. To support the houses and his missionary work, he promoted the mining of salt, which led to the renaming of the place as Salzburg (salt mountain). Bishop of Salzburg. Considered a confessor of the faith.


Born

probably in France


Died

718 in Salzburg, Austria


Patronage

• Salzburg, Austria, city of

• Salzburg, Austria, province of



Saint John of Lycopolis

எகிப்து நாட்டின் யோவான் (மார்ச் 27)

யோவான், எகிப்து நாட்டில் 300 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிறந்திருக்கலாம் என்று நம்பப்படுகின்றது. இவர் தன்னுடைய வாழ்வின் முதல் இருபத்து ஆண்டுகளை தனது தந்தையோடு இருந்து, அவருக்கு தச்சு வேலையில் ஒத்தாசை புரிவதில் செலவழித்தார். இந்தக் காலக்கட்டத்தில் இவர் இறைவனுடைய அழைப்பை உணர்ந்தார். எனவே எல்லாவற்றையும் துறந்து, ஒரு காட்டிற்குச் சென்று, அங்கிருந்த ஒரு துறவியிடத்தில் சீடராகச் சேர்ந்து பயிற்சிகள் பெற்று வந்தார்.

அந்தத் துறவியோ யோவானிடம் பெரிய பெரிய பாறைகளை ஓரிடத்திலிருந்து உருட்டி, இன்னொரு இடத்திற்குக் கொண்டு சேர்த்தல், காய்ந்த சருகுகளை பொருக்கி ஓரிடத்தில் குவித்தல் போன்ற பல கஷ்டமான வேலைகளைக் கொடுத்து அவரை அவஸ்தைக்கு உள்ளாக்கினார். அந்த வேலைகளை எல்லாம் யோவான் மிகப் பொறுமையாகச் செய்து வந்தார். ஏறக்குறைய பதினாறு ஆண்டுகள் அவரோடு இருந்து பல்வேறு விதமான பயிற்சிகளைப் பெற்றுக்கொண்ட பின்னர் யோவான் அவரிடமிருந்து விடைபெற்று, ஓர் மலை உச்சிக்குச் சென்று, அங்கு கடுந்தவம் செய்துவந்தார்.

யோவான் மலை உச்சிக்குச் சென்ற பின்னர், யாரையும் பார்க்காமல் கடுந்தவம் செய்து வந்தார். அவர் மலை உச்சியில் இருந்து தவம் செய்துகொண்டிருக்கின்றார் என்று அறிந்து, அவரைப் பார்ப்பதற்கு நிறையப் பேர் போனார்கள். ஆனால், அவர் யாரையும் நேராகப் பார்க்காமல், தனது அறையின் ஜன்னல் வழியாகப் பேசி அனுப்பி வைத்தார். ஒரு சமயம் பார்வையற்ற பெண்மணி ஒருத்தி, தனக்குப் பார்வை கிடைக்கவேண்டும் என்று யோவானிடத்தில் வேண்டினார். யோவானோ அவருக்கு அற்புதமான முறையில் பார்வை கொடுத்து அவரைக் குணப்படுத்தினார். இப்படி பல்வேறு மனிதர்கள் அவரால் நலம் பெற்றார்கள்.

யோவானுக்கு பின்னர் நடப்பதை முன்கூட்டியே தெரிந்துகொள்ளக் கூடிய வல்லமையை இறைவன் கொடுத்திருந்தார். அதனைக் கொண்டு, அவர் எதிர்காலத்தில் நடக்க இருந்த பல ஆபத்துகளை எடுத்துச் சொல்லி, மக்களை எச்சரிக்கையாக இருக்கவேண்டும் என்று சொல்லி வந்தார். அதைப் போன்று மன்னர் முதலாம் தியோடசியஸ் போரில் வெற்றி பெறுவார் என்று சொன்னார். அவர் சொன்னது போன்றே மன்னர் போரில் வெற்றி பெற்றார்.


நாட்கள் ஆக, ஆக, யோவானுக்கு உடல் நலம் குன்றியது. அதனால் அவர் யாரையும் பார்க்கவிரும்பாமல், அறையில் தன்னை அடைத்துக்கொண்டு இறைவனிடத்தில் எப்போதும் ஜெபித்து வந்தார். 390 ஆம் ஆண்டு மார்ச் மாதம் தன்னுடைய சாவு நெருங்கிவிட்டது என்பதை அறிந்த யோவான் முழந்தாள் படியிட்டு இறைவனிடத்தில் ஜெபிக்கத் தொடங்கினார். அவர் ஜெபித்துக்கொண்டிருந்த நிலையிலே அவருடைய உயிர் அவருடைய உடலை விட்டுப் பிரிந்தது. இரண்டு மூன்று நாட்கள் கழித்து அவர் இறந்துவிட்டார் என்பதை அறிந்து, மக்கள் அவரை நல்லடக்கம் செய்தார்கள்.

Also known as

• Johannes av Egypt

• John of Egypt

• John of the Theibaid

• John the Anchorite

• John the Clairvoyant

• John the Egyptian

• John the Hermit

• Prophet of the Thebaid



Profile

Carpenter. Hermit on a mountain near Lycopolis from ages 25 to 65, living most of his life in a small, walled-up cell. Devoted himself to prayer and meditation five days a week, spiritual direction of male students the other two days; there were so many, he had to build a hospice for them. His reputation for wisdom and holiness caused him to be chosen as advisor to Emperor Theodosius. Had the gifts of prophecy, healing, and knowledge of the hidden sins of his visitors. Known and admired by Saint Jerome, Saint Augustine of Hippo, Saint Cassia, and Saint Palladius.



Born

c.305 at Assiut, Egypt


Died

394 of natural causes




Blessed Francesco Faà di Bruno


Profile

Youngest of twelve children born to Louis, Marquis of Bruno, and Carolina Milanesi, a family of wealthy nobles. Francesco studied mathematics, geography, surveying and cartography, served in the army of Savoy, and rose to officer status in the corps of engineers. Graduated from the Sorbonne with degrees in mathematics and astronomy in 1853. Worked at the French National Observantory in 1855. Professor of mathematics in Turin, Italy, and wrote on a number of math theories. Priest in the archdiocese of Turin. Founded the Society of Saint Zita, the Minim Sisters of Our Lady of Suffrage, a home for un-wed mothers, and a school that is now named for him.



Born

29 March 1825 in Alessandria, Italy


Died

27 March 1888 in Turin, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

25 September 1988 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Giuseppe Ambrosoli


Profile

Born the seventh son of Giovanni Battista Ambrosoli and Palmira Valli. As a college student in World War II, he helped smuggle Jews into neutral Switzerland to escape persecution. Physician, surgeon and teacher. Priest. Member of the Comboni Missionaries of the Heart of Jesus. In 1956 he began serving as a physician missionary in northern Uganda where he served for over 30 years. He expanded a small dispensary to a modern hospital, and founded Saint Mary’s Midwifery School.



Born

25 July 1923 in Ronago, Como, Italy


Died

at 1:50pm on 27 March 1987 at the Comboni Mission in Lira, Uganda of renal failure


Beatified

• 22 November 2020 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at Kalongo, Uganda, presided by Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu



Saint Augusta of Treviso

புனித_அகஸ்டா (ஐந்தாம் நூற்றாண்டு)

மார்ச் 27

இவர் (#StAugusta_Treviso) இத்தாலியைச் சார்ந்தவர். இவரது தந்தை ஃப்ரையூலியை‌ ஆண்ட மன்னர் ஆவார்.

பிற சமயத்தைச் சார்ந்த இவர், இயேசுவின் போதனையால் ஈர்க்கப்பட்டுக் கிறிஸ்தவரானார்.

இதை அறிந்த இவரை இவரைத் தலை வெட்டிக் கொன்றுபோட்டார். இவ்வாறு இவர் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவின்மீது கொண்ட நம்பிக்கைக்காகத் தன் இன்னுயிரைத் துறந்தார்

Also known as

• Augusta of Ceneda

• Augusta di Serravalle

• Augusta of Tarvisium

• Augusta the Martyr



Profile

Fith century daughter of the Teutonic duke of Friuli. Convert to Christianity. Killed by her father with his own hands for her faith.


Died

• beheaded by her father in the 5th century

• buried at Treviso, northern Italy


Patronage

• Ceneda, Italy

• Serravalle, Italy


Representation

• sword

• funeral pyre

• wheel

• holding a sword on a funeral pyre, sometimes with her father nearby

• being killed by her father

• woman in royal robes with a palm of martyrdom



Blessed Louis-Èdouard Cestac


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Bayonne, France. Founded the Daughters of Mary.



Born

6 January 1801 in Bayonne, Pyrénées-Atlantiques France


Died

27 March 1868 in Bayonne, Pyrénées-Atlantiques France of natural causes


Beatified

• 31 May 2015 by Pope Francis

• recognition celebrated at the Cathedral of Sainte-Marie, Bayonne, France, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Blessed Pellegrino of Falerone


Profile

Son of Roger, the wealthy lord of Falerone, Italy. Studied philosophy and canon law in Bologna, Italy. He abandoned his university studies to become one of the first followers of Saint Francis of Assisi. Pilgrim to the Holy Lands. Considered himself one of the lowest of servants of the Order, he served as a lay brother in several places.



Died

1233 at the convent of San Severino March, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

31 July 1821 by Pope Pius VII (cultus confirmation)



Saint Gelasius of Armagh


Also known as

• Giolla Iosa

• Gioua-Mac-Liag

• Gilla Meic Liac mac Diarmata


Profile

Son of the Irish poet Diarmaid. Abbot in Derry, Ireland for 16 years. Archbishop of Armagh, Ireland in 1138; he served for 36 years. First Irish bishop to receive the pallium. Rebuilt the cathedral of Armagh. As the primate bishop of Ireland, Gelasius travelled widely, preaching to the faithful, re-building old monasteries, convening synods, encouraging teachers. Ordained Saint Lawrence O'Toole as archbishop of Dublin in 1162. Convened a synod in Armagh in 1170 to look for a way to defend against invading Anglo-Normans.


Died

27 March 1174 of natural causes



Blessed Frowin of Engelberg


Also known as

• Frowin II

• Frodowin...



Profile

Benedictine monk at Saint Blaise Abbey in Badan, Germany, and may have been at Einsiedeln Abbey in Switzerland. Abbot of Engelberg Abbey in Unterwalden, Switzerland in 1146. Spiritual teacher of Blessed Berchtold of Engelberg, and recommended him for the abbacy. Frowin founded a library and scriptorium, encouraged painting and art, and made the house a center for learning, art and piety. Wrote theological text books.


