Julh-12-acem Sogglem Santam
Julh-12-acem Sogglem Santam
Santancem Vatt: Julh Baracem Sogglem Santam. O Caminho dos Santos: Os Santos e festas da Dia 12 de Julho. The Way of the Saints: All Saints of July 12.
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Saudações! A Paz de Jesus Cristo esteja com você! Boas festas de Nossa Senhora, nossa Mãe Maria, sob os títulos de Nossa Senhora da Monte Lura, e também as festas dos Santos João Gualberto e Veronica de Sudorio! Happy feasts of Our Lady, our Mother Mary, under the titles of Our Lady of Lure, and also the feasts of St John Gualbert and of St Veronica!July 12, 1110: Our Lady of Mount Lure near Avignon.
«Sometime at the beginning of the 6th century, a priest from Orleans, St Donatus, in search of solitude, made his way into the Alps. The Mountain of Lure seemed to be the kind of place he was looking for; and with the approval of the Bishop of Sisteron, he settled there. On the side of the mountain he built an oratory for which he himself made the statue of Our Lady, carving it from native stone. When after 32 years he died, having spent these years in penance and apostolic work, he was replaced by the Benedictines of Val-Benoit. A chapel was built to replace the oratory which proved too small to accommodate the many pilgrims. When the Muslim Infidels invaded Provence, the Benedictine monks had to flee and so they hid the statue. Barbarians ravaged the country several times and the convent was destroyed. About 1110 the countess Adelaide to whom the land of Lure belonged, gave the place of the original oratory to the Bishop of Sisteron. Several nobles aided in the work of restoring the monastery of Our Lady of Lure. The ancient statue was found and placed above the tomb of St Donat. The church became well known and pilgrimages were well attended. In 1318, Pope John XXII attached the shrine to Our Lady of Lure to the See of Avignon. In 1481, Pope Sixtus IV called back to Avignon the 12 canons at the shrine, and the church, badly cared for, fell to pieces in 1557. For 80 years the place remained desolate. One day a shepherd, who was resting near the ruins, heard a voice saying, "Oh, how many graces I would give to men in this place, if my sanctuary were rebuilt." The ecclesiastics to whom he told his story took the shepherd seriously. The shrine was rebuilt, and the statue rescued from the debris, was placed on a new altar which was consecrated in 1637. Pilgrimages again flourished. During the French Revolution the chapel was pillaged and the statue desecrated by the Satanists. With the return of peace, pilgrims again came. On a number of occasions, Mary granted the miracle of an abundant rain to pilgrims that had come to seek this favor. The largest number of pilgrims were wont to come on Pentecost, the feast of the Assumption, and the Nativity of Our Lord.» (See https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montagne_de_Lure)
The Holy Martyrs Saints Andrew, Faustus, Menas and their fellow soldiers & martyrs. Their history is lost.
The Holy Martyrs of Ancyra in Roman Galatia Saints Proclus and Hilarion, who won the palm of martyrdom after most bitter torments, in the time of the emperor Trajan and the governor Maximns. (RM)
The Holy Martyrs of Aquileia, St Hermagoras, disciple of the blessed evangelist Mark, and first bishop of that city. Whilst occupied in performing miraculous cures, in preaching frequently and bringing souls to repentance, he suffered many kinds of torments, and finally by capital punishment, merited an immortal triumph with his deacon St Fortunatus. (RM)
The Holy Martyrs of Lucca, in Tuscany, St Paulinus, who was consecrated first bishop of that city by St Peter. Under Nero, after many combats, he terminated his martyrdom with some companions, at the foot of Mount Pisa. (RM)
The Holy Martyrs of Milan, Saints Nabor and Felix, who suffered in the persecution of Maximian Herculeus about the year 304. Their bodies were first interred without the walls of the city, but afterwards brought into it, and deposited in a place where a church was built over their tomb, to which great multitudes of people resorted with wonderful devotion, as Paulinus testifies in his life of St Ambrose. In the same church St Ambrose discovered the relics of Sts Gervasius and Protasius, as himself relates in his letter to his sister St Marcellina. The people continued to venerate the relics of Sts Nabor and Felix with the same ardour of devotion, as that holy doctor assures us. They are still honoured in the same church, which at present bears the name of St Francis. (RM & AB).
