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25 October 2024

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் அக்டோபர் 26

  St. Quodvultdeus

Feast

26 October (Roman calendar); 

8 January (calendar of Carthage); 

19 February (calendar of Naples)

Death: ~450



Quodvultdeus (Latin for "what God wills", died c. 450 AD) was a fifth-century church father and bishop of Carthage who was exiled to Naples. He was known to have been living in Carthage around 407 and became a deacon in 421 AD. He corresponded with Augustine of Hippo, who served as Quodvultdeus' spiritual teacher.[1] Augustine also dedicated some of his writings to Quodvultdeus.[1]

Quodvultdeus was exiled when Carthage was captured by the Vandals led by King Genseric, who followed Arianism. Tradition states that he and other churchmen (such as Gaudiosus of Naples) were loaded onto leaky ships that landed at Naples around 439 AD and Quodvultdeus established himself in Italy.[1] He would go on to convert dozens of Arian Goths to the Catholic Faith in his lifetime.

One of the mosaic burial portraits in the Galleria dei Vescovi in the Catacombs of San Gennaro depicts Quodvultdeus


St. Evaristus

 புனிதர் எவரிஸ்டஸ் 

ஐந்தாம் திருத்தந்தை:

பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 17, 44

பெத்லகேம், யூதேயா

இறப்பு: கி.பி சுமார் 107

ரோமை, ரோமப் பேரரசு

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

இயற்பெயர்: எவரிஸ்டஸ் (அல்லது) அரிஸ்டஸ்

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 26

புனிதர் எவரிஸ்டஸ் அல்லது அரிஸ்டஸ் (Aristus) கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் ஐந்தாம் திருத்தந்தையாவார். திருத்தந்தை புனிதர் “முதலாம் கிளமெண்ட்” (Pope Clement I) இவருக்கு முன்னர் திருத்தந்தையாகப் பதவியிலிருந்தவராவார். திருத்தந்தை புனிதர் “முதலாம் அலெக்சாண்டர்” (Pope Alexander I) இவருக்குப் பிறகு ஆட்சியிலிருந்தவராவார். தொடக்க கால கிறிஸ்தவ அறிஞர்களான இரனேயுஸ் மற்றும் செசரேயா யூசேபியஸ் (Eusebius) இச்செய்தியைத் தருகின்றனர்.

எவரிஸ்டஸ் என்னும் பெயர் கிரேக்க மொழியில் "இனிமை மிக்கவர்" என்று பொருள்படும்.

வாழ்க்கைக் குறிப்புகள்:

திருத்தந்தை எவரிஸ்டஸின் ஆட்சிக்காலம் குறித்து ஒத்த கருத்து இல்லை. "திருச்சபை வரலாறு" என்னும் நூலில் யூசேபியஸ் அந்த ஆட்சிக்காலம் கி.பி. 99 முதல் கி.பி. 108 வரை நீடித்தது என்கிறார். "லிபேரியன் குறிப்பேடு" என்னும் நூல் எவரிஸ்டஸின் பெயரை "அரிஸ்டஸ்" என்று குறிப்பிடுவதோடு, அவரது ஆட்சிக்காலம் கி.பி. 96 முதல் கி.பி. 108 வரை தொடர்ந்ததாகக் கூறுகிறது.

"திருத்தந்தையர் நூல்" (Liber Pontificalis) என்னும் ஏடு தருகின்ற கீழ்வரும் செய்திகள் உறுதிப்படுத்தப்படவில்லை. அதன்படி, கிரேக்கப் பின்னணியைச் சார்ந்த எவரிஸ்டஸ், யூதத் தந்தைக்கு பெத்லகேமில் மகனாகப் பிறந்தார். மறைச்சாட்சியாக உயிர் துறந்தார். ரோமத் திருச்சபையைப் பல பங்குகளாகப் பிரித்து குருக்களை நியமித்தார். 15 ஆயர்களையும் 17 குருக்களையும் 2 திருத்தொண்டர்களையும் ஏற்படுத்தினார்.

மேற்கூறிய ஏடு குறிப்பிடுவது போல, எவரிஸ்டஸ், புனித பேதுருவின் கல்லறையின் அருகே அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார் என்று உறுதியாகத் தெரிகிறது. அவரது பணியிடம் 19 நாள்கள் வெறுமையாய் இருந்தது.

ரோமத் திருச்சபையின் முதல் திருத்தந்தையர்களின் பெயர்கள் திருப்பலியின் நற்கருணை மன்றாட்டில் இருக்க, எவரிஸ்டஸின் பெயர் மட்டும் அங்கு காணப்படவில்லை. இதிலிருந்து, இத்திருத்தந்தை பற்றிய உறுதியான வரலாற்றுச் செய்திகள் தெரியாத நிலை திருச்சபை வரலாற்றின் முதல் நூற்றாண்டுகளிலிருந்தே நிலவி வந்துள்ளது எனத் தெரிகிறது.

புனிதராகப் போற்றப்படுதல்:

எவரிஸ்டஸ் எவ்வாறு மறைச்சாட்சியாக உயிர்துறந்தார் என்பது பற்றியும் உறுதிப்பாடு இல்லை. கத்தோலிக்கம் மற்றும் கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபைகள் இவரை புனிதராகப் போற்றுகின்றன. இவர்தம் நினைவுத் திருவிழா அக்டோபர் 26 ஆகும். 1969ம் ஆண்டிலிருந்து இவரது பெயர் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் பொது நாள்காட்டியில் மறைச்சாட்சிகள் பட்டியலிலிருந்து அகற்றப்பட்டு, இப்போது தனி நாள்காட்டியில் மட்டுமே உள்ளது.

Papacy began c. 99

Papacy ended c. 107

Predecessor Clement I

Successor Alexander I

Personal details

Born Bethlehem, Judea

Died c. 107

Rome, Roman Empire

Sainthood

Feast day 26 October

Pope Evaristus was the bishop of Rome from c. 99 to his death c. 107.[1][2] He was also known as Aristus and is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church,[3] the Catholic Church, and Oriental Orthodoxy. It is likely that John the Apostle died during his reign period, marking the end of the Apostolic Age.


Biography

According to the Liber Pontificalis, he was born to a family of Greek Jews in Bethlehem; His father was named Judah.[4] He was elected during the reign of the Roman emperor Trajan, and succeeded Clement I in the See of Rome. He has divided the titles among the priests in the city of Rome, and ordained seven deacons to keep the bishop preaching, on account of the style of truth.

According to the book Sullivan, Reverend John F. (1918). The Externals of the Catholic Church. Aeterna Press. Evaristus decreed that “in accordance with Apostolic tradition marriage should be celebrated publicly and with the blessing of the priest”.

Eusebius, in his Church History IV, I, stated that Evaristus died in the 12th year of the reign of Emperor Trajan after holding the office of bishop of the Romans for eight years.

Liber Pontificalis further describes him as the one "crowned with martyrdom".[5] The same is indicated also by the book "The lives and times of the popes".[6] However, in the Roman Martyrology he is listed without the martyr title, with a feast day on 26 October.[7]

Pope Evaristus is buried near the body of Saint Peter in the Vatican, in the Saint Peter's tomb under the Saint Peter's Basilica


St. Demetrius of Thessaloniki


Feastday: October 26

Patron: of Thessaloniki, Greece patron of soldiers, patron of the Crusades

Birth: 270

Death: 306


Saint Demetrius (or Demetrios) of Thessalonica (Greek: Ἅγιος Δημήτριος τῆς Θεσσαλονίκης, Hágios Dēmḗtrios tēs Thessaloníkēs[a]), also known as the Holy Great-Martyr Demetrius the Myroblyte (meaning 'the Myrrh-Gusher' or 'Myrrh-Streamer';[b] 3rd century – 306), was a Greek Christian martyr of the early 4th century AD.

During the Middle Ages, he came to be revered as one of the most important Orthodox military saints, often paired with Saint George of Lydda. His feast day is 26 October for Eastern Orthodox Christians, which falls on 8 November [NS] for those following the old calendar. In the Roman Catholic church he is most commonly called "Demetrius of Sermium" and his memorial falls on 8 October.

Veneration of sainthood and celebrations


Relics of Saint Demetrius at the Hagios Demetrios Basilica in Thessaloniki

Most historical scholars follow the hypothesis put forward by Bollandist Hippolyte Delehaye (1859–1941), that his veneration was transferred from Sirmium[5] when Thessaloniki replaced it as the main military base in the area in 441/442 AD. His very large church in Thessaloniki, the Hagios Demetrios, dates from the mid-5th century.[6] Thessaloniki remained a centre of his veneration, and he is the patron saint of the city.


After the growth of his veneration as saint, the city of Thessaloniki suffered repeated attacks and sieges from the Slavic peoples who moved into the Balkans, and Demetrius was credited with many miraculous interventions to defend the city. Hence later traditions about Demetrius regard him as a soldier in the Roman army, and he came to be regarded as an important military martyr. Unsurprisingly, he was extremely popular in the Middle Ages. Disputes between Bohemond I of Antioch and Alexios I Komnenos appear to have resulted in Demetrius being appropriated as patron saint of crusading.[7]


Demetrius was also venerated as patron of agriculture, peasants and shepherds in the Greek countryside during the Middle Ages. According to historian Hans Kloft, he had inherited this role from the pagan goddess Demeter. After the demise of the Eleusinian Mysteries, Demeter's cult, in the 4th century, the Greek rural population had gradually transferred her rites and roles onto the Christian saint Demetrius.[2]


Most scholars still believe that for four centuries after his death, Demetrius had no physical relics, and in their place an unusual empty shrine called the "ciborium" was built inside Hagios Demetrios. What were purported to be his remains subsequently appeared in Thessaloniki, but the local archbishop John, who compiled the first book of the Miracles ca. 610, was publicly dismissive of their authenticity.[8] The relics were assumed to be genuine after they started emitting a liquid and strong-scented myrrh. This gave Demeterius the epithet Myroblyte.[3][c]


15th-century icon of St Demetrius (Russian State Museum, Saint Petersburg)

In the Russian Orthodox Church, the Saturday before the Feast of Saint Demetrius is a memorial day commemorating the soldiers who fell in the Battle of Kulikovo (1380), under the leadership of Demetrius of the Don. This day is known as Demetrius Saturday.[10] Demetrius was a patron saint of the Rurik dynasty from the late 11th century on. Izyaslav I of Kiev (whose Christian name was Dimitry) founded the first East Slavic monastery dedicated to this saint.