Died

11 March 1178 at Engelberg Abbey in Switzerland of natural causes



Saint Alexander of Drizipara


Also known as

Alessandro


Profile

Third-century imperial Roman soldier and Christian. Military tribune under the command of Tiberius. In Rome, Italy he was ordered to make a sacrifice to the pagan god Jupiter; he refused. Being of high rank, he was taken before Emperor Maximian Herculeus; there he proclaimed his faith. Tortured and sentenced to hard labour at a series of prisons before being executed. Martyr.


Died

• beheaded in Drizipara, Thrace (modern Büyük Karistiran, Turkey)

• body thrown into the nearby river, but was pulled out by four dogs, and local gave Alexander a Christian burial



Blessed Aimone of Halberstadt


Also known as

Haimo


Profile

Young monk at the Benedictine monastery of Fulda, Germany. Friend of Rabano Mauro. Spritual student of Blessed Alcuin in Tours, France in 802. Returned to the house in Fulda from 804 until he moved to a house in Hersfeld, Germany in 839. Bishop of Halberstadt, Germany in 840. Worked in the synod of Mainz, Germany from 847 to 852.


Died

27 March 853 of natural causes



Saint Matthew of Beauvais


Also known as

Matteo di Beauvais


Profile

Soldier. Knight who fought in the First Crusade. Captured by Saracens, he was ordered to renounce Christianity; he refused. Martyr.



Born

Beauvais, France


Died

beheaded in 1098


Canonized

never formally canonized; his cultus has remained local



Blessed Petrus Jo Yong-sam


Also known as

Peter


Additional Memorial

20 September as one of the Martyrs of Korea


Profile

Layman martyr in the apostolic vicariate of Korea.


Born

Yanggeon, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea


Died

27 March 1801 in Cheongju, Chungcheong-do, South Korea


Beatified

15 August 2014 by Pope Francis



Martyrs of Bardiaboch


Also known as

• Martyrs of Hubah

• Martyrs of Persia


Profile

A group of Christians who were arrested, tortured and executed together for their faith during the persecutions of Persian king Shapur II. Martyrs. - Abibus, Helias, Lazarus, Mares, Maruthas, Narses, Sabas, Sembeeth and Zanitas.


Died

27 March 326 at Bardiaboch, Persia



Saint Philetus of Illyria


Profile

Senator. Married to Saint Lydia of Illyria; father of Saint Macedo of Illyria and Saint Theoprepius of Illyria. Martyred in the persecutions of Hadrian.



Died

c.121 in the imperial Roman province of Illyria, an area of the modern Balkans



Saint Lydia of Illyria


Profile

Married to Saint Philetus of Illyria; mother of Saint Macedo of Illyria and Saint Theoprepius of Illyria. Martyred in the persecutions of Hadrian.



Died

c.121 in the imperial Roman province of Illyria, an area of the modern Balkans



Saint Theoprepius of Illyria


Also known as

Theoprepides


Profile

Son of Saint Macedo of Illyria and Saint Lydia of Illyria; brother of Saint Theoprepius of Illyria. Martyred in the persecutions of Hadrian.


Died

c.121 in the imperial Roman province of Illyria, an area of the modern Balkans



Saint Ensfrid of Cologne


Also known as

Enfrid


Profile

Parish priest in Siegburg and Friedburg in Germany. Dean of the church of Saint Andrew in Cologne, Germany. Noted for his works of charity including literally giving the shirt off his back to beggars.


Died

27 March 1192 of natural causes



Blessed Claudio Gallo


Profile

Mercedarian. Patriarch of Antioch. Staunch defender of freedom for ecclesial unity. Known as a scriptural scholar and for his devotion to the Mother of God.



Died

1304 of natural causes



Saint Romulus the Abbot


Also known as

Romulus of Nimes


Profile

Monk. Abbot of Saint Baudilius Abbey near Nimes, France. During an invasion of Saracens c.720, he and his brother monks fled Baudilius, settled in and revitalized the ruined monastery at Saissy-les-Bois, France.


Died

c.730



Saint Macedo of Illyria


Profile

Son of Saint Philetus of Illyria and Saint Lydia of Illyria; brother of Saint Theoprepius of Illyria. Martyred in the persecutions of Hadrian.


Died

c.121 in the imperial Roman province of Illyria, an area of the modern Balkans



Saint Amphilochius of Illyria


Profile

Military captain. Martyred in the persecutions of Hadrian.


Died

c.121 in the imperial Roman province of Illyria, an area of the modern Balkans



Saint Cronidas of Illyria


Profile

Notary. Martyred in the persecutions of Hadrian.


Died

c.121 in the imperial Roman province of Illyria, an area of the modern Balkans



Saint Alexander of Pannonia


Profile

Third-century imperial Roman soldier and Christian stationed in Hungary. Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Maximian Herculeus.



Saint Alkeld the Martyr


Also known as

Athilda


Profile

Martyred by Danes. Two churches in Yorkshire, England are dedicated to her.


Died

10th century



Saint Amator the Hermit


Also known as

Amador


Profile

Hermit. Several churches in Portugal are dedicated to him.



Saint Suairlech of Fore


Profile

First bishop of Fore, Westmeath, Ireland from c.735 to c.750.


Died

c.750



Also celebrated but no entry yet


• Our Lady of Workers

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மார்ச் 26

 St. William of Norwich



Born 2 February 1132

Norwich, England

Died c. 22 March 1144 (aged 12)

Norwich, England

Venerated in Folk Catholicism

Canonized Never officially canonized.

Feast 26 March (removed from the Universal Calendar)[2]

Attributes Depicted holding nails, with nail wounds or undergoing crucifixion


Supposed martyr. According to discredited tradition, he was a young boy and an apprentice to a tanner in Norwich, England. William was murdered by two Jews in a terrible ceremony prompted by a hatred for Christ. There is no evidence to support the legend, and it declined owing to papal displeasure in the years prior to the Reformation. It is now suppressed.




William of Norwich (2 February 1132 – c. 22 March 1144) was an English boy whose disappearance and killing was, at the time, attributed to the Jewish community of Norwich. It is the first known medieval accusation against Jews of ritual murder.


William was an apprentice tanner who regularly came into contact with Jews and visited their homes as part of his trade. His murder remains unsolved; the local community of Norwich attributed the boy's death to the Jews, though the local authorities would not convict them for lack of proof. William was acclaimed as a saint in Norwich, with miracles attributed to him.


William's story was told in The Life and Miracles of St William of Norwich,[3][4] a multi-volume Latin work by Thomas of Monmouth, a monk in the Norwich Benedictine monastery. Thomas started The Life in 1149/50; he completed volume seven by 1173.[5] Augustus Jessopp (1823–1914), one of the editors of the first printed edition of Thomas' work, describes Thomas as belonging to the class of those who are "deceivers and being deceived



St. Margaret Clitherow

புனிதர் மார்கரெட் க்ளித்ரோவ் 

இங்கிலாந்து மற்றும் வேல்ஸ் மறைசாட்சியரில் ஒருவர்:

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1556

யோர்க், யோர்க்ஷைர், இங்கிலாந்து

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 25, 1586

யோர்க், யோர்க்ஷைர், இங்கிலாந்து

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: டிசம்பர் 15, 1929

திருத்தந்தை பதினொன்றாம் பயஸ்

புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 25,1970

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல்

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

ஷேம்பில்ஸ், யோர்க், வடக்கு யோர்க்ஷைர், இங்கிலாந்து

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 26

பாதுகாவல்:

பெண் வியாபார்கள், மாற்றப்பட்டவர்கள், மறைசாட்சியர், கத்தோலிக்க பெண்கள் சமூகம், இலத்தீன் பெரும் சமூகம்

புனிதர் மார்கரெட் க்ளித்ரோவ், ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் ஆங்கிலேய புனிதரும், மறைசாட்சியுமாவார். சில வேளைகளில், “யோர்க்கின் முத்து” (The Pearl of York) என்றும் இவர் அழைக்கப்படுவதுண்டு.

கி.பி. 1556ம் ஆண்டு, வடக்கு இங்கிலாந்து (Northern England) நாட்டின் “யோர்க்ஷைர்” (Yorkshire) மாகாணத்தில் பிறந்த மார்கரெட் க்ளித்ரோவின் தந்தையார் பெயர் “தாமஸ்” (Thomas) ஆகும். நகரின் கௌரவமான மெழுகுதிரி வியாபாரியான இவர், கி.பி. 1564ம் ஆண்டு, மாநகர ஷெரிஃப் ஆகவும் பதவி வகித்தார். மார்கரெட்டின் தாயார் பெயர் “ஜேன் மிட்ல்டன்” (Jane Middleton) ஆகும். மார்கரெட்டுக்கு பதினான்கு வயதாகையில் இவரது தந்தை மரித்துப் போனார்.

நகரின் அரச பிரதானியும் (Chamberlain of the City), கசாப்பு (Butcher) வியாபாரியுமான “ஜான் க்ளித்ரோவ்” (John Clitherow) என்பவரை கி.பி. 1571ம் ஆண்டு, திருமணம் முடித்தார். இவர்களுக்கு மூன்று குழந்தைகள் பிறந்தன. இவர்களது குடும்பம் “ஷேம்பில்ஸ்” (The Shambles) எனப்படும் பழைய தெருவில் வசித்தது. மார்கரெட் க்ளித்ரோவ், கி.பி. 1574ம் ஆண்டு, கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபைக்கு மதம் மாறினார். இவரது கணவர் ஜான் க்ளித்ரோவ், எதிர் திருச்சபையைச் சேர்ந்தவராயினும், தமது சகோதரர் “வில்லியம்” (William) ஒரு கத்தோலிக்க குரு என்ற காரணத்தால், அவர் ஆதரவாகவே இருந்தார்.


எதிர் திருச்சபையின் தேவாலய சேவைகளில் கலந்துகொள்ளாததற்காக மார்கரெட்டுக்கு விதிக்கப்பட்ட அபராதத் தொகையை அவரது கணவர் செலுத்தினார். தேவாலய சேவைகளில் கலந்துகொள்ளாததற்காக, முதன்முறையாக கி.பி. 1577ம் ஆண்டு மார்கரெட் கைது செய்யப்பட்டு சிறையிலடைக்கப்பட்டார். மேலும் இரண்டு முறை, “யோர்க் கேஸ்ட்டில்” (York Castle) என்றழைக்கப்படும் சிறைக் கூடத்தில் அடைக்கப்பட்டார். இவரது மூன்றாவது மகனான வில்லியம் (William) இங்கேதான் பிறந்தான்.