The Holy Martyrs of Orange Saints Jean Mary of St Bernard de Romillon, Rose of St Xavier baptized Magdalene Teresa Talieu), Mary of St Henry (baptized as Margaret Eleanor of Justamond), Martha of the Good Angels (baptized as Mary Cluse), murdered by the Satanists, Traitors, Apostates, Usurpers of France, Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to worship Satan, refusing to be traitors, refusing to accept the Satanist Usurpers and Frauds as "Popes of France."
St Agnes Lê Thi Thành (Bà) Ðê, murdered by the Buddhists for sheltering a priest, at Ba Den in Tran Hóa, Vietnam. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
St Ansbald, monk at the Prüm Abbey near Trier, Germany. Abbot of St Hubert in the Ardennes. Abbot of Prüm in 860. Prüm was burned by Vikings in 882, but Ansbald re-built it.
St Bachla or Balay, a hermit at Ploermellac in Brittany, student of St Guenole.
St Bertha, or Bertrada of Laon (born between 710 and 727 – 12 July 783), also known as Bertrada the Younger, daughter of Count Heribert or Charibert and his wife Bertrada the Elder, was a Frankish queen, wife of Pepin the Short, mother of Emperor St Charlemagne, Carloman and Gisela, and other children.
St Colmán of Clonpriest (Irish & Celtic Saints)
St David Gonson or Gunston, was born in Deptford, Kent, the son of William Gonson and his wife Bennett Walter. His was a naval family, with his father serving as a Vice-Admiral and well connected with the nobility. His father had been born in Melton Mowbray and his uncle, Bartholomew, served as a priest there, during which time he erected the Gonson Memorial in the church paying tribute to his parents. David Gonson was received into the Order of Malta at the English Auberge in Valetta on October 20, 1533. He served onboard ships of the Order in the Mediterranean until 1540 when he returned to England. As part of the actions taken during the Deformation, the Order was suppressed in England by King Henry VIII on May 10, 1540. Gonson refused to recognise the authority of the king in spiritual matters. The writ against him claimed that in Malta "He denied that King Henry was supreme head of the Church of England and that he called the King a heretic" with the accusation being laid by a fellow knight, Sir Philip Babington. For this he was imprisoned in the Tower of London and subsequently at Marshalsea Prison. In 1541, for his refusal to be a Traitor, for his denial that Henry VIII is the "Pope of England," for refusing to worship Satan, he was murdered at St Thomas' Waterings in Southwark on July 12, 1541, by the Satanists, Traitors, Apostates, Usurpers of England, Maranos and Freemasons. He was beatified by Pope Pius XI in Rome on December 15, 1929.
St Epiphania, martyr at Lentini, who, after having her breasts cut off, died in the time of the emperor Diocletian and the governor Tertillus. (RM)
St Harduin or Arduin was born in 749 in the village of Alvimare in France. He entered the famous Benedictine monastery of St Wandrille in Fontenelle near Rouen in Normandy, founded by St Wandrille. He was ordained a priest and received permission from his abbot to live as a hermit, and he was locked in a cell called St Saturninus, which Wandrille had founded near the monastery. He spent his free time copying works by the Church Fathers. Since all the monks were found to be very ignorant, Abbot Gervald founded a school in the convent, where Harduin taught mathematics and handwriting. He was an expert in handwriting and has left many volumes in the monastery's library. In the pontificate of Pope Hadrian I (772-95), Harduin left his cell to go on a pilgrimage to Rome, and when he returned, he spent the rest of his life in the monastery of Fontenelle. He died on July 12, 811, aged 62, and was buried in the abbey church of St Paul. His memorial day is the day of his death on July 12, but April 20 is also mentioned.