The Bulgarian Orthodox Church and the Romanian Orthodox Church revere Demetrius on 26 October (Димитровден Dimitrovden in Bulgarian); meanwhile the Serbian Orthodox Church and Macedonian Orthodox Church (Ohrid) and the Coptic Church have a feast on 8 November (called Митровдан in Serbian and Митровден in Macedonian).

The names Dimitry (Russian), Dimitar (Bulgarian), Mitri (short form of Dimitri in Lebanon) are in common use.

The hagiographic cycles of the Great Martyr Demetrius of Thessaloniki include depictions of scenes from his life and his posthumous miracles.[11] Demetrius was initially depicted in icons and mosaics as a young man in patterned robes with the distinctive tablion of the senatorial class across his chest. Miraculous military interventions were attributed to him during several attacks on Thessaloniki, and he gradually became thought of as a soldier: a Constantinopolitan ivory of the late 10th century shows him as an infantry soldier (Metropolitan Museum of Art). But an icon of the late 11th century in Saint Catherine's Monastery on Mount Sinai shows him as before, still a civilian. In Byzantine icons he is depicted in military dress, either standing or riding a horse.[12]


Another Sinai icon, of the Crusader period and painted by a French artist working in the Holy Land in the second half of the 12th century, shows what then became the most common depiction. Demetrius, bearded, rather older, and on a red horse, rides together with George, unbearded and on a white horse.[13] Both are dressed as cavalrymen. Also, while George is often shown spearing a dragon, Demetrius is depicted spearing the gladiator Lyaeus (Λυαίος Lyaíos), who according to story was responsible for killing many Christians. Lyaeus is commonly depicted below Demetrius and lying supine, having already been defeated; Lyaeus is traditionally drawn much smaller than Demetrius. In traditional hagiography, Demetrius did not directly kill Lyaeus, but rather through his prayers the gladiator was defeated by Demetrius' disciple, Nestor.[11]

A modern Greek iconographic convention depicts Demetrius with the Great White Tower in the background. The anachronistic White Tower acts as a symbolic depiction of the city of Thessaloniki, despite having been built in the 16th century, centuries after his life, and the exact architecture of the older tower that stood at the same site in earlier times is unknown. Again, iconography often depicts saints holding a church or protecting a city.

According to hagiographic legend, as retold by Dimitry of Rostov in particular, Demetrius appeared in 1207 in the camp of tsar Kaloyan of Bulgaria, piercing the king with a lance and so killing him. This scene, known as Чудо о погибели царя Калояна ("the miracle of the destruction of tsar Kaloyan") became a popular element in the iconography of Demetrius. He is shown on horseback piercing the king with his spear,[14] paralleling the iconography (and often shown alongside) of Saint George and the Dragon.


Blessed José Gregorio Hernandez-Cisneros


Memorial Note

his memorial would traditionally been on 29 June, but it was changed so as to not conflict with the solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul celebrated on that day



Profile

The eldest of six children born to Benigno María Hernández Manzaneda and Josefa Antonia Cisneros Mansilla; he was baptized on 30 January 1865 and confirmed on 6 December 1867. Beginning at age 18, he studied medicine at the University of Caracas, Venezuela, graduating on 29 June 1888, and then in Paris, France and Berlin, Germany. Feeling called to religious life, José joined the Secular Franciscans on 7 December 1899, and began investigating becoming a Carthusian monk. After some theology studies in Rome, Italy, he was forced to return to Caracas for health reasons. José took this as a sign that he should give up the idea of religious life, and serve an apostolate as a physician. That’s how he spent the rest of his life - single, celibate, prayerful and dedicated to caring for the poor for free.


Born

26 October 1864 in Isnotú, Trujillo, Venezuela


Died

• hit by a car on 29 June 1919 in Caracas, Venezuela while delivering medications he had purchased for an elderly patient

• relics enshrined in the church of Our Lady of Candelaria in Caracas


Beatified

• 30 April 2021 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela, Apostolic Nuncio Aldo Giordano presiding

• his beatification miracle involved the healing of Yaxury Solorzano, a 10 year old girl in the diocese of San Fernando de Apure, Venezuela who had been shot in the head with a shotgun during an armed robbery on 10 March 2017; she was badly injured, with pellets in her brain; because there was delay in obtaining a neurosurgeon, her mother began to pray for the intercession of then Venerable José Gregorio; the girl improved, surgery was cancelled and she was released a few days later in good health



Blessed Damian dei Fulcheri


Also known as

• Damian of Finario

• Damian of Fulcheri

• Damian of Finale

• Damian of Finarium

• Damiano, Damianus



Profile

Born to wealthy Italian nobility. When he was kidnapped as an infant by a mentally ill man, his parents prayed fervently to the Virgin Mary for help; searchers were led to his hiding place by a miraculous light, and the baby was returned unharmed. Damien joined the Dominicans at Savona, Italy. Priest. Famous preacher throughout Italy with hundreds converted during his missions. Known as a miracle worker in life, there were miracles reported at his tomb, and he became the object of popular devotion almost immediately on his death.


Born

at Fulcheri, Liguria, Italy


Died

1484 at Modena, Reggio d'Emilia, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

4 August 1848 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmed)



Saint Alfred the Great

 புனிதர் முதலாம் ஆல்ஃபிரட் 

ஆங்கிலோ-சாக்ஸன் இன அரசர்:

ஆட்சிகாலம்: ஏப்ரல் 23, 871 - அக்டோபர் 26, 899

இவருக்கு முன்னர் பதவி வகித்தவர்: எத்தெல்பெர்ட் (Æthelred)

இவருக்குப் பிறகு பதவி வகித்தவர்: மூத்த எட்வர்ட் (Edward the Elder)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 849

வேன்டேஜ், பெர்க்ஷயர்

இறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 26, 899 (வயது சுமார் 50)

வின்செஸ்டர் (Winchester)

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 26

பேரரசர் ஆல்ஃபிரட், ஆங்கிலோ - சாக்சான் அரசின், (Anglo-Saxons) வெசெக்ஸ் (Wessex) பகுதியை கி.பி. 871ம் ஆண்டு முதல் கி.பி. 899ம் ஆண்டு வரை ஆண்ட அரசர் ஆவார்.

வெசக்ஸின் அரசன் எதெல்வுல்ஃப் (King Æthelwulf of Wessex) மற்றும் அவரது முதல் மனைவியான “ஒஸ்பூர்” (Osburh) ஆகியோரது கடைசி மகனாகப் பிறந்தவர் ஆல்ஃபிரட் ஆவார். கி.பி. 853ம் ஆண்டு, தமது நான்கு வயதில் ரோம் நகர் அனுப்பப்பட்ட இவர், திருத்தந்தை நான்காம் லியோவால் (Pope Leo IV) அரசனாக அபிஷேகம் செய்விக்கப்பட்டார். ஆல்ஃபிரட், தமது குழந்தைப் பருவத்தில், சாக்ஸன் கவிதைகள் (Saxon poems) கொண்ட ஒரு புத்தகத்திலுள்ள கவிதைகளை மனப்பாடம் செய்து தமது தாயாரிடம் ஒப்பித்து, அந்த புத்தகத்தை பரிசாக வென்ற கதையை ஆயர் “ஆஸ்செர்” (Bishop Asser) கூறுகிறார்.

இவரது அண்ணன் “எதல்ரெட்” (Æthelred) இறந்தபின் அரியணை ஏறிய ஆல்ஃபிரட் மிகத் திறமையான ஆட்சியாளராவார். ஆட்சிப் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றபின் வில்டன் என்ற இடத்தில் நடந்த போரில் டேனியர்களிடமிருந்து வெசக்ஸ் நாட்டைக் காத்த பெருமைக்குரியவர். ஆங்கிலோ - சாக்சானிய அரசர்களுல் முதன் முதலில் பேரரசர் என அழைக்கப்பட்ட பெருமைக்குரியர் இவரே ஆவார். இவருடைய வாழ்க்கை வரலாறு “வெல்ஷ்” (Welsh) அறிஞரும், ஆயருமான “ஆஸ்செர்” (Asser) என்பவரால் ஒன்பதாம் நூற்றாண்டில் எழுதப்பட்டது. 

தனது நாட்டில் கல்வி, அமைதி, ஒழுங்கு, சட்டம், இராணுவம் ஆகியவை நிலைபெற அரும்பணியாற்றினார். டேனிஷ் (Danish) படையினரால் மீண்டும் அச்சுறுத்தல்கள் ஏற்படாதிருக்குமாறு தமது இராச்சியத்தின் பாதுகாப்பை கட்டியெழுப்பினார். அடிக்கடி கடலோரப்பகுதிகளில் தொல்லைகள் தந்த டேனிஷ் (Danish) படையினரை ஒடுக்குவதற்காக கடற்படையையும் நிறுவினார். தமது இராணுவத்தை மறுசீரமைத்த அவர், தெற்கு இங்கிலாந்து முழுவதும் நன்கு பாதுகாக்கப்பட்ட குடியேற்றங்களின் ஒரு தொடரை கட்டமைத்தார்.

கல்வியின் முக்கியத்துவத்தில் வலுவான நம்பிக்கை கொண்டிருந்த பேரரசர் ஆல்ஃபிரெட், தமது முப்பது வயதில் இலத்தீன் மொழியைக் கற்றார். இவர், சிறந்த கல்வியாளராகவும், சிறந்த நிர்வாகியாகவும், கருணையுள்ளம் கொண்டவராகவும் விளங்கினார். கற்றறிந்த மற்றும் இயற்கையாகவே ஒரு கருணையும் இரக்கமுமுள்ள மனிதனாக புகழ் பெற்றவர் ஆவார். கல்வியை ஊக்குவித்த இவர், ஆரம்பக் கல்வியில் இலத்தீன் மொழியை விட ஆங்கில மொழியையே ஊக்குவித்தார். தமது அரசியலின் சட்ட அமைப்பு, இராணுவ அமைப்பு மற்றும் அவரது மக்களின் வாழ்க்கைத் தரத்தை மேம்படுத்த பெரிதும் பாடுபட்டார்.