மார்கரெட், கத்தோலிக்க குருக்களுக்கு தங்க இடம் கொடுப்பதிலும், அவர்களைப் பராமரிப்பதிலும் தமது உயிரையே பணயம் வைத்திருந்தார். தமது வீட்டுடன் ஒட்டியிருந்த அறையை குருக்கள் மறைந்து வசிப்பதற்கு கொடுத்திருந்த மார்கரெட், தமது வீட்டின் சிறிது தூரத்திலிருந்த இன்னொரு வீட்டையும் வாடகைக்கு எடுத்து குருக்களுக்கு அளித்திருந்தார். குருக்கள் மறைவாக வசித்த அங்கேயே திருப்பலிகளும் நிகழ்த்தப்பட்டன. கத்தோலிக்க திருமறையும் திருப்பலிகளும் தடை செய்யப்பட்டிருந்த அக்காலத்தில், கத்தோலிக்க குருக்களுக்கு அடைக்கலம் தருவது தண்டனைக்குரிய குற்றமாகும். இங்கிலாந்தின் வடக்கில் தப்பியோடிய குருமார்களின் மிக முக்கியமான மறைவிடங்களில் அவரின் வீடும் ஒன்று ஆனது.

மார்கரெட், தமது மூத்த மகனான ஹென்றியை (Henry) ஃபிரான்ஸ் நாட்டின் “கிராண்ட் எஸ்ட்” (Grand Est region) மாகாணத்தின் “ரெய்ம்ஸ்” (Reims) எனும் நகரிலிருந்த ஆங்கிலேய கல்லூரியில் (English College) குருத்துவ கல்வி கற்க அனுப்பினார். அவரது மூத்த மகன் வெளிநாட்டிற்கு ஏன் போனார் என்பதை விளக்குமாறு, மார்கரெட்டின் கணவர் அதிகாரிகளால விசாரிக்கப்பட்டார். கி.பி. 1586ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், க்ளித்ரோவ் வீடு சோதனையிடப்பட்டது. விசாரணையில், பயம் கொண்ட சிறுவன் ஒருவன், குருக்களின் மறைவிடங்களைக் காட்டிக் கொடுத்தான்.

மார்கரெட் உடனடியாக கைது செய்யப்பட்டார். ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க குருக்கள் தங்க மறைவிடங்களை ஏற்பாடு செய்து தந்த குற்றத்துக்காக “அஸ்ஸிசெஸ்” (Assizes) நீதிமன்றங்களில் விசாரிக்கப்பட்டார். மார்கரெட் வழக்காட மறுத்தார். இதன்காரணமாக, அவரது குழந்தைகளை விசாரிக்கவும், குற்றம் சாட்டவும், துன்புறுத்தவும் இயலாமல் போனது. தமது நான்காவது குழந்தையை கருத்தரித்திருந்த மார்கரெட், கி.பி. 1586ம் ஆண்டு, “லேடி டே” (Lady Day) என்றழைக்கப்படும் அன்னை மரியாள் தினத்தன்று, கொல்லப்பட்டார். அன்றைய தினம், அந்த வருடத்தின் பெரிய வெள்ளிக் கிழமையுமாகும்.

Born c. 1556

York, Yorkshire, England[1]

Died 25 March 1586 (aged 29–30)

York, Yorkshire, England

Venerated in Roman Catholic Church

Anglican Communion

Beatified 15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI

Canonized 25 October 1970 by Pope Paul VI

Major shrine The Shambles, York, North Yorkshire, England

Feast 25 March (individual)

25 October (together with Forty Martyrs of England and Wales)

Attributes door, bible, martyr's palm, rosary

Patronage businesswomen, converts, martyrs, Catholic Women's League, Latin Mass Society



St. Margaret Clitherow was born in Middleton, England, in 1555, of protestant parents. Possessed of good looks and full of wit and merriment, she was a charming personality. In 1571, she married John Clitherow, a well-to-do grazier and butcher (to whom she bore two children), and a few years later entered the Catholic Church. Her zeal led her to harbor fugitive priests, for which she was arrested and imprisoned by hostile authorities. Recourse was had to every means in an attempt to make her deny her Faith, but the holy woman stood firm. Finally, she was condemned to be pressed to death on March 25, 1586. She was stretched out on the ground with a sharp rock on her back and crushed under a door over laden with unbearable weights. Her bones were broken and she died within fifteen minutes. The humanity and holiness of this servant of God can be readily glimpsed in her words to a friend when she learned of her condemnation: "The sheriffs have said that I am going to die this coming Friday; and I feel the weakness of my flesh which is troubled at this news, but my spirit rejoices greatly. For the love of God, pray for me and ask all good people to do likewise." Her feast day is March 26th.



Margaret Clitherow (1556 – 25 March 1586) was an English saint and martyr of the Roman Catholic Church,[2] known as "the Pearl of York". She was pressed to death for refusing to enter a plea to the charge of harbouring Catholic priests. She was canonised in 1970 by Pope Paul VI.


Life

Margaret Clitherow was born in 1556,[3] one of five children of Thomas and Jane Middleton. Her father was a respected businessman, a wax-chandler and Sheriff of York in 1564,[4] who died when Margaret was fourteen. In 1571, she married John Clitherow, a wealthy butcher and a chamberlain of the city, and bore him three children; the family lived at today's 10–11 The Shambles.


She converted to Roman Catholicism in 1574. Although her husband, John Clitherow, belonged to the Established Church, he was supportive as his brother William was a Roman Catholic priest.[5] He paid her fines for not attending church services. She was first imprisoned in 1577 for failing to attend church, and two more incarcerations at York Castle followed.[6] Her third child, William, was born in prison.[7]



Margaret risked her life by harbouring and maintaining priests, which was made a capital offence by the Jesuits, etc. Act 1584. She provided two chambers, one adjoining her house and, with her house under surveillance, she rented a house some distance away, where she kept priests hidden and Mass was celebrated through the thick of the persecution.[4] Her home became one of the most important hiding places for fugitive priests in the north of England. Local tradition holds that she also housed her clerical guests in The Black Swan at Peasholme Green, where the Queen's agents were lodged.[7]


She sent her older son, Henry, to the English College, relocated in Reims, to train for the priesthood. Her husband was summoned by the authorities to explain why his oldest son had gone abroad, and in March 1586 the Clitherow house was searched.[8] A frightened boy revealed the location of the priest hole.[6]


Margaret was arrested and called before the York assizes for the crime of harbouring Catholic priests. She refused to plead, thereby preventing a trial that would entail her three children being made to testify, and being subjected to torture. She was sentenced to death. Although pregnant with her fourth child,[4] she was executed on Lady Day, 1586, (which also happened to be Good Friday that year) in the Toll Booth at Ouse Bridge, by being crushed to death by her own door, the standard inducement to force a plea.[9]


The two sergeants who should have carried out the execution hired four desperate beggars to do it instead. She was stripped and had a handkerchief tied across her face then laid across a sharp rock the size of a man's fist, the door from her own house was put on top of her and loaded with an immense weight of rocks and stones so that the sharp rock would break her back. Her death occurred within fifteen minutes, but her body was left for six hours before the weight was removed.


Veneration

Clitherow was beatified in 1929 by Pope Pius XI and canonised on 25 October 1970[10] by Pope Paul VI among the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales. Their feast day in the current Roman Catholic calendar is 4 May in England and 25 October in Wales. She is also commemorated in England on 30 August, along with martyrs Anne Line and Margaret Ward. The three were officially added to the Episcopal Church liturgical calendar with a feast day on 30 August.[11]


A relic, said to be her hand, is housed in the Bar Convent in York.[6]


St. Margaret's Shrine is at 35–36 The Shambles. John Clitherow had his butcher's shop at 35.[12] However, the street was re-numbered in the 18th century, so it is thought their house was actually opposite.



Saint Ludger of Utrecht

புனிதர் லூட்கர்

'முன்ஸ்டர்' மறை மாவட்ட முதல் ஆயர்:

சக்ஸனி நகர அப்போஸ்தலர்:

பிறப்பு: கி. பி. 742

ஸுய்லேன், நெதர்லாந்து

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 26, 809

பில்லர்பெக், ஜெர்மனி

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 26

பாதுகாவல்: 

க்ரோநின்ஜென் (Groningen), நெதர்லாந்து (Netherlands), டேவெண்டேர் (Deventer), கிழக்கு ஃபிரிஸியா (East Frisia), வேர்டேன் (Werden), முன்ஸ்டர் மறைமாவட்டம் (Diocese of Münster), ஜெர்மனி (Germany).

புனிதர் லூட்கர், "ஃப்ரீசியன்ஸ்" (Frisians) மற்றும் "சக்ஸன்ஸ்" (Saxons) ஆகிய மாநிலங்களில் மறைப் பணியாற்றிய மறைப்பணியாளரும், "வெர்டேன்" (Werden Abbey) துறவு மடத்தின் நிறுவனரும், "முன்ஸ்டர்" (Münster) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் முதல் ஆயரும் ஆவார்.

இவரது பெற்றோர், "தியாட்க்ரிம்" (Thiadgrim) மற்றும் "லியாஃபர்க்" (Liafburg) ஆவர். இவர்கள் செல்வம் படைத்த ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவக் குடும்பத்தினராவர்.

கி.பி. 753ம் ஆண்டு, லூட்கர் ஜெர்மனியின் பெரிய அப்போஸ்தலரான (great Apostle of Germany) புனிதர் "போனிஃபேஸ்" (Saint Boniface) அவர்களைச் சந்திக்கும் வாய்ப்பு கிட்டியது. அதனைத் தொடர்ந்த சம்பவமாக அப்புனிதர் மறை சாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டது, அவரில் ஆழ்ந்த பெரும் தாக்கத்தினை ஏற்படுத்தியது.

கி.பி. 756 அல்லது 757ம் ஆண்டு, இவர் புனிதர் "கிரகோரி" (Saint Gregory of Utrecht) அவர்கள் நிறுவிய பேராலய பள்ளியில் இணைந்து கல்வி கற்றார். கல்வியில் நல்ல முன்னேற்றம் கண்ட இவர், 767ம் ஆண்டு, இங்கிலாந்திலிருந்து வந்து "யோர்க்" (York) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் ஆயராக பொறுப்பேற்கச் சென்ற "அலுபெர்ட்" (Alubert) என்பவருடன் துணையாகச் சென்ற இவர், அங்கேயே பேராயர் "எதெல்பெர்ட்" (Ethelbert of York) என்பவரால் திருத்தொண்டராக அருட்பொழிவு பெற்றார். அங்கேயே ஆங்கிலேய அறிஞர் "அல்ஸுய்ன்" (Alcuin) என்பவரின் கீழ் கல்வியைத் தொடர்ந்தார். லூட்கர், "அல்ஸுய்ன்" ஆகிய இருவரும் வாழ்நாள் நண்பர்களானார்கள்.

லூட்கர், 777ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூலை மாதம், ஏழாம் நாளன்று, கொலோனில் (Cologne) குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு பெற்றார். பிறகு சாக்சன் சென்று மறைப் பணியாற்றினார். கற்பிக்கும் பணியையும் செய்தார். இங்ஙனம் சுமார் ஏழு வருடங்கள் பணியாற்றினார். கி.பி. 784ம் ஆண்டு, "விடுல்கைன்ட்" (Widukind) என்பவன் "ஃபிரிஸியா" மாகான மக்களை துன்புறுத்த ஆரம்பித்தான். மறைப் பணியாளர்களை அங்கிருந்து விரட்டுவதற்காக அவர்களை கொன்றும், கிறிஸ்தவ ஆலயங்களை தீயிட்டு எரித்தும் துன்புறுத்தினான். ஆலயங்களில் பாகன் கடவுளர்களை கொண்டுவந்து வைத்தான்.