St Ignatius Clement Delgado y Cebrián, martyr, Spanish missionary bishop in the Philippines and Vietnam, murdered by the Buddhists, July 12, 1838 at Name Dinh, under the King of Tonkin Minh Mang. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
St Jason, one of the first disciples of Christ, a collaborator of St Paul the Apostle, named in the Bible, died in the Lord at Cyprus. (RM)
St John Gualbert, founder of the Vallumbrosan order, died in the Lord at the monastery of Passignano near Florence. (RM)
St John the Iberian, also called the Hagiorite, a Iberian (Georgian) nobleman, and outstanding military commander. Father of St Euthymius the Illuminator. With his wife's approval, he became a monk on Mount Olympus in Bithynia. Travelled to Constantinople to his son, who was being held hostage by the emperor. Euthymius then joined his father as a monk. Their holiness attracted followers, so they retired to the monastery of St Athanasius on Mount Athos in South Macedonia. With John's brother-in-law, the retired general John Thornicus, and Euthymius, John founded Iviron or Iweron ("Iberian") monastery on Mount Athos and served as its first abbot. (He lived, and died, before the Great Schism of the Byzantines, so in unity with the Catholic Church.)
St John Jones OFM, also known as John Buckley, John Griffith, Godfrey Maurice, or Griffith Jones was a Franciscan friar, and Catholic priest. He was born at Clynnog Fawr, Caernarfonshire (Gwynedd), in Cymru ("Wales"), and was murdered July 12, 1598 at Southwark, England, by the Satanists, Traitors, Apostates, Usurpers of England, Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to become a Traitor, for refusing to worship Satan, for refusing to accept that the "Kings of England" (actually Henry VIII's daughter and granddaughter, the Bastard and Whore Elizabeth Boleyn) are "Popes of England." Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
St Lambert, abbot of the Cîteaux Abbey in Saint-Nicolas-lès-Cîteaux, France from 1155 to 1161. In 1161 he retired as a monk at the Morimond Abbey, where he died, July 12, 1163.
St Leo I, 2nd abbot of the monastery of La Cava.
St Lucius or Lúcío, nicknamed Luguzzone, Uguzzone and Uguzo, of Cavargna, martyr, has the center of his cult in the small Oratory of St Lucio, lost among the mountain pastures, at the extreme limit of the Val di Cavargna, on the border with Switzerland between the lakes of Lugano and Como, at 1669 m. above sea level; the parish is that of Cavargna of the diocese of Milan, although it is in the province of Como. From the ancient "Catalogus sanctorum Italiae" published in 1613, we learn that Lucio was a hired shepherd, whose master dismissed him for alleged thefts, because he had made small gifts to the poor. He was hired by a new, more condescending master, and it happened that while his wealth increased, those of the previous master diminished; who, both out of hatred and envy, killed him. On the spot where he was killed, a spring gushed out so abundant as to form a pond, to whose waters the sick of the eyes rush to heal. The ancient oratory of St Lucio of Cavargna became a pilgrimage destination for devotees, who turned to it to beg for rain or clear weather; it also preserves a valuable painting of the sixteenth century on copper, which depicts the holy shepherd who distributes cheese to the poor. His cult is widespread in about fifty locations in northern Italy and in the Swiss Canton of Ticino; his feast is on July 12th.
St Marciana, virgin and martyr at Toledo, For the faith of Christ, she was exposed to the beasts, torn to pieces by a bull, and was thus crowned with martyrdom. (RM)
St Menulph or Menou of Quimper-Corentin (Irish & Celtic Saints)
St Nazair of Liethmore (Irish & Celtic Saints)
St Paternianus, bishop of Bologna. (RM)
St Peter Kahn or Khan, a priest, martyred, murdered by the Buddhists July 12, 1842 in Hà Tinh, Vietnam. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
St Ultán of Cork (Irish & Celtic Saints)
St Veronica or Berenicea, when Jesus carried the cross on His way to Calvary, she was present in the crowd, and, feeling pity for Him, wiped His face with her kerchief. An accurate picture of His face was left on this cloth, since then revered as the Sudorium.
St Viventiolus, bishop of Lyons. (RM)

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