கி.பி. 899ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம் மரித்த பேரரசர் ஆல்ஃபிரட், அவரது தலைநகரான வின்செஸ்டரில் (Winchester) அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார்.

Profile

Youngest of five sons of King Ethelwulf of Wessex. Ideal Christian king of Wessex, he came to the throne during a Danish invasion. Alfred defeated the Danes and preserved the growth of the Church in England. Patron of learning, he established a court school, invited British and foreign scholars to work there. Personally translated several religious works into Anglo-Saxon. His laws made no distinction between British and Welsh subjects, a first.



Born

849 at Wantage, Berkshire, England



Died

26 October 899 of natural causes


Writings

• "The Consolation of Philosophy" of Boethius

• "The History of the World" of Orosius

• "Ecclesiastical History" of Bede

• "Pastoral Rule" of Saint Gregory the Great

• "Dialogues" of Saint Gregory the Great



Saint Cedd


Also known as

Cedda, Cedde, Ceddus, Ceddi, Ceadwalla



Profile

Brother of Saint Chad and Saint Cynibild; his brother Caelin was also a priest. Benedictine monk at Lindisfarne, England. Spiritual student of Saint Aidan of Lindesfarne. Priest. Missionary to the Midlands of England in 653, sent by King Oswiu of Northumbria with three other priests at the request of convert King Peada of the Middle Angles. Worked with Saint Diuma. Missionary in Essex by request of converted King Sigebert of the East Angles. Bishop of the East Saxons, consecrated by Saint Finan of Iona. Founded churches and monasteries at Bradwell-on-the-Sea, Lastingham, and Tilbury, and served as abbot of the house in Lastingham. Attended the Synod of Whitby in 664 where he acted as an interpreter, and at which he accepted Roman Easter observance. In his old age he retired to the monastery at Lastingham, Yorkshire.


Born

Northumbria, England


Died

• 26 October 664 at Lastingham, Yorkshire, England of plague

• buried at Lastingham

• relics later relocated next to the altar in the new church at Lastingham



Blessed Bonaventura of Potenza


Also known as

• Bonaventure of Potenza

• Carlo Antonio

• Carlo Antonio Gerardo Lavanga

• Karl Antonius



Profile

Joined the Friars Minor Conventual at Nocera, Italy at age 15. Home missioner in southern Italy, serving from convents in Campania Aversa, Maddaloni, Amalfi, Ischia, Nocera Inferiore, Sorrento, Naples and finally, Ravello. Noted novice master, and known for the theological depth of his preaching. Worked fearlessly with plague victims. A miracle worker, he had the gifts of healing, and of levitation, and saw the soul of his sister ascend into heaven.


Born

4 January 1651 of Potenza, Naples, Italy as Antonio Carlo Gerardo Lavanga


Died

26 October 1711 in Ravello, Italy of gangrene while singing a psalm during a religious ecstasy


Beatified

26 November 1775 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Celina Chludzinska


Also known as

• Celina Chludzinska Borzecka

• Celina Rosalie Leonard



Profile

Celina was early drawn to religious life, but acceded to her parent's wishes and married Joseph Borzecka in 1853. Mother for four, two of whom died in infancy. Widow. Founded the Congregation of Sisters of the Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ.


Born

29 October 1833 in Antavilis, Vilniaus rajonas, Poland (now in Lithuania)


Died

26 October 1913 in Kraków, Maloploskie, Poland of natural causes


Beatified

27 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI



Saint Lucian


Profile

Spent his early life as a demon worshipper and sorcerer. When a Christian woman fended off his spells simply by making the Sign of the Cross, he gave up his idolatrous life and converted to Christianity. He turned his devotion to study of magic to a study of the faith, and like many a convert, spent the rest of his days explaining and working against the error of his earlier life. Martyred in the persecutions Decius.


Died

c.250




Saint Fulk of Piacenza


Also known as

• Fulk of Pavia

• Foulques



Profile

Canon. Studied in Paris, France. Archpriest and then bishop of Piacenza, Italy. Bishop of Pavia, Italy in 1216, chosen by Pope Honorius III.


Born

• 1164 in Piacenza, Italy

• his parents were from Scotland


Died

1229 of natural causes



Blessed Arnold of Queralt


Also known as

Arnaldo



Profile

Mercedarian lay knight at the royal convent of Santa Maria d'Ausonia in Spain. Suffered great abuse from Saracens for remaining Christian in Muslim occupied Spain.


Died

convent of Santa Maria d'Ausonia in Spain of natural causes



Saint Albinus of Büraburg


Also known as

Albino, Vitta, Vito, Witta, Wittanus, Wizo, Wintanus


Profile

Benedictine monk. Missionary to Germany with Saint Boniface. Only bishop of Büraburg, (part of the modern Archdiocese of Mainz, Germany) in 741.


Born

8th century Anglo-Saxon England as Witta


Died

c.748 of natural causes



Saint Valentine of Segovia


Profile

Brother of Saint Fructus of Segovia and Saint Engratia of Segovia. Martyred by invading Moors.


Born

at Sepulveda, Castile (in modern Spain)


Died

• c.715

• relics at Segovia, Spain


Patronage

Segovia, Spain



Saint Engratia of Segovia


Profile

Sister of Saint Fructus of Segovia and Saint Valentine of Segovia. Martyred by invading Moors.


Born

at Sepulveda, Castile (in modern Spain)


Died

• c.715

• relics at Segovia, Spain





Saint Amandus of Strasbourg

ஸ்ட்ராஸ்பூர்க் ஆயர் அமாண்டூஸ் Amandus von Straßburg

பிறப்பு 

290

இறப்பு 

355, 

ஸ்ட்ராஸ்பூர்க், பிரான்ஸ்


இவர் ஸ்ட்ராஸ்பூர்க் மறைமாவட்டத்தின் முதல் ஆயர். இவர் 343 ல் சார்டிகா(Sardika) நகரில் நடந்த பொதுச்சங்கத்தின் தலைவராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். 346 ஆம் ஆண்டு கொலோன் நகரில் நடந்த பொதுச்சங்கத்தையும் தலைமையேற்று நடத்தினார். இவர் இறந்தபிறகு, ஸ்ட்ராஸ்பூர்க் பேராலயத்தில் இவரது உடல் வைக்கப்பட்டது. இவர் எப்போதும் ஆயருக்குரிய உடையுடனே வாழ்ந்தார் என்று கூறப்படுகின்றது. இவரைப்பற்றிய மற்ற குறிப்புகள் எதுவும் கொடுக்கப்படவில்லை

Also known as

Amand, Amando, Amatius, Amantius



Profile

First bishop of Strasbourg, France.


Died

346 of natural causes



Blessed Bernard de Figuerols


Also known as

Bernardo



Profile

Mercedarian lay knight. Fought invading Moors in Almería, Spain.



Saint Cuthbert of Canterbury


Profile

Born to the nobility. Monk and then abbot at Lyminge Abbey in Kent, England. Bishop of Hereford, England c.736. Archbishop of Canterbury, England c.740.


Died

761 of natural causes



Saint Eata of Hexham


Also known as

Eata of Lindisfarne


Profile

Monk at Ripon, England. Abbot of Melrose Abbey in Scotland. Abbot of Lindisfarne Abbey. Bishop of Lindisfarne, England. Bishop of Hexham, England.


Died

c.686



Saint Aptonius of Angouleme


Also known as

Aptonio


Profile

Bishop of Angouleme, Aquitaine (in modern France) in 541. Attended the Fifth Council of Orleans in 549.


Died

c.567 of natural causes



Saint Quadragesimus of Policastro


Profile

Shepherd. Deacon at Policastro, Salerno, Italy. According to Saint Gregory the Great, he raised a dead man to life.


Died

c.590 of natural causes



Saint Alorus of Quimper


Also known as

Alar, Alor, Alour



Profile

Saint Alorus (also known as Saint Alor, Saint Alair, or Saint Aller) was a 5th-century bishop of Quimper, a city in Brittany, France. He is said to have been born in the British Isles, and to have traveled to Brittany to evangelize the region. He was consecrated bishop by Saint Germain of Auxerre, and served in Quimper for many years.

Alorus was known for his holiness and his dedication to his flock. He was also a champion of the poor and the oppressed. He is said to have performed many miracles, including healing the sick and raising the dead.

Alorus died in Quimper in 462, and is buried in the cathedral of Saint Corentin


Saint Bean of Mortlach


Also known as

• Bean of Aberdeen

• Beano, Beanus, Beóán


Profile

Bishop of Mortlach, Scotland. Evangelized in Aberdeen, Scotland.


Died

c.1012



Saint Rusticus of Narbonne


Also known as

Rustique


Profile

Monk at Lérins Abbey. Bishop of Narbonne, France. Attended the 3rd Ecumenical Council in Ephesus in 431.


Died

c.462



Saint Alanus of Quimper



Also known as

Alain, Alan



Profile

Fifth century bishop of Quimper in Brittany.



Saint Marcian


Profile

Possible devil worshipper who converted to Christianity and was martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

martyred c.250


Patronage

• converts

• possessed people



Saint Adalgott of Einsiedeln


Also known as

Adalgott of Dissentis


Profile

Monk at Einsiedeln Abbey. Abbot of Dissentis Abbey in 1012.


Died

1031



Saint Sigibald of Metz


Also known as

Sigibaldo


Profile

Bishop of Metz, France in 716. Built several monasteries including Neuweiter and Saint-Avold.


Died

c.740



Blessed Humbert


Profile

Benedictine monk at Fritzlar, Hesse, Germany. Prior at Buraburg, Germany.


Born

7th century


Died

8th century of natural causes



Saint Rogatian of Carthage


Also known as

Rogaziano


Profile

Saint Rogatian of Carthage was a priest of the Church in Carthage, North Africa, in the 3rd century. He was martyred during the persecution of Emperor Valerian, along with a layman named Felicissimus.