இத்தீவிர துன்புருத்தல்களிளிருந்து தமது சீடர்களுடன் தப்பி ஓடிய லூட்கர் கி.பி. 785ல் ரோம் நகர் சென்றார். அங்கே திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் "அட்ரியான்" (Pope Adrian I) அவர்களால் வரவேற்கப்பட்ட அவருக்கு திருத்தந்தை நிறைய ஆலோசனைகள் வழங்கினார். பின்னர் அங்கிருந்து "மான்டே கஸினோ" (Monte Cassino) சென்ற லூட்கர், அங்கே "பெனடிக்ட் சட்ட விதிகளின்"படி (Rule of Saint Benedict) வாழ ஆரம்பித்தார்.

கி.பி. 787ம் ஆண்டு, லூட்கர் "லாவெர்ஸ்" (Lauwers) நதியின் கிழக்குக் கரையோரமுள்ள ஐந்து மாவட்டங்களுக்கு மறைப் பணியாளராக நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். மிகவும் சிரமமான இப்பணியை செய்ய தொடங்கிய இவருக்கு உள்ளூர் மொழியும் உள்ளூர் மக்களின் பழக்கவழக்கங்களும் அறிந்திருந்தபடியால் அவரது பணிகள் சற்றே இலகுவாக இருந்தன. லூட்கர் பல்வேறு இடங்களில் பணியாற்றினார். புனிதர் "வில்லிப்ரார்ட்" (Saint Willibrord) மறைப்பணியாற்றிய இடமான "ஹெலிகோலேண்ட்" (Heligoland) சென்றார். அங்கேயிருந்த பாகன் கோவில்களை அழித்தார். கிறிஸ்தவ தேவாலயம் ஒன்றினை கட்டினார். பின்னர் அங்கிருந்து திரும்பும் வழியில், கண் பார்வையற்ற கவிஞரான "பெர்ன்லெஃப்" (Bernlef) என்பவரை சந்தித்தார். கண் பார்வை திரும்பவேண்டுமென இறைவனை நோக்கி உருக்கமாக இவர் செபித்ததால் "பெர்ன்லெஃப்" மீண்டும் பார்வை பெற்றார். அத்துடன் முழு விசுவாசமுள்ள கிறிஸ்தவராக மாறினார்.

தூய ரோமப் பேரரசர் முதலாம் சார்லசின் (Charlemagne) வேண்டுகோளுக்கிணங்க, கி.பி. 805ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 30ம் நாளன்று, ஆயராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்விக்கப்பட்டார். லூட்கருக்கு அருட்பொழிவு செய்வித்தவர் "கொலோன்" பேராயர் "ஹில்டேபோல்ட்" (Hildebold, Archbishop of Cologne) ஆவார்.

லூட்கரின் அமைதியான மறை போதனை, பேரரசர் சார்லசின் சூழ்ச்சி முறைகளை விட கிறிஸ்தவத்தை பரப்புவதில் அதிக வெற்றியைத் தந்தது. தேவாலயங்களுக்கு நகைகளாக போய்ச் சேரவேண்டிய பணத்தை தானமாக கொடுப்பதாக இவர் மீது குற்றச்சாட்டுகளும் எழுந்தன. ஆனால், அதில் தவறேதுமில்லை என்று எடுத்துரைத்து அவர் பேரரசரை சமாதானம் செய்வித்தார்.

கி.பி. 809ம் வருடம், "கொயேஸ்ஃபெல்ட்" (Coesfeld) என்ற இடத்தில், தவக்காலத்தின் ஐந்தாம் ஞாயிறன்று, (Passion Sunday) அதிகாலை தேவாலயத்தில் மறையுரையாற்றி திருப்பலி நிறைவேற்றினார். பின்னர் மீண்டும் காலை ஒன்பது மணி பூஜையிலும் மறையுரையாற்றி தமது கடைசி திருப்பலி நிறைவேற்றினார். அன்று மாலையே அவர் அமைதியாக மரித்துப் போனார்

Also known as

• Apostle of Saxony

• Ludger of Münster

• Liudger, Ludiger


Additional Memorials

• 24 April (translation of relics)

• 3 October (translation of relics)



Profile

Son of Thiadgrim and Liafburg, wealthy Frisian nobles. Brother of Saint Gerburgis and Saint Hildegrin. Saw Saint Boniface preach in 753, and was greatly moved. Studied at Utrecht, Netherlands under Saint Gregory of Utrecht. Studied three and a half years in England under Blessed Alcuin. Deacon.


Returned to the Netherlands in 773 as a missionary. Sent to Deventer in 775 to restore a chapel destroyed by pagan Saxons, and to recover the relics of Saint Lebwin, who had built the chapel. Taught school at Utrecht. Destroyed pagan idols and places of worship in the areas west of Lauwers Zee after they were Christianized. Ordained in 777 at Cologne, Germany. Missionary to Friesland, mainly around Ostergau and Dokkum, from 777 to 784, returning each fall to Utrecht to teach in the cathedral school. Left the area in 784 when pagan Saxons invaded and expelled all priests.


Pilgrim to Rome, Italy in 785. Met with Pope Adrian I, and the two exchanged counsel. Lived as a Benedictine monk at Monte Cassino, Italy from 785 to 787, but did not take vows. At the request of Charlemagne, he returned to Friesland as a missionary. It was a successful expedition, and he built a monastery in Werden, Germany to serve as a base. Reported to have cured the blindness of, and thus caused the conversion of the blind pagan bard Berulef.


Refused the bishopric of Trier, Germany in 793. Missionary to the Saxons. Built a monastery at Mimigernaford as the center of this missionary work, and served as its abbot. The word monasterium led to the current name of the city that grew up around the house - Münster. Built several small chapels throughout the region. First bishop of Münster in 804, being ordained at Westphalia.


Ludger's health failed in later years, but he never reduced his work load. No matter how busy or dangerous his outside life, he never neglected his time of prayer and meditation, it being a source of the strength to do everything else. The man's life can be summed up in two facts -


• he was reprimanded and denounced only once during his bishopric - for spending more on charity than on church decoration

• on the day of his death, he celebrated Mass - twice.


Born

c.743 at Zuilen, Friesland (modern Netherlands)


Died

• in the evening of Passion Sunday, 26 March 809 of natural causes

• buried at Werden, Germany

• relics also at Münster and Billerbeck, Germany


Patronage

• 2 dioceses

• 13 cities




Blessed Maddalena Caterina Morano

அருளாளர்_மதலேனா_கத்தரினா_மொரனா 

(1847-1908)

மார்ச் 26

இவர்‌ (#BlMaddalenaCaterinaMorana) இத்தாலியில் பிறந்தவர். இவருக்கு எட்டு வயது நடக்கும்போது இவரது தந்தையும் இவரது மூத்த சகோதரரியும் இறந்தனர்.‌ இதனால் குடும்பத்தைப் பராமரிக்க வேண்டிய பொறுப்பு இவரது தலையில் விழுந்தது.

இவர் ஏறக்குறைய பன்னிரண்டு ஆண்டுகள் படித்துக்கொண்டே குடும்பத்திற்கு உதவி வந்தார். 1878 ஆம் ஆண்டு இவர் புனித ஜான் போஸ்கோ நிறுவிய "மரியாவின்‌ புதல்வியர்" என்ற சபையில் சேர்ந்து துறவியானார்.

இதன் பிறகு இவர் சிசிலிக்கு அனுப்பி வைக்கப் பட்டார். அங்கு இவர் பெண்களின் முன்னேற்றத்திற்காக உழைத்தார்; நிறைய பள்ளிக் கூடங்களைத் தொடங்கினார்; ஆசிரியர்களை நன்கு பயிற்றுவித்தார். இவ்வாறு அயராது பணியாற்றிய இவர் 1908 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

இவருக்கு 1994 ஆம் ஆண்டு நவம்பர் திங்கள் 5 ஆம் நாள் திருத்தந்தை புனித இரண்டாம் ஜான்பால் அவர்களால் அருளாளர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

Profile

Her father and older sister died when Maddalena was 8 years old, and the girl had to work to help support her large family. She managed to work and study, and in 1866 she graduated as an elementary school teacher. She wanted to enter religious life, but her family needed her, and she worked for 12 years as a teacher in rural Montaldo, Italy teaching catechism in her parish.


In 1878, having helped raise her siblings, and saved enough to insure her mother‘s future, Maddalena entered the Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians, the congregation founded six years earlier by Saint John Bosco. In 1881 she was sent to Trecastagni in the Diocese of Catania, Sicily, and took charge of an existing institute for women, inspiring it with Salesian principles.



Sicily became her second home. She opened new houses, set up after-school activities and sewing classes, trained teachers, and taught catechism. She spent 25 years in Sicily, serving her community as local and provincial superior, guiding novices, and faithfully living the charism of Mother Maria Mazzarello, co-foundress of the institute.


Born

15 November 1847 at Chieri, Italy


Died

26 March 1908 at Catania, Sicily, Italy of cancer


Beatified

5 November 1994 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Castulus of Rome


Also known as

• Castulus of Moosburg

• Castolo, Castulo, Catulus, Kastl, Kastulis, Kastulus



Profile

Married to Saint Irene of Rome. Military officer in the imperial palace in Rome during the reign of Emperor Diocletian. A quiet Christian, he was denounced to authorities for sheltering fellow Christians; arrested, tortured and martyred.


Died

• buried alive in 288 on the Via Labicana outside Rome, Italy

• a cemetery named for him developed on the land

• a church dedicated to him was built in the 7th century on the site of his execution

• relics transferred to a Benedictine monastery in Moosburg an der Isar, Germany c.768

• relics transferred to Landshut, Germany in 1604


Patronage

• against blood poisoning

• against drowning

• against erysipelas

• against fever

• against horse theft

• against lightning

• against storms

• against wildfire

• cowherds

• farmers

• shepherds

• Hallertau, Germany

• Moosburg an der Isar, Germany



Saint Bercharius


Also known as

Bercario, Bererus


Profile

Godson of Saint Nivard of Rheims; student of Saint Remaclus of Maestricht. Monk at Luxeuil Abbey under the leadership of Saint Walbert. First abbot of Hautvillers Abbey; he expanded it and built other houses, one of which was populated by brothers who were redeemed slaves. First abbot of Montier-en-Der Abbey. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy and to the Holy Lands, bringing back relics for his houses. Venerated as a martyr as he died defending the principles of his religious order.