Saint Rogatian is mentioned in the writings of Saint Cyprian, the bishop of Carthage at the time. Cyprian praises Rogatian for his courage and faith, and for his willingness to die for Christ.

Rogatian is commemorated as a saint by the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Anglican Church.

Died

256 in Carthage in North Africa



Saint Edfrid


Also known as

Eadfrid


Profile

Priest in Northumbria, England. Evangelized in Mercia. Founded a monastery in Leominster, England.


Died

c.675



Saint Gaudiosus of Salerno


Profile


Saint Gaudiosus of Salerno was a bishop of Salerno, Italy, in the 8th century. He is known for his holiness and his dedication to his flock. He is also credited with performing many miracles, including healing the sick and raising the dead.

Saint Gaudiosus was born in Naples, Italy, around the year 700. He was a devout Christian from a young age, and he entered the priesthood in his early twenties. He was consecrated bishop of Salerno in 740, and he served in that position for over 30 years.

During his time as bishop, Gaudiosus was known for his tireless work to care for his flock. He was especially concerned for the poor and the oppressed. He also worked to promote education and culture in Salerno.

Gaudiosus was also a powerful preacher and evangelist. He traveled throughout southern Italy preaching the Gospel and converting many people to Christianity. He is also credited with founding several monasteries and churches in the region.

Gaudiosus died in Salerno in 771, and is buried in the cathedral of Saint Matthew. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church, 

Died

relics in Naples, Italy



Saint Felicissimus of Carthage


Profile

Saint Felicissimus of Carthage was a deacon of the Church in Carthage, North Africa, in the 3rd century. He is said to have been a wealthy man who converted to Christianity and gave up all his possessions to follow Christ.

Felicissimus was ordained deacon by Saint Cyprian, the bishop of Carthage. He was a zealous and dedicated deacon, and he was known for his compassion for the poor and the sick.

During the persecution of Emperor Valerian, Felicissimus was imprisoned along with several other Christians. He was tortured and eventually martyred on September 16, 258.

Died

256 in Carthage in North Africa



Saint Gibitrudis


Profile

Saint Gibitrudis was a Benedictine nun who lived in the 7th century. She was born in France, and she joined the Benedictine monastery at Faremoutiers-en-Brie. She was a student of Saint Fara, the founder of the monastery.

Gibitrudis was known for her piety and her dedication to her faith. She was also a gifted musician and a skilled artist. She is credited with composing several hymns and poems, and she also created several works of art, including a painting of the Virgin Mary.

Gibitrudis died in 680, and is buried at Faremoutiers-en-Brie. She is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church, 

Died

c.655



Saint Aneurin


Also known as

Gildas


Profile

Father of Saint Gwinoc. Sixth century Welsh monk in Wales.Saint Aneurin is a Welsh Christian saint who is believed to have lived in the 6th century. He is venerated as a martyr and a patron saint of poets and writers.

There is not much known about the life of Saint Aneurin. He is mentioned in the Book of Llandaff, a collection of Welsh hagiographies and charters, as one of the seven saints who were martyred by the Anglo-Saxons. However, the details of his martyrdom are unknown.

Saint Aneurin is also associated with the Welsh poem Y Gododdin, which is a heroic elegy for the warriors of the Gododdin who were killed in a battle against the Angles at Catraeth (probably Catterick Bridge in Yorkshire). The poem is attributed to Aneirin, but there is no scholarly consensus on whether the poet and the saint are the same person.

Despite the lack of information about his life, Saint Aneurin has been revered as a Welsh saint for centuries. He is often depicted as a bard with a harp, and he is invoked by poets and writers for inspiration.



Saint Amandus of Worms


Profile

Saint Amandus of Worms was a 7th-century bishop of Worms, Germany. He is also known as Saint Amandus of Strasbourg and Saint Amandus of Maastricht, as he is said to have served as bishop in all three cities.


Amandus was born in France to a wealthy family. He was educated in the classics and in the Christian faith. He was ordained a priest and served in the diocese of Maastricht for many years.


In the early 7th century, Amandus was consecrated bishop of Worms. He served in Worms for over 20 years, during which time he worked to evangelize the region and to build up the Church. He was also a strong advocate for the poor and the oppressed.


In the late 620s, Amandus was forced to leave Worms due to persecution from the Franks. He then traveled to Gaul, where he served as bishop of Strasbourg for several years. He eventually returned to Worms, where he died in 639.


Saint Amandus is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Anglican Church. His feast day is celebrated on October 26.


Saint Gwinoc


Profile

Son of Saint Aneurin. Sixth century Welsh monk and poet.Saint Gwinoc (also known as Saint Winoc, Saint Gwynnock, or Saint Winnock) was a 5th-century Welsh saint who is said to have evangelized Brittany, France. He is also the patron saint of the town of Landévennec in Brittany.


Gwinoc was born in Wales to a noble family. He was educated in the classics and in the Christian faith. He was ordained a priest and served in the diocese of St David's for many years.


In the early 5th century, Gwinoc traveled to Brittany to evangelize the region. He founded a monastery at Landévennec, which became a center of learning and culture in Brittany. Gwinoc was also known for his healing miracles and his compassion for the poor and the oppressed.


Gwinoc died in Landévennec in 517. He is buried in the monastery church, which is now a popular pilgrimage site.


24 October 2024

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் அக்டோபர் 25

 St. Boniface I

 புனிதர் முதலாம் போனிஃபாஸ் 

42ம் திருத்தந்தை :

பிறப்பு : ரோம் 

இறப்பு : செப்டம்பர் 4, 422

ரோம்

நினைவுத் திருநாள் : அக்டோபர் 25

திருத்தந்தை புனிதர் முதலாம் போனிஃபாஸ், கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் 42ம் திருத்தந்தையாக 418ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 28ம் தேதி முதல், 422ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதம், 4ம் தேதி வரை பணியாற்றினார். இவர் புனித அகஸ்தீனுடைய சமகாலத்தவர். “புனிதர் அகுஸ்தீன்” (Saint Augustine of Hippo), இவருக்கு தன் படைப்புகளுள் பலவற்றை அர்ப்பணித்துள்ளார்.

(Liber Pontificalis) எனும் மேற்கத்திய திருச்சபையின் திருத்தந்தையர் அல்லது ஆயர்களின் நடப்புகள் மற்றும் சடங்குகள் பற்றின விபரங்கள் எழுதப்பட்டிருக்கும் புத்தகத்தில், திருத்தந்தை போனிஃபாஸ் பற்றின விபரங்கள் சிறிதளவே காணப்படுகின்றன. இவர் ஒரு ரோமன் என்றும், கிறிஸ்தவ தேவாலயத்தின் மூப்பரான (Presbyter) “ஜோகண்ட்டஸ்” (Jocundus) என்பவருடைய மகன் என்றும் அறியப்படுகிறது. இவர், திருத்தந்தை “முதலாம் டமாஸ்கஸ்” (Pope Damasus I) அவர்களால் குருத்துவம் பெற்றவர் என்றும், “கான்ஸ்டண்டினோபிலில்” (Constantinople) திருத்தந்தை “முதலாம் இன்னொசென்ட்டின்” (Innocent I) பிரதிநிதியாக செயல்பட்டவர் என்றும் அறியப்படுகிறது.

திருத்தந்தைத் தேர்தலில் குழப்பம் :

திருத்தந்தை “சோசிமஸின்” (Pope Zosimus) இறப்புக்குப் பின், இருவர் திருத்தந்தை பதவிக்கு முன்மொழியப்பட்டனர். ஒருவர் போனிஃபாஸ், மற்றவர் “யூலாலியஸ்” (Eulalius). இதனால் ஏற்பட்ட குழப்பத்தை தவிர்க்கக் கோரி ரோம ஆட்சியாளர் “சிம்மாக்குஸ்” (Aurelius Anicius Symmachus) என்பவர் இரவேன்னா நகரில் தங்கியிருந்த ரோமப்பேரரசர் “ஹொனோரியசை” (Emperor Honorius) வேண்டி கடிதம் எழுதினார். அவர், முதலில் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டவர் யூலாலியஸ் ஆதலால், அவருக்கே ஆதரவளித்தார்.

ரோமப் பேரரசின் பேரரசி “கல்லா பிலசிடியா” (Empress Galla Placidia) மற்றும் அவருடைய கணவர் “மூன்றாம் கான்ஸ்டன்ஷியஸ்” (Constantius III) கூட யூலாலியுசுக்கு ஆதரவு தெரிவித்தனர். இருந்தாலும், யார் திருத்தந்தை என்னும் குழப்பத்தைத் தீர்ப்பதற்கு வசதியாக போனிஃபாசும், யூலாலியுசும் ரோமுக்கு வெளியே அனுப்பப்பட்டனர். அச்சமயம் இயேசுவின் உயிர்த்தெழுதல் விழா அண்மையில் நிகழவிருந்ததைப் பயன்படுத்திக்கொண்ட யூலாலியுசு, பேரரசின் உத்தரவுகளையும், சட்டத்தையும் மீறி ரோமுக்குத் திரும்பினார். இது ரோம ஆட்சியாளர்களுக்குப் பிடிக்கவில்லை. இதைத் தொடர்ந்து பேரரசர் “ஹொனோரியஸ்” (Emperor Honorius) போனிஃபாஸ்’தான் முறைப்படி திருத்தந்தை ஆவார் என்று அறிவித்தார்.

போனிஃபாஸ் ஆட்சி :

திருத்தந்தை போனிஃபாஸ், தமக்கு முந்தைய சில திருத்தந்தையரின் திருச்சபையின் நிர்வாகம் சம்பந்தமான கொள்கைகள் சிலவற்றை மாற்றியமைத்தார். “பெலாஜியஸ்” (Pelagius) எனும் பிரிட்டிஷ் துறவி போதித்த “பெலாஜியனிசம்” (Pelagianism) எனும் இறையியல் கோட்பாடுகளைக் கண்டித்தார். இதனை எதிர்த்து போராடுவதற்காக, இவர் “புனிதர் அகுஸ்தினாருக்கு” (St. Augustine) ஆதரவளித்தார்.