Born

636 in Aquitaine (in modern France)


Died

• fatally stabbed on Holy Thursday, 28 March 696 at Moutier-en-Der Abbey by his godson, a monk named Daguin, whom Bercharius had reprimanded

• died on Easter Sunday, 31 March 696 forgiving his killer

• relics taken to a church in Burgundy, France in the 9th century to protect them from invading Normans, but were returned to the abbey by 924

• some relics taken to the collegiate church of Châteauvillain, Haute-Marne, France, but were destroyed in the anti-Christian excesses of the French Revolution



Saint Peter of Sebaste


Profile

Youngest of ten children born to Saint Basil the Elder and Saint Emmelia; brother of Saint Basil the Great, Saint Gregory of Nyssa, and Saint Macrina the Younger. His father died when Peter was an infant, and he was raised and educated by Saint Macrina. Monk in a monastery in Armenia on the Iris River, a house that had been founded by his parents and was headed by his brother Basil. Abbot of the house in 362. Worked to help people suffering in a famine in Pontus and Cappadocia. Ordained in 370. Bishop of Sebaste, Armenia in 380. Fought fiercely against Arianism in his see. Attended the General Council of Constantinople in 381.


Born

c.340 in Caesarea, Cappadocia


Died

c.391 in Sebaste, Armenia (in modern Turkey) of natural causes



Saint Basil the Younger


Profile

Hermit near Constantinople. Being a foreigner, and being odd in his appearance and behavior, he was arrested, questioned and tortured as a spy, but his gift of miracles and prophecy convinced his captors that he was just a holy man, and they freed him. Friend of Saint Theodora of Constantinople. He later publicly denouced the immorality of the area's aristocracy, including Princess Anastasia, which led to further persecution by the authorities.


Died

952 near Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey) of natural causes



Saint Eutychius of Alexandria


Profile

Sub-deacon in Alexandria, Egypt and leader of a group of Christians who supported Saint Athanasius of Alexandria and opposed Arianism. Arrested, scourged and condemned to slavery in the mines for adhering to orthodox Christianity. Martyr.


Died

from abuse and exhaustion while on the road to the mines in Egypt in 356



Saint Barontius of Pistoia


Also known as

Barontus, Baronce, Baronto, Baronzio


Profile

Member of the French nobility and a courtier to King Theirry II. Married and a father. Retired to become a monk at Lonrey, France. After receiving a vision, he moved to become a hermit near Pistoia, Italy. Friend of Saint Desiderius of Pistoia.


Died

c.725



Saint Maxima the Martyr


Also known as

Massima


Profile

Married to and martyred with Saint Montanus the Martyr in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

drowned in 304





Saint Govan


Also known as

Cofen, Gofan, Goven, Gowan


Profile

Sixth century hermit who lived on the face of a cliff at Saint Govan's Head, Dyfed, Wales; his stone hut survives today, and attracts many visitors. Spiritual student of Saint Ailbe.


Died

buried under the altar in his stone hut



Saint Emmanuel


Also known as

Emanuele, Maneul



Profile

Martyred with 42 companions in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

c.304


Representation

man tied and nailed to a tree



Saint Quadratus of Anatolia


Also known as

Codrato


Profile

Bishop in Anatolia (in modern Turkey). Martyred with 42 companions in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

c.304 in Anatolia, Asia Minor (modern Turkey)



Saint Mochelloc of Kilmallock


Also known as

Celloch, Cellog, Motalogus, Mottelog


Profile

Abbot at Kilmallock, Ireland.


Died

c.639


Patronage

Kilmallock, Limerick, Ireland



Saint Montanus the Martyr


Also known as

Montano


Profile

Priest. Married to and martyred with Saint Maxima the Martyr in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

drowned in 304



Saint Sincheall of Killeigh


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Patrick. Founded the Killeigh monastery in Offaly, Ireland.


Died

5th century



Saint Felicitas of Padua


Profile

Nun in Padua, Italy.


Died

• 9th century

• relics in the church of Saint Justina, Padua, Italy



Saint Desiderius of Pistoia


Also known as

Dizier, Desiderio


Profile

Hermit at Pistoia, Italy. Friend of Saint Barontius of Pistoia.



Saint Theodosius


Also known as

Teodosio


Profile

Martyred with 42 companions in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

c.304 in Anatolia, Asia Minor



Saint Sabino of Anatolia


Profile

Martyred with 42 companions in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

c.304 in Anatolia, Asia Minor



Saint Bathus


Profile

Martyred along with his wife, two sons and two daughters for their faith.


Died

burned to death in their church c.370 somewhere in the Balkans



Saint Felix of Trier


Profile

Bishop of Trier, Germany in 386, consecrated by Saint Martin of Tours.


Died

c.400



Saint Wereka


Profile

Martyr.


Died

burned to death in their church c.370 somewhere in the Balkans



Saint Garbhan


Profile

Seventh century abbot at Dungarvan, Ireland.


Born

Irish



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group of Christians martyred together. The only details to survive are the names - Cassian, Jovinus, Marcian, Peter and Thecla.


Died

Rome, Italy, date unknown



Also celebrated but no entry yet


• Abepas


24 March 2023

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மார்ச் 25

 St. Harold


Born Aroldo[1]

Died 17 March 1168[2]

Gloucester, England

Venerated in Roman Catholic Church

Major shrine Gloucester

Feast 25 March



Martyred child of Gloucester, England. He was reported to have been slain by Jews in the area, and was venerated as a martyr. The veneration of the child martyrs is often considered as an example of the pervasive anti-Semitism of the period. 


Harold of Gloucester (died 1168) was a supposed child martyr who was claimed by Benedictine monks to have been ritually murdered by Jews in Gloucester, England, in 1168.[3] The claims arose in the aftermath of the circulation of the first blood libel myth following the unsolved murder of William of Norwich. A Christian cult and veneration of Harold was briefly promoted in Gloucester, but soon died out.


Context

He is one of a small group of 12th-century English unofficial saints of strikingly similar characteristics: they were all young boys, all mysteriously found dead and all hailed as martyrs to alleged anti-Christian practices among Jews. Contemporary assumptions made about the circumstances of their deaths evolved into the blood libel.[4]


The accusations following Harold's death came after widely circulated claims of Jewish ritual child-murder in the case of William of Norwich, who died in 1144. The stories created about Harold's death were followed by similar claims about Robert of Bury. The phenomenon culminated in the trials and executions occasioned by the death of Hugh of Lincoln.


Death

Harold's body was apparently found floating in a river.[5] According to Anna Sapir Abulafia, the local Benedictine monks used the discovery to claim that "the child had been spirited away by the Jews on the 21st February for them to torture him to death on the night of 16th March". They proceeded to identify marks on the body which were supposed to suggest that the child had been made to wear a crown of thorns and had been subject to some form of crucifixion.[6] All of these were features of the mythology created around the death of William of Norwich in Easter 1144.[6]


The story was given credence because Jews had apparently been congregating in Gloucester at the time for a brit milah circumcision ceremony. The ritual spilling of a child's blood in circumcision was symbolically linked in the minds of Christians to the Crucifixion.[7] Events seem to have occurred close to Easter, though inconsistencies the days and dates given in sources suggest a confusion over the year in which the events happened, which may imply a "botched attempt to force dates to fit into the Christian liturgical calendar".[7]


There is no evidence that any Jews were ever arrested or charged with a crime, which suggests that the claims began as no more than speculation after the missing local child's body was found. The accusation helped to convince Gloucester Jews to lend money to finance Richard de Clare, known as "Strongbow", in his conquest of Ireland.[8]


The story hardened into fact in later retellings.[7] The attempt to establish a cult of Harold seems to have been unsuccessful. It was never officially supported and died out long before the Reformation.[6]


Significance

According to historian Joe Hillaby, the story of Harold was never widely circulated, and was much less well-known than that of William of Norwich, but it was crucially important because it established that the mythology created around William's death could be used as a template for explaining later deaths. For the first time an unexplained child death occurring near the Easter festival was arbitrarily linked to Jews in the vicinity by local Christian churchmen: "they established a pattern quickly taken up elsewhere. Within three years the first ritual murder charge was made in France


St. Robert of Bury


Feastday: March 25

Died 1181

Gloucester, England

Venerated in Folk Catholicism

Major shrine Bury St Edmunds

Catholic cult suppressed 1536

Traditionally, a boy martyr of the Middle Ages whose death was blamed upon local Jews. He was supposedly kidnapped and murdered by Jews on Good Friday at Bury St. Edmunds, England. As was the case with other reputed victims of Jewish sacrificial rites, the story of Richard is entirely fictitious and owes its propagation to the rampant anti-Semitism of the period.




Saint Robert of Bury (died 1181) was an English boy, allegedly murdered and found in the town of Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk in 1181. His death, which occurred at a time of rising antisemitism, was blamed on local Jews.[1] Though a hagiography of Robert was written, no copies are known, so the story of his life is now unknown beyond the few fragmentary references to it that survive. His cult continued until the English Reformation.


Robert of Bury joined a small group of 12th-century English unofficial saints of strikingly similar characteristics: all young boys, all mysteriously found dead and all hailed as martyrs to alleged anti-Christian practices among Jews. Contemporary assumptions made about the circumstances of their deaths are typical of blood libel. The first of these was William of Norwich (d.1144), whose death and cult were probably an influence on the story that grew up around the death of Robert.


Cult

Tradition states that Robert was kidnapped and then killed on Good Friday 1181. By the 1190s Robert had become the focus of a martyr cult. Jocelin de Brakelond, a monk of Bury St. Edmunds, later wrote a chronicle covering this period. He also mentions writing a book about the life and miracles performed by the boy saint, but this book has not survived.[2]


Information about the circumstances of his death remains unclear. John of Taxster is the source for the date.[3] Jocelyn's surviving account, in his history of the abbey of Bury, says only "the saintly boy Robert was murdered and buried in our church; many signs and wonders were performed among the people as I have recorded elsewhere."[4] Another record merely states that he was "martyred" at Easter by Jews. A later record refers to him as "a boy crucified by the Jews".


John Lydgate wrote a poem entitled Prayer for St. Robert, which implies that the story of his death closely mirrored that of William of Norwich, in which Jews are supposed to have kidnapped the child with the help of a Judas-like Christian accomplice, tortured and then crucified him over Easter in a parody of Jesus's death.[4] Lydgate says he was "scourged and nailed to a tree". An illustration to a Latin prayer to Robert depicts him lying dead in a ditch beside a tree, with an archer nearby shooting an arrow upwards, illuminated by a giant sun. Another image shows a woman holding the child over a well with the inscription "the old woman wished, but was not able, to hide the light of God". This may be the "nurse" obliquely mentioned in Lydgate's poem, possibly the Christian accomplice. Alternatively, she may be a Jewish woman trying to hide the body after the murder.[4]


Nothing more is known about the supposed events surrounding his death, or about Robert's identity, life or family.


Significance

Historian Robert Bale argues that the cult of Robert arose because of the influence of the nearby cult of William of Norwich. Though Bury St Edmunds already held the tomb of St. Edmund the Martyr, after which the town is named, the cult of William was a rival, so a local boy-martyr was desirable if the abbey was to retain its pilgrims.[4] According to historian Joe Hillaby, the death of a boy called Harold in Gloucester in 1168 had already established that William's death could be used as a template for later unexplained deaths of male children occurring around Easter. It "established a pattern quickly taken up elsewhere. Within three years the first ritual murder charge was made in France."[5]


Bale, referring to the research of Hillaby, suggests that the cult was promoted at a time when the abbey at Norwich was attempting to assert authority over Bury. He argues that Samson of Tottington, Abbot of Bury from 1182 to 1211, decided that the town needed the cult to preserve its independence. It may have also been linked to local political rivalries, as Samson was trying to undermine his rival William the Sacrist who had business links with the town's Jews.[6]


The cult of Robert may have served as a contributing factor in the later violent attack upon the Jews of Bury St Edmunds on Palm Sunday 1190, in which fifty-seven were killed. The whole surviving Jewish community was immediately thereafter expelled from the town by order of Abbot Samson.[1] According to Bale, the cult may have paved the way for the expulsion, "demonising the Jews for the practical purpose of their removal", but not enough is known about its early history to be sure that it did not develop as a retrospective justification for the expulsion.[4]


See also

Other children whose deaths in medieval times gave rise to the persecution of the Jews:


In England

William of Norwich

Harold of Gloucester

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln

Others

Andreas Oxner

Werner of Oberwesel

Simon of Trent



Saint Nicodemus of Mammola


Also known as

• Nicodemus of Cirò

• Nicodemus of Cellerano

• Nicodemus of Kellerano

• Nicodemo of...



Additional Memorials

• 12 March (Mammola, Italy and surrounding area)

• Sunday after 12 May (founding of the Monte Cellerano monastic community)

• 1st Sunday in September (translation of relics in 1501)


Profile

Son of Theophanes and Pandia. Educated by a local priest, Father Galatone, known for his learning and piety. Even as a young man, Nicodemus was disgusted by the mis-spent lives of his contemporaries, and was drawn to the monastic life. He tried to join the monks in the San Mercurius abbey on Mount Pollino in the Calabria region of Italy; it was a hard, ascetic life for these monks, dressed in goat skins, going bare-foot in all seasons, surviving on chestnuts and lupins with a cave for shelter and some straw for a bed, and Nicodemus was initially turned away by the abbot, Saint Fantinus, who thought the young man’s health too frail for a monk‘s life. But Nicodemus persevered, and Fantinus eventually relented and welcomed him to the community. Brother monk with Saint Nilus of Rossano.


Feeling the need for greater solitude, Nicodemus withdrew to live as a hermit on Monte Cellerano in Locri, Italy. His reputation for wisdom and piety followed him, though, and he soon attracted several spiritual students, and organized them in to a colony that lived separately but met once a week. However, his community became too well known; there were too many would be students, too many lay visitors, and too many incursions by Saracen invaders. The monks dispersed to various monasteries. Nicodemus moved first to a house in Gerace, Italy, and then to a monastery near Mammola, Italy where he spent the rest of his life. His reputation for holiness was such that, upon his death, the monastery was renamed San Nicodemo in his honour.


Born

early-10th century in Cirò, Catanzaro, Italy


Died

• 25 March 990 in the monastery at Mammola, Calabria, Italy (a house then renamed San Nicodemo) of natural causes

• interred in a tomb in a small oratory at the monastery

• oratory re-built into a large church by Normans in 1080

• relics transferred to the church of Mammola in 1580

• his chapel was re-built and decorated in the city of Mammola in 1884

• relics surveyed and re-enshrined on 12 May 1922


Patronage

Mammola, Italy (proclaimed in 1630)



Saint Dismas

புனிதர் தீஸ்மாஸ் 

நல்ல கள்வன்:

இறப்பு: சுமார் 30-33 கி.பி

கொல்கொதா மலை, யெரூசலமுக்கு வெளியே

ஏற்கும் சபை/ சமயம்:

கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை:

சிலுவையில் இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவின் அருகில் அறையப்பட்டிருப்பது போல.

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மார்ச் 25

காவல்:

மரணதண்டனை விதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ள கைதிகள், சவப்பெட்டி செய்வோர்; மனம்மாறிய கள்வர்கள்;

நல்ல கள்வன் அல்லது மனம்மாறிய கள்வன் என்பவர் லூக்கா நற்செய்தியில் பெயர் குறிப்பிடப்படாமல், சிலுவையில் இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவின் இரு பக்கத்திலும் அறையப்பட்ட கள்வர்களுள் ஒருவராவார்.

பாரம்பரியப்படி இவரின் பெயர் புனிதர் தீஸ்மாஸ் ஆகும். இவர் சிலுவையில் தன் பாவங்களுக்காய் மனம் வருந்தி இயேசுவிடம் மன்னிப்பு பெற்று விண்ணகம் சென்றார் என்பது விவிலிய அடிப்படையில் கிறிஸ்தவ நம்பிக்கை ஆகும்.

விவிலியத்தில்:

இயேசுவோடு அவரின் வலப்புறம் ஒருவனும் இடப்புறம் ஒருவனுமாக இரு கள்வர்களை சிலுவைகளில் அறைந்தார்கள் என விவிலியம் கூறிகின்றது.

(மத்தேயு 27:38, மார்க் 15:27-28, லூக்கா 23:33, யோவான் 19:18).

இந்நிகழ்வை மாற்கு, ஏசாயா 53:12ல் உள்ள மறைநூல் வாக்கு நிறைவேறியதாக கூறுகின்றார்.

மத்தேயு, இரண்டு கள்வர்களுமே இயேசுவை பழித்துரைத்ததாக கூறுகின்றார் (மத்தேயு 27:44).

ஆயினும் லூக்கா பின்வருமாறு இந்நிகழ்வை விவரிக்கின்றார் : ( 23 : 39 - 43 )

39 சிலுவையில் தொங்கிக்கொண்டிருந்த குற்றவாளிகளுள் ஒருவன், "நீ மெசியாதானே! உன்னையும் எங்களையும் காப்பாற்று" என்று அவரைப் பழித்துரைத்தான். 40 ஆனால் மற்றவன் அவனைக் கடிந்து கொண்டு, "கடவுளுக்கு நீ அஞ்சுவதில்லையா? நீயும் அதே தீர்ப்புக்குத்தானே உள்ளாகி இருக்கிறாய். 41 நாம் தண்டிக்கப்படுவது முறையே. நம் செயல்களுக்கேற்ற தண்டனையை நாம் பெறுகிறோம். இவர் ஒரு குற்றமும் செய்யவில்லையே!" என்று பதிலுரைத்தான். 42 பின்பு அவன், "இயேசுவே, நீர் ஆட்சியுரிமை பெற்று வரும்போது என்னை நினைவிற்கொள்ளும்" என்றான். 43 அதற்கு இயேசு அவனிடம், "நீர் இன்று என்னோடு பேரின்ப வீட்டில் இருப்பீர் என உறுதியாக உமக்குச் சொல்கிறேன்"

Also known as

• The Good Rogue

• The Good Thief

• The Penitent Thief

• Demas, Desmas, Dimas, Dysmas, Rach, Titus, Zoatham



Memorial

25 March; date derived from a tradition that this was the calendar date of the Crucifixion, though the Passover and Easter celebrations move from year to year


Profile

One of the thieves crucified with Jesus, the other being traditionally known as Gestas; Dismas is the Good Thief, the one who rebuked the other, and asked for Christ's blessing.


An old legend from an Arabic infancy gospel says that when the Holy Family were running to Egypt, they were set upon by a band of thieves, including Dismas and Gestas. One of the highwaymen realized there was something different, something special about them, and ordered his fellow bandits to leave them alone; this thief was the young Dismas.


Died

crucified c.30 at Jerusalem


Patronage

• condemned prisoners

• death row prisoners

• dying people

• funeral directors

• penitent criminals

• prison chaplains

• prisoners

• prisoners on death row

• prisons

• reformed thieves

• undertakers

• Przemysl, Poland, archdiocese of

• Merizo, Guam


Representation

• man carrying his cross immediately behind Christ

• man crucified at Christ's right hand

• naked man, holding his cross, often with his hand on his heart to signify penitence

• tall cross




Blessed Josaphata Mykhailyna Hordashevska


Also known as

• Giosafata Hordasevska

• Michalina Jozafata Hordaszewska

• Mykhailyna Hordashevska

• Yosafata Hordashevska



Profile

Greek Catholic. Entered the contemplative Basilian Sisters at age 18. When the Basilians decided to establish a woman's congregation that focused on the active life, sister Mykhailyna was chosed to lead it. First member of the Sisters Servant of Mary Immaculate, taking the name Josaphata, from Saint Josaphat.


The Sister Servants "serve Your people where the need is greatest", teaching and caring for the sick. Josaphata founded day care centers so parents could work the fields, studied herbal medicines and compounded home-made remedies for people who could not afford physicians, and read the lives of the saints to the illiterate. She and the Sisters worked in areas of typhus and cholera epidemics, helped restore churches, and taught people to make liturgical vestments.


Because many men and women of the day could not deal with a woman as governor of a congregation, she met great opposition from laity and clergy. Lies were told about her, and her fatal disease of incredibly painful, but she confronted all it with prayer, and today the Sisters have houses in Ukraine, Canada and Brazil.


Born

20 November 1869 at Lviv, Ukraine as Mykhailyna Hordashevska


Died

• 7 April 1919 of tuberculosis of the bone in Krystynopil, Ukraine

• buried at Krystynopil

• remains transferred to a chapel at the Generalate of the Sisters Servants in Rome in November 1982


Beatified

27 June 2001 by Pope John Paul II at Ukraine




Blessed Emilian Kovch


Also known as

• Omeljan Kovc

• Emilian Kowacz



Profile

Greek Catholic. Seminarian at Lviv, Ukraine and Rome, Italy; graduated from the College of Sergius and Bachus in Rome. Married, and father of six. Ordained in 1911. Worked throughout Galacia, and with Ukrainian immigrants to Yugoslavia. Chaplain to Ukrainian soldiers fighting the Bolsheviks in 1919. Parish priest in 1922 at Peremyshliany, Ukraine, a village of 5,000, most of whom were Jewish. An active priest, he organized pilgrimages and youth groups, and welcomed poor and orphaned children of all faiths into his home.


When the Nazis invaded Ukraine, they began rounding up Jews. To save them, Father Emilian began baptizing them, and listing them as Christians. The Nazis were wise to this trick, and had prohibited it. Emilian continued, but was arrested by the Gestapo in December 1942. Deported to the Majdanek concentration camp in August 1943. There he ministered to prisoners, hearing confessions, and celebrating Mass when possible. Martyred in the ovens.