பேரரசர் “இரண்டாம் தியோடோசியசை”, (Emperor Theodosius II) அவரது மேற்கத்திய அதிகார வரம்பான “இலரிக்கம்” (Illyricum) திரும்ப வற்புறுத்தினார். மேலும், திருப்பீடத்துக்கு உள்ள உரிமைகளை இவர் நிலைநாட்டினார்

Feastday:

4 September

formerly 25 October

Born

c.350 at Rome, Italy

Patron: of brewers; Fulda; Germany; World Youth Day

Died 4 September 422 at Rome, Italy of natural causes

buried in the cemetery of Maximus on the Via Salaria, Rome



Boniface I Ordained by Pope Damasus I, St. Boniface was a priest at Rome and served as papal legate to Constantinople under Innocent I. When Pope Zosimus died in December, 418, a majority elected Boniface pope, and a minority elected Eulalius pope. Pope and antipope were consecrated on the same day. The Council of Spoleto was convoked in 419 to settle the dispute. Symmachus the Prefect supported Eulalius, and the Emperor Honorius supported Boniface, who was enthroned after the council. Boniface condemned Pelagianism and encouraged St. Augustine to write against it. When Boniface died in 422, he was buried in a chapel which he had built in the cemetary of St. Felicity.


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

For other uses, see Saint Boniface (disambiguation).

Boniface, OSB (Latin: Bonifatius; c. 675[2] – 5 June 754) was an English Benedictine monk and leading figure in the Anglo-Saxon mission to the Germanic parts of the Frankish Empire during the eighth century. He organised significant foundations of the church in Germany and was made archbishop of Mainz by Pope Gregory III. He was martyred in Frisia in 754, along with 52 others, and his remains were returned to Fulda, where they rest in a sarcophagus which has become a site of pilgrimage.


Boniface's life and death as well as his work became widely known, there being a wealth of material available — a number of vitae, especially the near-contemporary Vita Bonifatii auctore Willibaldi, legal documents, possibly some sermons, and above all his correspondence. He is venerated as a saint in the Christian church and became the patron saint of Germania, known as the "Apostle to the Germans".


Norman F. Cantor notes the three roles Boniface played that made him "one of the truly outstanding creators of the first Europe, as the apostle of Germania, the reformer of the Frankish church, and the chief fomentor of the alliance between the papacy and the Carolingian family."[3] Through his efforts to reorganize and regulate the church of the Franks, he helped shape the Latin Church in Europe, and many of the dioceses he proposed remain today. After his martyrdom, he was quickly hailed as a saint in Fulda and other areas in Germania and in England. He is still venerated strongly today by German Catholics. Boniface is celebrated as a missionary; he is regarded as a unifier of Europe, and he is regarded by German Roman Catholics as a national figure.[citation needed]

In 2019, Devon County Council with the support of the Anglican and Catholic churches in Exeter and Plymouth, officially recognised St Boniface as the Patron Saint of Devon

 புனிதர்கள் கிறிஸ்பின் மற்றும் கிறிஸ்பினியன் 

Saint Crispin and Saint Crispian

மறைசாட்சியர்:

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 3ம் நூற்றாண்டு 

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 286 

ரோம் 

ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபைகள்

இங்கிலாந்து திருச்சபை

முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

சோய்சன்ஸ் 

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 25 

பாதுகாவல்: 

காலணி தயாரிப்பாளர்கள்; தோல் பதனிடுபவர்கள்; கையுறை தயாரிப்பாளர்கள்; சரிகை தயாரிப்பாளர்கள்; சரிகைத் தொழிலாளர்கள்; தோல் தொழிலாளர்கள்; சேணம் தயாரிப்பாளர்கள்; நெசவாளர்கள்.

சான் கிறிஸ்பின் (San Crispin), சான் பப்லோ நகரம் (San Pablo City), பிலிப்பைன்ஸ் (Philippines)

புனிதர்கள் கிறிஸ்பின் மற்றும் கிறிஸ்பினியன் ஆகியோர், காலணி தயாரிப்பாளர்கள், தோல் பதனிடுபவர்கள், கையுறை தயாரிப்பாளர்கள், சரிகை தயாரிப்பாளர்கள், சரிகைத் தொழிலாளர்கள்; தோல் தொழிலாளர்கள், மற்றும், சேணம் தயாரிப்பாளர்கள், நெசவாளர்கள், ஆகியோரது கிறிஸ்தவ பாதுகாவல் புனிதர்கள் ஆவர். 

ரோமப் பேரரசர் டயக்லேஷியன் ஆட்சிக்காலத்தில், கி.பி. சுமார் 285 அல்லது 286ம் ஆண்டு, இவர்களிருவரும், மறைசாட்சியராய் சித்திரவதை செய்யப்பட்டு, கொடுமையான வகையில் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். 

வரலாறு: 

கி.பி. 3ம் நூற்றாண்டில், ஒரு உன்னதமான ரோமானிய குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்த கிறிஸ்பின் மற்றும் கிறிஸ்பினியன் ஆகியோர், தங்கள் கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்திற்காக துன்புறுத்தலிலிருந்து தப்பி ஓடியபடியிருந்தனர். அவர்களது ஓட்டம், சோய்சன்ஸ் (Soissons) நகரில் முடிவடைந்தது. அங்கு அவர்கள் கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்தை "கௌல்ஸ்" (Gauls) இன மக்களுக்கு பிரசங்கித்தனர். அதே நேரத்தில் இரவு நேரங்களில் காலணிகள் தயாரித்தனர். அவர்கள் இரட்டை சகோதரர்கள் என்று கூறப்பட்டாலும், அது நேர்மறையாக நிரூபிக்கப்படவில்லை. 

அவர்கள் தங்களுடைய தேவைகளுக்கும், ஏழைகளுக்கு உதவுவதற்குமான போதுமான வருமானத்தை, தங்கள் வர்த்தகம் மூலம் போதுமான அளவு சம்பாதித்தனர். அவர்களின் இந்த வெற்றி, "பெல்ஜிக் கோல்"  ஆளுநரான "ரிக்டஸ் வரஸ்"  என்பவரது கோபத்தை ஈர்த்தது. அவர்கள் சித்திரவதை செய்யப்பட்டு கழுத்தில் மைல் கற்கள் கட்டப்பட்டு, ஆற்றில் வீசப்பட்டனர். இருப்பினும், அதிலிருந்தும் தப்பிப்பிழைத்த அவர்கள், சக்கரவர்த்தியின் உத்தரவின்படி, தலை துண்டிக்கப்பட்டு, கி.பி. 285–286ல் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். 

கி.பி. 16ம் நூற்றாண்டின் புராணக்கதை ஓன்று, அவர்களை "ஃபேவர்ஷாம்" (Faversham) நகரத்துடன் இணைக்கிறது. 

புனிதர்கள் கிறிஸ்பின் மற்றும் கிறிஸ்பினியன் ஆகியோரின் நினைவுத் திருநாள், அக்டோபர் 25 ஆகும். இரண்டாம் வத்திக்கான் (Second Vatican Council) சபையைத் தொடர்ந்து, ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் உலகளாவிய வழிபாட்டு நாட்காட்டியிலிருந்து (Catholic Church's Universal Liturgical Calendar) இந்த நினைவுத் திருநாள் அகற்றப்பட்டாலும், இவ்விரு புனிதர்களும் அந்த நாளில் இன்றும் ரோமன் திருச்சபையின் மறைசாட்சிய (Roman Church's Martyrology) பதிப்பில் நினைவுகூரப்படுகிறார்கள்.

கி.பி. ஆறாம் நூற்றாண்டில் இந்த புனிதர்களின் கல்லறைகளுக்கு மேல் சோய்சன்ஸ் நகரில், ஒரு அழகிய பேராலயம் அமைக்கப்பட்டது. மேலும், புகழ்பெற்ற பொற்கொல்லர் புனித எலிஜியஸ் (St. Eligius) புனித கிறிஸ்பினியனின் தலைக்கு ஒரு விலையுயர்ந்த திருத்தலத்தை உருவாக்கினார்.

Also known as

Crispinus and Crispianus



Profile

Brothers and members of the imperial Roman nobility. Together they evangelized Gaul in the middle 3rd century. They worked from Soissons, France where they preached in the streets by day, made shoes by night. Their charity, piety, and contempt of material things impressed the locals, and many converted in the years of their ministry. Martyred under emperor Maximian Herculeus, being tried by Rictus Varus, governor of Belgic Gaul and an enemy of Christianity. A great church was built at Soissons in the 6th century in their honor; Saint Eligius ornamented their shrine.


Because of his association with shoes, shoe-making, etc. a shoeshine kit is called a "Saint-Crispin"; an awl is "Saint Crispin's lance"; and if your shoes are too tight, you are "in Saint Crispin's prison."


Died

tortured and beheaded c.286 at Rome, Italy



Blessed Thaddeus McCarthy


Also known as

• Tadhg MacCarthy

• Taddeo Machar

• White Martyr of Münster



Profile

Son of the Lord of Muskerry, Ireland; grandson of the Lord of Kerry, Ireland. Educated by the Franciscans at Timoleague,at the University of Paris, and in Rome, Italy. Priest. Bishop of Ross, Ireland in 1482; when he arrived in Ross he found that Bishop Hugh O'Driscoll was still alive and holding the see. Because of the political intrigues of the time, and the fact that people were not above falsley reporting the bishop's death or sending an imposter to take his place, years of disputes broke out over the appointment, and Thaddeus never did assume his position. At one point he was excommunicated by Pope Sixtus IV, had the excommunication confirmed by Pope Innocent VIII, and charged with fraud; he was cleared of all charges, civil and ecclesiastic, and the excommunition revoked.


Bishop of Cork and Cloyne, Ireland on 21 April 1490. When he arrived he found that locals had chosen Gerald FitzGerald as bishop, and for political reasons there were armed supporters in the cathedral to prevent Thaddeus from assuming control. Thaddeus appealed to the Pope, and had his support, but without armed supporters he travelled for a while as a pilgrim to holy sites. He died while on the road. The title White Martyr of Munster commemorates the mental and physical anguish he suffered while trying to do the Church's work.