Recognized on 9 September 1999 as a Righteous Ukrainian by the Jewish Council of Ukraine.


Born

20 August 1884 near Kosiv, Ivano-Frankivs'ka oblast, Ukraine


Died

gassed and burned on 25 March 1944 in the ovens of the Nazi death camp at Majdanek, Lubelskie, Poland


Beatified

27 June 2001 by Pope John Paul II at Ukraine




Saint Lucia Filippini

புனிதர் லூஸி ஃபிலிப்பினி 

நிறுவனர்:

பிறப்பு: ஜனவரி 16, 1672

கொர்நெடோ-டர்குய்நியா, இத்தாலி

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 25, 1732 (வயது 60)

மோண்டேஃபியாஸ்கோன், இத்தாலி

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

அருளாளர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 13, 1926

திருத்தந்தை பதினொன்றாம் பயஸ்

புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 22, 1930

திருத்தந்தை பதினொன்றாம் பயஸ்

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

மோண்டேஃபியாஸ்கோன் பேராலயம்

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 25

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் புனிதரான லூஸி ஃபிலிப்பினி, இத்தாலியின் "மோண்டேஃபியாஸ்கோன்" (Corneto-Tarquinia) எனுமிடத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவரது தந்தை பெயர் "ஃபிலிப்போ ஃபிலிப்பினி" (Filippo Filippini) ஆகும். தாயாரின் பெயர் "மட்டலேனா பிச்சி" (Maddalena Picchi) ஆகும். தமது பெற்றோரின் ஐந்தாவது - கடைக்குட்டி குழந்தையாகப் பிறந்த இவர், சிறு வயதிலேயே அனாதையானார்.

தமது ஆறு வயதில் பிரபுத்துவ வசதி படைத்த தமது அத்தை மாமன் வீட்டிலிருந்து கல்வி கற்க சென்றார். அவர்கள் அவரை ஆன்மீக கல்வி கற்க பரிந்துரை செய்தனர். லூஸியும் "சான்ட லூஸியா" (Santa Lucia) "பெனடிக்டைன் அருட்சகோதரியர்" (Benedictine nuns) இல்லத்தில் இணைந்தார்.

புனிதர் லூஸி ஃபிலிப்பினியின் பணிகள் கர்தினால் "மார்கண்டோனியோ பார்பாரிகோ" (Marcantonio Barbarigo) என்பவரின் பாதுகாவலுடன் தொடங்கின. அவர், லூஸியை ஏழை இளம் பெண்களுக்கான பள்ளிகளை நிறுவ உந்தினார். புனிதர் "ரோஸ் வெனேரினியுடன்" (St. Rose Venerini) இணைந்து இளம்பெண்களுக்கு ஆசிரியர் பயிற்சியளிக்கும் பள்ளியொன்றையும் தொடங்கினார். நகரின் ஏழைப்பெண்களுக்கு உள்நாட்டுக் கலை, நெசவு, எம்ப்ராய்டரி, வாசிப்பு, மற்றும் கிறிஸ்தவ கோட்பாடுகளை கற்பித்தனர்.

பன்னிரண்டு வருடங்களின் பிறகு, கர்தினால் இவர்களுக்கான ஆன்மீக விதிகளின் தொகுப்பை திட்டமிட்டு உருவாக்கி கொடுத்தார். லூஸி தமது வாழ்நாளில் மொத்தம் ஐம்பத்திரண்டு பள்ளிகளை கட்டி, நிறுவி, நடத்தினார். 1707ம் ஆண்டு, திருத்தந்தை பதினொன்றாம் கிளமென்ட் (Clement XI) லூஸியை ரோம் நகருக்கு அழைத்தார். திருத்தந்தை அவர்கள் தாமே நிறுவி தமது விசேஷ பாதுகாப்பில் வைத்திருந்த பள்ளிகளை நடத்திட லூஸியை அழைத்தார்.

இவர் நிறுவிய பள்ளிகள் 1910ம் ஆண்டிலிருந்து திருத்தந்தையின் ஒப்புதல் பெற்ற பள்ளிகளாக அறிவிக்கப்பட்டு செயல்பட்டது.

தமது அறுபது வயதில் மார்பக புற்றுநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட லூஸி 1732ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 25ம் நாளன்று மரணமடைந்தார்.

Also known as

Lucy Filippini



Profile

Orphaned when very young. Worked under Blessed Rose Venerini to train schoolmistresses. Founded the Religious Teachers Filippini, a group devoted to the education of young girls. Founded several schools throughout Italy. Called to Rome, Italy by Pope Clement XI in 1707 to establish the first school there. Victim of a number of illnesses and ailments throughout her life.


Born

13 January 1672 at Cornetto, Tuscany, Italy


Died

• 25 March 1732 of cancer at Montefiascone, Italy

• buried at the Cathedral of Montefiascone


Canonized

22 June 1930 by Pope Pius XI


Patronage

Religious Teachers Filippini




Blessed Pawel Januszewski


Also known as

Father Hilary Januszewski



Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Son of Martin and Marianne Januszewski. Pawel studied at colleges in Greblin, Suchary and Krakow in Poland. Joined the Carmelites of the Ancient Observance in 1927 at age 20, taking the name Hilary, and beginning his novitiate in Lviv (in modern Ukraine). He studied philosophy in Krakow, then theology at the International College of Saint Albert in Rome, Italy. Ordained a priest on 15 July 1934. Recognized for academic excellence while studying at the Academy of Saint Thomas in Rome. Assigned to the Carmel in Krakow, Poland in 1935. Professor of Dogmatic Theology and Church History in Krakow. Prior of the Krakow Carmelite community on 1 November 1939. Arrested, deported and imprisoned in December 1940 in the Nazi persecutions, having offered himself in exchange for an older brother who was very ill. Imprisoned in Krakow, the Sachsenchausen concentration camp, and finally in the Dachau concentration camp in April 1941. Imprisoned with Blessed Titus Brandsma, the two often spent time in prayer together. Father Hilary ministered to other prisoners where he could, dying of typhus contracted by caring for the sick. Martyr.


Born

11 June 1907 in Krajenki, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland as Pawel Januszewski


Died

• 25 March 1945 in prisoner cabin 25 in the Dachau concentration camp, Oberbayern, Germany of typhus

• his body was still in the cabin when Allied troops liberated the camp a few days later

• body cremated in the Dachau crematorium


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II in Warsaw, Poland



Saint Margaret Clitherow


Also known as

• Margaret Clitheroe

• Margaret Middleton

• Margarita, Margherita, Marguerite

• the Pearl of York



Additional Memorial

25 October as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales


Profile

Daughter of Thomas and Jane Middleton, a candle maker and the Sheriff of York for two years. Raised Anglican. Married to John Clitherow, wealthy butcher and chamberlain of the city of York, on 8 July 1571. Converted to Catholicism around 1574. Imprisoned several times for her conversion, for sheltering priests (including her husband's brother), and for permitting clandestine Masses to be celebrated on her property. During her trial in Tyburn, London, England on 14 March 1586, she refused to answer any of the charges for fear of incriminating her servents and children; both her sons became priests, her daughter a nun.


Born

1556 at York, England as Margaret Middleton


Died

• pressed to death on Good Friday, 25 March 1586 at York, England

• right hand preserved at Saint Mary's Convent, York


Canonized

25 October 1970 by Pope Paul VI


Patronage

• businesswomen

• converts

• martyrs




Blessed Placido Riccardi


Also known as

• Tommaso Riccardi

• Thomas Riccardi


Additional Memorials

• 14 March (Saint-Paul-Outside-the-Walls Abbey, Rome, Italy)

• 5 December (Sylvestrines)



Profile

Spent a worldly youth in Umbria, Italy. He moved to Rome, Italy in 1865 to study philosophy under the Dominicans at the Angelicum College. The study led to a conversion experience, a pilgrimage to Loreto, and entry to the Cassinese Benedictine abbey of Saint-Paul-Outside-the-Walls in Rome on 12 November 1866; he made his final profession on 19 January 1868, taking the name Placido. As a deacon he was arrested as a draft dodger for not joining the Italian army; he was imprisoned in Florence, Italy and then sent to the 57th Infantry Regiment in Livorno, Italy. Released, he returned to Rome to resume his studies and was ordained on 25 March 1871. Spiritual teacher whose students include Blessed Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster. Contracted malaria in 1881, and suffered from the disease for the rest of his life, sometimes to the point of paralysis from the fever. Assigned to the San Pietro monastery in Perugia, Italy in 1882, and served a spiritual director. Served as a rector to Benedictines in Rome in 1887. Rector of the Basilica of Santa Maria di Farfa in Rome in 1894; he lived in a hermitage near the castle of San Fiano and served as confessor to a nearby convent of Poor Clare nuns.


Born

24 June 1844 in Trevi, Umbria, Italy as Tommaso Riccardi


Died

• 25 March 1915 in Rome, Italy of natural causes

• relics transferred to Farfa, Italy in 1925


Beatified

5 December 1954 by Pope Pius XII



Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 இயேசு பிறப்பின் முன்னறிவிப்பு 

திருவிழா நாள்: மார்ச் 25

இயேசு பிறப்பின் முன்னறிவிப்பு அல்லது மங்கள வார்த்தை அறிவிப்பு என்பது லூக்கா நற்செய்தி 1:26-38ல் உள்ளபடி கபிரியேல் தேவதூதர், கன்னி மரியாளுக்கு தோன்றி, அவர் தூய ஆவியினால் கருவுற்று ஒரு மகனைப் பெற்று இயேசுவின் தாயாவார் என்பதனை அறிவித்த நிகழ்வாகும். இந்த நிகழ்வின்போதே மரியாளிடம் கபிரியேல் தூதர் பிறக்கவிருக்கும் குழந்தைக்கு, இயேசு என பெயரிடச்சொன்னார். மேலும், திருமுழுக்கு யோவானின் பிறப்பையும் மரியாளிடம் எடுத்தியம்பினார். மரியாளின் உறவினராகிய எலிசபெத்தும் தமது முதிர்ந்த வயதில் ஒரு மகனைக் கருத்தரித்திருக்கிறார் எனவும் கருவுற இயலாதவர் என்று சொல்லப்பட்ட அவருக்கு இது ஆறாம் மாதம் எனவும் கபிரியேல் மரியாளுக்கு அறிவித்தார்.

பல கிறிஸ்தவ பிரிவுகள் இந்நிகழ்வை மார்ச் 25ம் நாளன்று கொண்டாடுகின்றனர். இது இயேசு பிறப்புக்கு ஒன்பது மாதங்களுக்கு முன் என்பதுவும் இது இயேசுவின் பாடுகளின் காலத்தில் நிகழ்கின்றது என்பதும் குறிக்கத்தக்கது. இத்தேதியினை முதன் முதலில் இவ்விழாவுக்கென கொண்டவர் இரனேயு (காலம்.130-202) ஆவார்.