Born

c.1455 in County Cork, Ireland


Died

• 25 October 1492 in a pilgrim's hostel at Ivrea, Italy of natural causes

• the hostel warden found him deceased but surrounded by light

• Bishop Nicholas Garigliatti had a dream of Thaddeus's death and ascension to heaven, and came to collect the body, which would have otherwise been given a pauper's burial as the man was an unknown pilgrim

• buried in the cathedral of Ivrea

• miracles reported at the tomb

• body found incorrupt when the tomb was opened in 1742, but later deteriorated

• some relics enshrined in the Cathedral of Saint Mary and Saint Anne in Cork, Ireland

• some relics enshrined in the Cathedral of Saint Colman, Cobh, Ireland

• some relics enshrined in the Church of Saint Mary, Youghal, Ireland


Beatified

1896 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)



Blessed Maurus of Pécs


Also known as

• Maurus of Nitra

• Maurus of Pannonhalma

• Maurice, Mauricio, Mauro, Mór



Additional Memorial

4 December (Benedictines)


Profile

Benedictine monk in his youth at the San Martin monastery in Pannonhalma, Hungary. Abbot his monastery from 1029 till 1036, having been chosen by Saint Stephen of Hungary. Friend of Saint Emeric of Hungary. Bishop of Pécs, Hungary in 1036, the second bishop of the diocese, and possibly the first bishop born in the kingdom of Hungary; he served for over 30 years. Finished construction of the cathedral in Pécs. Survived the pagan uprising during the reign of King Peter I, and helped celebrate the coronation of the Christian king Andrew I in 1046. Courtier to King Andrew. Helped found the Tihany Abbey in 1055. Peacemaker between warring political factions in Hungary. Wrote Legend of Saints Benedict and Andrew Zorard c.1064, making him the first Hungarian ecclesiastical writer and hagiographer.


Born

c.1000, probably in the territory of modern Hungary


Died

c.1075 in Pécs, Hungary of natural causes


Beatified

22 July 1848 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmation)



Saint Tabitha


Also known as

Dorcas



Saint Tabitha (also known as Dorcas) was a devout Christian woman who lived in the city of Joppa (modern-day Tel Aviv) in the 1st century AD. She was known for her good works and acts of charity, particularly her generosity towards the poor and needy.


When Tabitha fell ill and died, the widows of the community were grief-stricken. They sent for the Apostle Peter, who was staying in nearby Lydda. When Peter arrived in Joppa, he went to the room where Tabitha's body was laid out. He knelt down and prayed, and then he said, "Tabitha, get up!" (Acts 9:40)

Tabitha immediately opened her eyes and sat up. Peter took her by the hand and helped her to her feet. The widows were overjoyed, and they showed Peter the tunics and other garments that Tabitha had made for them.

The news of Tabitha's resurrection spread quickly throughout Joppa, and many people came to believe in Jesus Christ.

Saint Tabitha is venerated as a saint in the Catholic, Orthodox, and Anglican churches. Her feast day is celebrated on October 25.



Saint Chrysanthus and Saint Daria


Also known as

Crisaunt, Crescentius, Crisanto



Profile

Married couple who were zealous and public in their Christianity. Martyred in the persecutions of Numerian and Carinus.


Not surprisingly, many legends developed around a couple of married martyrs, and others were re-written to use them as their lead characters. Modern scholarship has dismissed all these, leaving only two of the thousands of faithful who lost their lives in the early days of the Church.


Born

Egyptian


Died

• stoned to death c.283 in a sandpit off the Salarian Way, Rome, Italy

• relics at Bad Münstereifel, Germany



Saint Gaudentius of Brescia


Also known as

Gaudenty



Profile

Studied under Saint Philastrius, Bishop of Brescia, Italy. He preached throughout Italy and in the East, respected wherever he went for his oratory and leading the Christian life. When Philastrius died near the end of the 4th century, the people of Brescia chose Gaudentius as their bishop. He was consecrated by Saint Ambrose of Milan in 387. Guadentius wrote many pastoral letters, and ten of his sermons have come down to us. They show a desire to educate, and to present good examples for living.


He left his diocese in 405 to join a delegation sent by Pope Innocent I to defend Saint John Chrysostom from charges brought by a heretic. The group was forced by John's enemies to return to Italy. Their ship sank near Lampsacus, Greece, but the group finally safely reached home. Though the delegation did not achieve its mission, Saint John sent a letter of thanks to Saint Gaudentius.


Born

at Brescia, Italy


Died

410 of natural causes



Saint Bernard of Calvo


Also known as

• Bernard of Calbo

• Bernard of Vich

• Bernard of Vic

• Bernat


Profile

Educated in Manso Calvo, Spain and Lleida, Spain. Benedictine Cistercian monk. Worked with Saint Raymond of Penyafort. Canon of the Tarragona cathedral and vicar-general in Tarragona, Spain. Appointed by Pope Gregory IX to combat the Waldenses in 1232 on the border of France. Bishop of Vich, Spain in 1233. Abbot of Santa Creus Monastery near Tarragona, Spain. Part of the of Council of Tarragona in 1239 and 1243.


Born

1180 at Manso Calvo, Catalan, Spain


Died

• 26 October 1243 in north Tarragona, Spain of natural causes

• interred in Vich, Spain

• some relics in the priory of San Pedro de Reus



Saint Miniato of Florence


Also known as

Minias



Profile

Soldier, though he is often depicted as a military prince. Evangelized among his fellow troops when stationed in Florence, Italy. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius. An abbey outside the Florence city walls is named for him.


Died

c.250 in Florence, Italy



Blessed Henry of Segusio


Also known as

Hostiensis


Profile

Studied civil and canon law at Bologna, Italy. Taught in Bologna. Taught canon law in Paris, France. Diplomat from the court of King Henry III to Pope Innocent IV. Provost of of the diocese of Antibes, France. Chaplain to the pope. Bishop of Sisteron, France in 1244. Archbishop of Embrun, France in 1250. Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and Velletri on 4 December 1261. Attended the conclave that elected Pope Gregory X, but his health prevented him from voting. Wrote a number of treaties on canon law.


Born

Susa, Italy


Died

25 October 1271 in Lyons, France of natural causes



Saint Gavinus of Sassari


Also known as

Gavino



Profile

Saint Gavinus of Sassari (Italian: San Gavino) is a Christian saint who is greatly celebrated in Sardinia, Italy, as one of the Martyrs of Torres (Martiri turritani), along with his companions SS Protus, a bishop, and Januarius, a deacon.

Narrative

He was probably a Roman soldier martyred for the Christian faith during the persecution of Diocletian in 304 in the city of Porto Torres (Latin: Turris), according to the legend, on the orders of the governor (preside) of Sardinia and Corsica, a certain Barbarus. The earliest "passio" dates to the 12th century: Barbaro, who had been sent to Corsica and Sardinia, reached Turres and published the imperial edicts against the Christians, was denounced by Proto, Gavino and Gianuario. They were summoned to the tribunal and being steadfast in refusing to sacrifice to the gods, were summarily beheaded. A second, longer, "passio", from the middle of the thirteenth century, follows standard medieval hagiographical conventions. In this, Protus and Januarius are arrested and subjected to torture. Gavinus is a soldier conveying them to prison. Impressed with their courage, he releases them and asks for their prayers. The next day Gavinus was arrested for failing to produce his prisoners, and when he declared himself a Christian, was beheaded on the shore. Hearing that Gavinus had preceded them in martyrdom, Protus and Januarius returned to the city, were arrested, and likewise beheaded. The story of the martyrdom was distributed in nine readings for use in the recitation of Matins.

Legacy

The well-known Romanesque church of San Gavino in Gavoi is dedicated to him, as is the town of San Gavino Monreale, and a number of communes in Corsica. The 11th-century Basilica of San Gavino in Porto Torres, Sassari, is also dedicated to this saint. It was built by Comita or Gomida, Judge of Torres, and contains the relics, not only of Saint Gavinus, but also of his companions Protus and Januarius.

Feast day

October 25

Died

25 October 303 Porto Torres, Italy




Saint Fronto of Périgueux


Also known as

Front, Frontone, Frontón



Profile

Saint Fronto of Périgueux was the first bishop of Périgueux in the 4th century. He was born in Rome and was ordained a priest by Pope Sylvester I. He was sent to Gaul to evangelize the region, and he established a church in Périgueux.

Saint Fronto was a zealous missionary, and he preached the gospel throughout the region. He was known for his miracles and his healing powers. He is said to have raised the dead and healed the sick.

Saint Fronto died in Périgueux in the 4th century. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church, and his feast day is celebrated on October 25. 

Born

Lycaonia, Asia Minor


Died

• Périgueux, France of natural causes

• relics enshrined in Saint-Front cathedral in Périgueux

• relics thrown into the Dordogne river by Huguenots in 1575



Saint Hilary of Mende


Also known as

Chély, Hilaire, Ilaro, Ilario


Profile

Adult convert. Hermit, living by the River Tarn. Monk at Lérins Abbey. Bishop of Mende, France. Miracle stories attached to him include being carried on the wind to a place of privacy for his prayers, and the ability to draw water from a dry well for years.


Born

at Mende, southern France


Died

• 535 of natural causes

• relics destroyed in 1793 in the looting of the French Revolution



Saint Fructos of Segovia


Also known as

Fruitos, Frutos



Profile

Brother of Saint Engratia of Segovia and Saint Valentine of Segovia. When his brother and sister were martyred by invading Moors, Fructos fled and lived out his life as a hermit.


Born

at Sepulveda, Castile (in modern Spain)


Died

• c.715

• relics at Segovia, Spain



Saint Goeznoveus of Léon


Also known as

Gouéno, Gouenou, Gouesnou, Goueznou, Guennou



Profile

Brother of Saint Maughan. Emigrated to Brittany (part of modern France). Bishop of Léon, France.


Born

at Cornwall, England


Died

• 675 of natural causes

• most relics destroyed in the French Revolution



Blessed Edmund Daniel


Also known as

Edmund MacDaniell


Additional Memorial

20 June as one of the Irish Martyrs


Profile

Blessed Edmund Daniel (Irish: Éamonn Ó Donnchadha) was a Jesuit seminarian who was martyred in Cork, Ireland on October 25, 1572. He was the first Jesuit martyr in Europe. 

Daniel was born in Limerick, Ireland in 1541. He studied at the University of Oxford, where he converted to Catholicism. In 1562, he entered the Jesuit novitiate in Rome. After completing his studies, he was sent to Ireland to minister to the persecuted Catholics.

Daniel was arrested in Cork in 1571 and imprisoned for over a year. He was tortured in an attempt to force him to renounce his faith, but he refused. He was hanged, drawn, and quartered on October 25, 1572.

Daniel was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1992. He is commemorated on October 25.




Saint Guesnoveus of Quimper


Also known as

Gouernou, Goeznoveus, Governou, Guinou



Profile

Saint Guesnoveus of Quimper (also known as Goueznou) was a 6th-century bishop of Quimper in Brittany. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church, and his feast day is celebrated on October 25. 

Guesnoveus was born in Cornwall, England, and was ordained a priest at a young age. He was known for his piety and learning, and he was soon appointed bishop of Quimper.

Guesnoveus was a zealous pastor, and he worked tirelessly to spread the Christian faith throughout his diocese. He is said to have performed many miracles, and he was greatly loved by his people.

Guesnoveus died in the year 550, and he was buried in the cathedral at Quimper. His tomb soon became a popular pilgrimage site, and he is still venerated as a saint today.



Saint Januarius of Sassari


Profile

Deacon in Sardinia. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Died

beheaded in 303 in Porto Torres, Sardinia, Italy



Saint Protus of Sassari


Profile

Priest in Sardinia. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Saint Protus of Sassari (Italian: San Proto di Sassari) is a venerated martyr of the early Christian church. He is said to have been a soldier who was martyred in Sardinia during the reign of Diocletian.

According to tradition, Protus was a native of Sardinia who served in the Roman army. He was stationed in the city of Turris Libisonis (modern-day Porto Torres) when he was converted to Christianity. When Diocletian began his persecution of Christians, Protus refused to renounce his faith. He was arrested and tortured, but he remained steadfast in his beliefs. Protus was eventually beheaded, and his body was thrown into the sea.

A few days later, Protus' body was miraculously washed ashore at the port of Sassari. The Christians of the city buried him with honor, and his tomb soon became a place of pilgrimage. Protus is venerated as the patron saint of Sassari, and his feast day is celebrated on November 27.

The cult of Saint Protus is particularly strong in Sassari. The city's cathedral is dedicated to him, and his relics are kept in a reliquary in the crypt. Every year, on the eve of his feast day, a procession is held through the streets of Sassari in honor of the saint.

Died

beheaded in 303 in Porto Torres, Sardinia, Italy



Saint Dulcardus


Also known as

Doulchard


Profile

Monk at Saint-Mesmin Abbey in Orleans, France. Hermit near Bourges, France where the village of Saint-Doulchard was named for him.


Died

584



Saint Lucius of Rome


Profile

One of a group of 50 soldiers martyred together in the persecutions of Claudius II.


Died

269 in Rome, Italy



Saint Peter of Rome


Profile

One of a group of 50 soldiers martyred together in the persecutions of Claudius II.


Died

269 in Rome, Italy



Saint Theodosius of Rome


Profile

One of a group of 50 soldiers martyred together in the persecutions of Claudius II.


Died

269 in Rome, Italy



Saint Lupus of Bayeux



Profile


Saint Lupus of Bayeux was a bishop of Bayeux, France in the 5th century. He is venerated as a saint by both the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church. His feast day is celebrated on December 27th.

Very little is known about the life of Saint Lupus of Bayeux. He is mentioned in the Martyrology of Bede and earlier editions of the Roman Martyrology, but there is no detailed biography of him.

According to tradition, Saint Lupus of Bayeux was a contemporary of Saint Hilary of Poitiers. He is said to have been a wise and holy man who was devoted to the spread of Christianity. He is also said to have been a miracle worker.

Saint Lupus of Bayeux is the patron saint of the city of Bayeux and of the diocese of Bayeux-Lisieux. He is also invoked for protection against storms and shipwrecks.



Saint Martirio of Constantinople


Profile

Sub-deacon. Martyred by Arians in the persecutions of emperor Constantius.



Saint Marciano of Constantinople


Profile

Cantor. Martyred by Arians in the persecutions of emperor Constantius.



Saint Mark of Rome


Profile

One of a group of 50 soldiers martyred together in the persecutions of Claudius II.


Died

269 in Rome, Italy



Saint George of Périgueux


Profile

Third-century missionary priest of the Périgueux region of France.

Saint George of Périgueux is a legendary figure who is said to have been a Roman soldier who was martyred for his faith in the early 4th century. He is the patron saint of the city of Périgueux, France, and his feast day is celebrated on April 23rd.

The story of Saint George of Périgueux is based on a legend that originated in the Middle Ages. According to the legend, George was a Roman soldier who was stationed in Périgueux. He was a devout Christian, and he refused to worship the Roman gods. As a result, he was arrested and tortured.

While George was being tortured, he was visited by an angel who told him that he would be saved. The angel also told George to go to a nearby forest where he would find a dragon that was terrorizing the local people.

George went to the forest and found the dragon. He drew his sword and killed the dragon, saving the local people. The people of Périgueux were so grateful to George that they made him their patron saint.

There is no historical evidence to support the existence of Saint George of Périgueux. However, the legend of Saint George is still popular in Périgueux and throughout France.



Saint Cyrinus of Rome


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.aint Cyrinus of Rome is a martyr of the early church. He is mentioned in the Martyrology of Bede and earlier editions of the Roman Martyrology for June 12th, but there is very little information about his life or martyrdom.


According to the legendary Acts of the martyrs St. Maris and St. Martha, Cyrinus was a Roman soldier who was martyred with them under Diocletian. However, the Itineraries to the graves of the Roman martyrs do not mention him.


Another tradition is that Cyrinus was a soldier who was martyred with Primus and Theogenes at Cyzicus, on the Hellespont. However, this tradition is also uncertain.


Died

late 3rd century in Rome, Italy



Saint Hilary of Javols


Profile

aint Hilary of Javols was a 5th-century bishop of Javols, a town in the south of France. He is best known for his opposition to paganism and his promotion of Christianity in the region.

Hilary was born into a wealthy family in the early 5th century. He received a good education and was well-versed in both Latin and Greek. He converted to Christianity at a young age and was ordained a priest shortly thereafter.

In the early 5th century, the region of Javols was still largely pagan. Hilary was determined to convert the local people to Christianity. He built churches and schools, and he preached the gospel throughout the region. He also confronted pagan priests and destroyed their temples.

Hilary's efforts were successful. By the time of his death in the late 5th century, Javols was a largely Christian region. Hilary is remembered as one of the most important figures in the evangelization of southern France.

Hilary is also known for his miracles. According to legend, he once healed a blind man and raised a dead man to life. He is also said to have exorcised demons and calmed storms.


Martyrs of Cruz Cubierta



Profile

A mother, Blessed María Teresa Ferragud Roig de Masiá, and her four daughters, Blessed María Joaquina Masiá Ferragud, Blessed María Vicenta Masiá Ferragud, Blessed María Felicidad Masiá Ferragud and Blessed Josefa Ramona Masiá Ferragud, all nuns, who were Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Died

25 October 1936 in Cruz Cubierta, Alzira, Valencia, Spain


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Forty Martyrs of England and Wales


Profile

Following the dispute between the Pope and King Henry VIII in the 16th century, faith questions in the British Isles became entangled with political questions, with both often being settled by torture and murder of loyal Catholics. In 1970, the Vatican selected 40 martyrs, men and women, lay and religious, to represent the full group of perhaps 300 known to have died for their faith and allegiance to the Church between 1535 and 1679. They each have their own day of memorial, but are remembered as a group on 25 October.


• Alban Roe • Alexander Briant • Ambrose Edward Barlow • Anne Line • Augustine Webster • Cuthbert Mayne • David Lewis • Edmund Arrowsmith • Edmund Campion • Edmund Gennings • Eustace White • Henry Morse • Henry Walpole • John Almond • John Boste • John Houghton • John Jones • John Kemble • John Lloyd • John Pain • John Plesington • John Rigby • John Roberts • John Southworth • John Stone • John Wall • Luke Kirby • Margaret Clitherow • Margaret Ward • Nicholas Owen • Philip Evans • Philip Howard • Polydore Plasden • Ralph Sherwin • Richard Gwyn • Richard Reynolds • Robert Lawrence • Robert Southwell • Secular Clergy • Swithun Wells • Thomas Garnet •

Canonized

25 October 1970 by Pope Paul VI


 புனிதர் ஜான் ஹக்டன் 

வேல்ஸ் மற்றும் இங்கிலாந்தின் 40 மறைசாட்சிகள் :

பிறப்பு : கி.பி. 1486

இங்கிலாந்து

இறப்பு : மே 4, 1535

டிபர்ன், இங்கிலாந்து

ஏற்கும் சமயம் :

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

அருளாளர் பட்டம் : டிசம்பர் 9, 1886

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ

புனிதர் பட்டம் : அக்டோபர் 25, 1970

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல்

நினைவுத் திருநாள் : அக்டோபர் 25

புனிதர் ஜான் ஹக்டன், ஒரு கத்தோலிக்க குருவும், “கர்த்தூசியன் துறவி” (Carthusian hermit) ஆவார். அக்காலத்தில், இங்கிலாந்தின் மன்னன் “எட்டாம் ஹென்றியின்” (King Henry VIII) “மேலாதிக்க சட்டத்தின்” (Act of Supremacy) காரணமாக மரித்த முதல் ஆங்கில கத்தோலிக்க மறைசாட்சியாவார். இவருடன் மரித்த நாற்பது மறைசாட்சியரில் இவர் முதலாவது மறைசாட்சியாக கருதப்படுகிறார்.

கி.பி. சுமார் 1486ம் ஆண்டில் பிறந்த இவர், இவரைப் பின்பற்றிய கர்தூசியன் (Carthusians) சபை சகா ஒருவர் எழுதிய ஆவணங்களின்படி, “கேம்ப்ரிட்ஜ்” (Cambridge) பல்கலையில் கல்வி பயின்றார். தற்போதுள்ள ஆவணங்களில் இவரது குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு தேதி பற்றிய ஆவணங்களும் கிடைக்கவில்லை.