முக்காலத்தில் சம இரவு-பகல் நாளினை ஒட்டி இவ்விழா நிகழ்ந்ததால், இது புத்தாண்டாக பல நாடுகளில் கொண்டாடப்பட்டது. கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையினரால் இந்நிகழ்வு முன்னறிவிப்பு பேராலயத்தில் நடந்ததாக நம்பப்படுகின்றது. ஆயினும் பிற கிறிஸ்தவ சபைகளிடையே இது குறித்த ஒத்த கருத்தில்லை.

கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையில், இயேசு பிறப்பின் முன்னறிவிப்பு நிகழ்வு, செபமாலையின் மகிழ்ச்சி மறைபொருள்களின் முதல் மறைபொருள் ஆகும்.

Also known as

• Annunciation of the Lord

• Annuntiatio Christi

• Annuntiatio Dominica

• Annuntiatio Mariae

• Annuntio Domini

• Christ's conception

• Christ's incarnation

• Conceptio Christi

• Feast of the Incarnation

• Festum Incarnationis

• Incarnation Christi

• Initium Redemptionis Conceptio Christi

• Mary's Annunciation



Profile

The annunciation to the Blessed Virgin Mary by Gabriel the Archangel that she was to be the Mother of God (Luke 1), the Word being made flesh through the power of the Holy Spirit. The feast probably originated about the time of the Council of Ephesus, c.431, and is first mentioned in the Sacramentary of Pope Gelasius (died 496). The Annunciation is represented in art by many masters, among them Fra Angelico, Hubert Van Eyck, Jan Van Eyck, Ghirlandajo, Holbein the Elder, Lippi, Pinturicchio, and Del Sarto.


Name Meaning

Latin: ad, to; nuntius, messenger


Patronage

• news dealers

• Texas

• 2 dioceses

• 13 cities




Blessed Tommaso of Costacciaro


Additional Memorial

1st Sunday of September (Costacciaro, Italy)


Profile

After a visit to a Camaldolese hermitage in 1270, Tommaso was drawn to the monastic and eremetical life. Camaldolese monk in the abbey of Santa Maria in Sitria, Italy. Hermit on Monte Cucco in the Umbria region of Italy for over 60 years, living a life of utter poverty and denial in order to spend all his time in prayer and meditation.



Born

mid-13th century in the castle of San Savino, Costacciaro, Umbria, diocese of Gubbio, Italy


Died

• 25 March 1337 on Monte Cucco, Umbria, Italy of natural causes

• buried at the Franciscan Conventual church in Costacciaro, Italy

• relics enshrined under the main altar of the church in 1546


Beatified

• Pope Clement VIII (cultus confirmation)

• a list of miracles attributed to his intercession was compiled in 1726

• a list of miracles attributed to his intercession was compiled in 1748

• 18 March 1778 by Pope Pius VI (cultus extended to the diocese of Gubbio, Italy)

• 1833 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus extended to the Camaldolese)


Patronage

• against abdominal diseases

• Costacciaro, Italy



Blessed Margaretha Flesch


Also known as

Margaret, Maria Rosa


Profile

Daughter of an oil-seed miller, the oldest of seven children. When her parents died, Margaretha worked as a day labourer to help support her siblings. In 1861, she and her sister Marianne moved into quarters at the Chapel of the Holy Cross in Waldbreitbach, Germany, trusting God for their daily bread and working with the poor and sick, caring for orphans, and teaching home management at local schools. Other women were attracted to the work and formed the foundation of the Franciscan Sisters of the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Angels. Margaretha took her vows in her new congregation in the chapel of the Holy Cross on 13 March 1863, taking the name Sister Mary Rose. Mother Rose spent the rest of her life as superior of the Sisters, and by her death there were 900 sisters in 72 mission houses serving the sick and poor.



Born

24 February 1826 in Schönstatt bei Vallendar, Mayen-Koblenz, Germany


Died

25 March 1906 in Waldbreitbach, Neuwied, Germany of natural causes


Beatified

4 May 2008 by Pope Benedict XVI




Saint Humbert of Pelagius


Also known as

• Humbert of Marolles

• Humbert of Maroilles


Additional Memorial

6 September (translation of relics)



Profile

Born to the nobility, the son of Blessed Evrard and Popita. He was a pious youth, and became Benedictine monk at Laon, France while still a very young man. Priest.


When his parents died, Humbert returned to the world to manage their estate. He took in Saint Amand of Maastricht as a visitor, became his spiritual student, and made a pilgrimage with him to Rome. He retired to Amand‘s abbey at Elnone to live as a prayerful monk. Co-founded and richly endowed the monastery of Maroilles on the Hespres in Flanders, and became its first abbot. Friend of Saint Aldegundis and Saint Cunibert of Maroilles


Born

early 7th century at Mezieres-sur-Oise, France


Died

c.680


Representation

• man with an angel showing him the Cross

• man with an angel making a cross on his brow

• man with a star on his forehead

• man with a bear carrying his baggage



Saint Procopius


Profile

Born to a Christian family in recently converted Bohemia. Eastern Rite priest c.1003. Monk in the area of modern Hungary. Hermit. Returned to Bohemia in 1029 where he lived as a hermit in the Sazava Valley. His reputation for holiness attracted the attention of the locals and then of Duke Oldrich. With the duke's support he founded an Eastern Rite monastery under the Benedictine and Basilian Rules, and served the rest of his life as its first abbot; the house survived over 700 years. Reported miracle worker and healer. Legend says that Procopius once hitched the devil to a plow and forced the otherwise useless creature to plow a trench along a river bank.



Born

c.980 at Kourim, Chotoun, Bohemia


Died

25 March 1053 at Sazava, Bohemia of natural causes


Canonized

• 2 June 1204 by Pope Innocent III

• recognition celebrated by Cardinal Guido of San Maria de Trastevere


Patronage

• Czech Republic

• farmers




Saint Mariam Sultaneh Danil Ghattas



Also known as

• Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas

• Maryam Sultanah Danil Ghattas

• Maria Alfonsina Danil Ghattas



Profile

Joined the Congregation of Saint Joseph of the Apparition at age 14. Nun. Following a vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary she received in Bethlehem, she co-founded the Rosary Sisters (Sisters of the Holy Rosary of Jerusalem of the Latins; Congregation of the Sisters of the Most Holy Rosary of Jerusalem). Spent her life working for the poor and the education of Palestinian Christians, and her Sisters continue that work today.


Born

4 October 1843 in Jerusalem


Died

25 March 1927 at Ain Karim, Jerusalem


Canonized

17 May 2015 by Pope Francis




Blessed James Bird


Also known as

• James Byrd

• James Beard


Profile

Lay man in the apostolic vicariate of England, raised as a Protestant and converting to Catholicism at age 19. Considered entering the Douai seminary in Rheims, France, but decided against it and returned to England. He refused to take the Oath of Sumpremacy and was executed for his loyalty to the Church.


Born

1574 at Winchester, Hampshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 25 March 1592 at Winchester, Hampshire, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Blessed Everard of Nellenburg


Also known as

Eberhard VI of Nellenburg



Profile

Born to the nobility. Count of Nellenberg, Swabia (in modern Germany). Married to Blessed Ita of Nellenberg. Founded the Benedictine monastery of Allerheiligen (All Saints) in Schaffhausen, Swabia, c.1049, built and provisioned it, and c.1070 entered it as a monk.


Born

c.1015


Died

1078 in Schaffhausen, Swabia, Germany of natural causes



Saint Quirinus of Rome


Also known as

• Quirinus of Tegernsee

• Cyrinus, Quirino


Additional Memorial

16 June (translation of relics)


Profile

Friend of Saint Marius and Saint Martha. Martyred in the persecutions of Claudius II.


Died

• martyred c.269 in Rome, Italy

• buried by Saint Marius and Saint Martha

• relics translated to the Benedictine abbey of Tegernsee in Bavaria, Germany in the 8th century


Representation

• orb

• sceptre



Saint Mona of Milan


Also known as

Monas


Profile

3rd–4th century bishop of Milan, Italy.


Died

• 25 March in he early 4th century of natural causes

• buried in the Basilica Fausta in Milan, Italy, later known as the church of San Vitale

• relics transferred to the cathedral in Milan on 6 February 1576 by Saint Charles Borromeo



Saint Hermenland


Also known as

Erblon, Herbland, Hermeland, Hermiland



Profile

Royal cup-bearer in his youth. Monk at Fontenelle under Saint Lambert. Priest. With twelve brother monks, he established an abbey on an island at Aindre on the Loire, and served as its first abbot.


Born

at diocese of Noyon, France


Died

c.720



Saint Kennocha of Fife


Also known as

Kyle, Enoch


Profile

The only daughter of a wealthy family, she rejected the worldly life and a series of suitors, feeling a call to a life of prayer. Nun at Fife, Scotland. Miracle worker. Highly venerated in the area of Glasgow, Scotland.


Born

Scottish


Died

1007 of natural causes



Blessed Herman of Zahringen


Also known as

• Herman I of Baden

• Herman I, Margrave of Baden


Profile

A member of the nobility, he was the Margrave of Zahringen, but gave up the position to become a Benedictine monk at Cluny Abbey in France.


Died

1074 of natural causes



Saint Alfwold of Sherborne


Also known as

Ælfwold


Profile

Monk in Winchester, England. Bishop of Sherborne, England in 1045. Had a great devotion to Saint Cuthbert and Saint Swithun.


Died

1058 of natural causes while singing the antiphon of Saint Cuthbert



Saint Matrona of Thessaloniki


Profile

Christian slave with a Jewish "owner". When the lady of the house caught Matrona going to Mass, she was abused, tortured and eventally killed. Martyr.


Died

beaten to death c.350 in Thessaloniki, Macedonia (in modern Greece)



Saint Matrona of Barcelona


Also known as

Madrona



Additional Memorial

15 March (Barcelona, Spain)


Profile

Girl martyred in Rome, Italy, date unknown.



Saint Dula the Slave


Profile

Christian slave of a pagan soldier in Nicomedia in Asia Minor. Died fighting off a rape attempt by her "owner".


Representation

dead young woman being watched over by a dog



Saint Pelagius of Laodicea


Profile

Bishop of Laodicea. Fought Arianism; exiled by the Arian emperor Valens, but recalled by Gratian. Attended the Council of Constantinople in 381.



262 Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group 262 Christians martyred together. We know nothing else about them, not even their names.


Died

in Rome, Italy



Also celebrated but no entry yet


• Our Lady of Betania

• Arnold de Amar

• Columba, Daughter of Baoit

• Francis Bruno

• Isaac the Patriarch

• Nicodemus of Mammoth

• Peter Formica

• Richard of Pontoise