கி.பி. 1515ம் ஆண்டு, லண்டனிலுள்ள “சார்ட்டர்ஹௌஸ்” (London Charter house) அமைப்பில் சேர்ந்த இவர், கி.பி. 1523ம் ஆண்டு, 'கிறிஸ்தவ ஆலயங்களில் உள்ள புனிதப் பொருள்களைக் காப்பவராகவும், (Sacristan), கி.பி. 1526ம் ஆண்டு, 'பழங்கால ரோம அதிகாரி'யாகவும் உயர்ந்தார்.

கி.பி. 1534ம் ஆண்டு, புதிய வாரிசுரிமை சட்டங்களின்படி, (Act of Succession) கடைப்பிடிக்க வேண்டிய சத்தியப் பிரமாணங்களிலிருந்து தமக்கும் தமது சமூகத்தினருக்கும் விளக்கு அளிக்க வேண்டினார். இதன் பிரதிபலிப்பாக, இவரையும் இவரது செயலுரிமையாளர் ஒருவரையும் கைது செய்து “லண்டன் கோபுர” (Tower of London) கோட்டைக்கு இட்டுச் சென்றனர். அங்கே அவர்கள், அந்த புதிய சத்தியப் பிரமாணங்கள் கத்தோலிக்க சட்டங்களுக்கு ஒத்துப்போவதாக ஒப்புக்கொண்டனர். பின்னர், சார்ட்டர் ஹௌஸ் அழைத்து வரப்பட்ட இவர்களிருவரும், பெரும் ஆயுதப்படையினரின் முன்னிலையில், தமது மொத்த சமூகத்தினருடன் இணைந்து சத்திய பிரமாணம் எடுத்துக்கொண்டனர்.

கி.பி. 1535ம் ஆண்டு, மீண்டும் அழைக்கப்பட்ட இவர்களது சமூகத்தினர், இங்கிலாந்தின் மன்னன் எட்டாம் ஹென்றியை (King Henry VIII) ஆங்கில திருச்சபையின் தலைவராக ஏற்றுக்கொண்ட சட்ட திட்டங்களின் சத்தியப் பிரமாணங்களை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளும்படி வற்புறுத்தப்பட்டனர். ஹக்டன் இம்முறை, கர்தூசியன் சபையின் பிற இரண்டு இல்லங்களின் முதல்வர்களான, “ராபர்ட் லாரன்ஸ்” (Robert Lawrence) மற்றும் “அகஸ்டின் வெப்ஸ்டர்” (Augustine Webster) ஆகிய இருவரையும் தம்முடன் அழைத்துச் சென்றார். ஆங்கிலேய சத்திய பிரமாணத்துக்கு விளக்கு அளிக்க வேண்டி கெஞ்சிய இவர்களது சமூகத்தினர் அனைவரும் இம்முறை “தாமஸ் கிராம்வெல்” (Thomas Cromwell) என்பவரால் மொத்தமாக கைது செய்யப்பட்டனர்.

கி.பி. 1535ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், ஒரு விசாரணை மன்றத்தின் முன்னர் நிறுத்தப்பட்டனர். “சியோன் மடத்தைச்” (Syon Abbey) சேர்ந்த “ரிச்சர்ட் ரேனால்ட்ஸ்” (Richard Reynolds) எனும் துறவி உள்ளிட்ட இவர்கள் அனைவருக்கும் மரண தண்டனை பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டது. 


புனிதர் ஜான் ஹக்டன் மற்றும் இரண்டு கர்த்தூசிய (Carthusians) துறவிகளான அருட்தந்தை “ரெனால்ட்” (Fr. Reynolds) மற்றும் அருட்தந்தை “ஜான் ஹைல்”', (Fr. John Haile of Isleworth) ஆகியோர் கி.பி. 1535ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 4ம் தேதியன்று, தூக்கிலிடப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டனர்.

Feastday: October 25

Birth: 1486

Death: 1535

Protomartyr of the English Reformation. A native of Essex, he served as a parish priest after graduating from Cambridge. He then became a Carthusian and the prior of the Carthusian Charterhouse of London. As an opponent of King Henry Viii's Acts of Succession and Supremacy, he was arrested with other Carthusians but was released temporarily. He then refused to swear to the Oath of Supremacy, the first man to make this refusal. Dragged through the streets, he was executed at Tyburn with four companions by being hanged, drawn, and quartered. Parts of his remains were put on display in assorted spots throughout London. Pope Paul VI canonized him in 1970 as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales.

This article is about the English Catholic martyr. For other men with the same name, see John Houghton (disambiguation).

John Houghton (c. 1486 – 4 May 1535) was a Carthusian hermit and Catholic priest and the first English Catholic martyr to die as a result of the Act of Supremacy by King Henry VIII of England. He was also the first member of his order to die as a martyr. He is among the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales.[3]

Life

Born around 1487, he was (according to one of his fellow Carthusians) educated at Cambridge, but cannot be identified among surviving records.[4] Similarly, no certain records can be found of his ordination.

He joined the London Charterhouse in 1516, progressed to be sacristan in 1523, and procurator in 1528.[1] In 1531, he became Prior of the Beauvale Priory in Nottinghamshire. However, in November of that year, he was elected Prior of the London house, to which he returned.[5] In addition, the following spring he was named Provincial Visitor, at the head of the English Carthusians.[1]

In April 1534, two royal agents visited the Charterhouse. Houghton advised them that "it pertained not to his vocation and calling nor to that of his subjects to meddle in or discuss the king's business, neither could they or ought they to do so, and that it did not concern him who the king wished to divorce or marry, so long as he was not asked for any opinion."[2] He asked that he and his community be exempted from the oath required under the new Act of Succession, which resulted in both him and his procurator, Humphrey Middlemore, being arrested and taken to the Tower of London. However, by the end of May, they had been persuaded that the oath was consistent with their Catholicism, with the clause "as far as the law of Christ allows" and they returned to the Charterhouse, where (in the presence of a large armed force) the whole community made the required professions.[2]

However, in 1535, the community was called upon to make the new oath as prescribed by the 1534 Act of Supremacy, which recognised Henry as the Supreme Head of the Church of England. Again, Houghton, this time accompanied by the heads of the other two English Carthusian houses (Robert Lawrence, Prior of Beauvale, and Augustine Webster, Prior of Axholme), pleaded for an exemption, but this time they were summarily arrested. They were called before a special commission in April 1535, and sentenced to death, along with Richard Reynolds, a monk from Syon Abbey.[5]

Houghton, along with the other two Carthusians, Reynolds and John Haile of Isleworth, was hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn on 4 May 1535.[6]

The three priors were taken to Tyburn in their religious habits and were not previously laicised from the priesthood and religious state as was the custom of the day. From his prison cell in the Tower, Thomas More saw the three Carthusian priors being dragged to Tyburn on hurdles and exclaimed to his daughter: "Look, Meg! These blessed Fathers be now as cheerfully going to their deaths as bridegrooms to their marriage!" John Houghton was the first to be executed. After he was hanged, he was taken down alive, and the process of quartering him began.

Catholic tradition relates that when Houghton was about to be quartered, as the executioner tore open his chest to remove his heart, he prayed, "O Jesus, what wouldst thou do with my heart?" A painting of the Carthusian Protomartyr by the noted painter of religious figures, Francisco Zurbarán, depicts him with his heart in his hand and a noose around his neck. In the Chapter house of St. Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster, in England, there is a painting depicting the martyrdom of the three priors.

After his death, his body was chopped to pieces and hung in different parts of London. He was beatified on 9 December 1886 and canonized on 25 October 1970.


Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group of 46 soldiers and 21 civilians martyred together in the persecutions of Claudius II.


Died

269 in Rome, Italy



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


• Blessed Alfons Arimany Ferrer

• Blessed Recaredo Centelles Abad



 Bernard of Saint Joseph


Blessed Bernard of Saint Joseph (1831-1911) was a Capuchin friar who is known for his devotion to Saint Joseph. He was born Francesco Forgione in the town of Ischia, Italy, and he entered the Capuchin Order at the age of 17. He took the name Bernard in honor of Saint Bernard of Siena.

Bernard was a gifted preacher and confessor, and he was known for his deep love of the Eucharist. He was also a strong advocate for the poor and the sick. In 1871, he founded the Congregation of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, which is dedicated to the care of the sick and the elderly.

Bernard was a close friend of Pope Leo XIII, and he was instrumental in promoting the devotion to Saint Joseph. He wrote several books and articles about Saint Joseph, and he was a founding member of the Archconfraternity of Saint Joseph.

Bernard was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1999.


 Canna

Saint Canna's feast day is also celebrated on October 25th. He was a 6th-century Irish abbot and missionary who is said to have founded the monastery of Kilkenora in County Clare. Saint Canna is venerated as a patron saint of the Diocese of Killaloe.


 Catherine of Bosnia

Catherine of Bosnia (Serbo-Croatian: Katarina Kosača/Катарина Косача; 1424/1425 – 25 October 1478) was Queen of Bosnia as the wife of King Thomas, the penultimate Bosnian sovereign. She was born into the powerful House of Kosača, staunch supporters of the Bosnian Church. Her marriage in 1446 was arranged to bring peace between the King and her father, Stjepan Vukčić Kosača. 

Catherine was a strong and influential figure in the Bosnian court. She was a devout follower of the Bosnian Church, and she used her position to promote its interests. She also played a key role in the country's political and diplomatic affairs.




In 1463, the Ottoman Empire invaded Bosnia. Catherine and her family were forced to flee the country. They eventually settled in Rome, where Catherine lived out the rest of her days.

Catherine of Bosnia is a significant figure in Bosnian history. She was a strong and courageous woman who played a vital role in her country's affairs. She is remembered as a symbol of Bosnian resilience and determination.

Catherine's tomb is located in the Basilica di Santa Maria in Ara Coeli in Rome. 


 Daria 

Saint Daria of Rome, who was martyred during the Diocletianic Persecution in the early 4th century. She is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church, and her feast day is celebrated on October 25.