Julh-19-acem Sogglem Santam
Julh-19-acem Sogglem Santam.
Santancem Vatt: Julh 19-cem Sogglem Santam. (Concannim).
O Caminho dos Santos: Os Santos e festas da Dia 19 de Julho. (Portugej).
The Way of the Saints: All Saints of July 19. (Waspish).
Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/07/julh-19-acem-sogglem-santam.html.
Saudações! A Paz de Jesus Cristo esteja com você! Boas festas de Nossa Senhora, nossa Mãe Maria, sob os títulos de Nossa Senhora de Moyen Pont e de Nossa Senhora do Milagre do Peru, do Papa São Simmaco, e de Aquiles, Aurea, Bernulfo, Hermao, Joao, Justina, Rufina, Stilla e Vicente!
The Peace of Jesus Christ be with you! Happy feasts of Our Lady, our Mother Mary, under the titles of Our Lady of Moyen Pont and of Our Lady of the Miracle of Peru, of Pope St Symmachus, and of Achilles, Aurea, Bernulf, Herman, John, Justina, Rufina, Stilla, and Vincent!
- + St Vincent de Paul, confessor, who slept in the Lord on September 27, his birthday in the Lord. Today is his Liturgical feast. Leo XIII declared him Heavenly patron before the throne of God of all charitable organizations throughout the Catholic world owing in any manner their origin to him. See https://www.bartleby.com/210/7/191.html.
- Defeat of Jane Grey, Protestant usurper of the Crown and Throne of England, by the Christians led by Queen Mary Tudor, July 19, 1553. Te Deum
- July 19: Our Lady of Moyen Pont, near Peronne, France.
«This feast day of the Blessed Virgin commemorates the miraculous image known as Our Lady of Moyen Point that was found by a French shepherd near the ponds where the meadows of Amele are presently located. According to local tradition, it was on an extremely hot day that July when a shepherd named John decided to take his sheep to the ponds beyond the peaceful meadows of Amele to give them some relief from the excessive heat of the day. The ponds had only recently been formed amid the rolling meadows due to the excessive rains of the previous season, and John hoped to give his sheep a treat of the cool, sweet water he knew he would find there. The shepherd was not prepared for the mystery that confronted him there amid the secluded meadows, for the sheep suddenly stopped and stood still as they drew near to the water. Instead of rushing forward to drink, as John had expected, they would not move at all, and a few of them bleated and made other strange sounds John had never heard before. Anticipating trouble, the shepherd made his way slowly to the edge of the closest pond, and found something odd lying in the water. Moving carefully toward the object, John was relieved to find that it appeared to be nothing more than a statue. Drawing it out cautiously, he found that it was an image of the Blessed Virgin Mary. As John rescued the statue of Our Lady of Moyen Point from the water, the sheep began to move forward and crowd closer around him, and then gazed fixedly at what their shepherd held cradled in his arm. The shepherd's statue proved to be miraculous, and a church and shrine to Our Lady of Moyen Point was erected there near Peronne and the statue was given a place of honor therein. According to local tradition, the church was built at the time of the Crusades by the Lords of the land to place a statue of the Virgin that the shepherd had miraculously discovered. Prodigies were not long in coming, and those who were seriously ill were carried there for a cure, and soon it was one of the most important pilgrimages in the region. In the year 1603, it is recorded that Robert Briogs was cured of paralysis, and that a Canon Anthony Dolle, was transported there in a desperate state, and recovered so completely that he was able to return to Peronne by walking. Many other miracles were recorded. The church that was built there in honor of the event was damaged and later repaired in the year 1612.» - + The Holy Martyrs of the Battle of Apamea in Syria, July 19, 998, victory of the Muslim Infidels over the Christians.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Borowikowszczyzna or Borovikovshchina (a Polish village located on the eastern edge of the Naliboki Forest annexed by the illegal Nazi-Soviet Ribbentrop-Molotov treaty to Belarus) Saints Achilles Puchala and Herman Stephen, Polish priests. During the Operation Hermann by the German Nazi Infidels, in retaliation of the Iwaniec Uprising, about 300 inhabitants of Pierszaje or Piaršai or Pierszajew were imprisoned here with the intention of murdering them. The Nazi Infidel officers gave the Franciscan priests an opportunity to escape, but they replied,: "The shepherds can not leave their sheep."Ultimately, the Nazi Infidels changed their mind, they tortured and murdered the priests, July 19, 1943, while the remaining detainees were sent to forced labor. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope. St Achilles Puchala was baptized as Joseph Puchala on the day of his birth. He entered the minor seminary in the ancient Polish city of Lviv, (annexed by the illegal Nazi-Soviet Ribbentrop-Molotov treaty to Ukraine) in 1924, becoming a Franciscan Minor Conventual, taking the name Achilles, and making his solemn vows on May 22, 1932. He was ordained on July 5, 1936 and served in the Franciscan convents in Grodno and Iwieniec in Poland. In early 1940 he moved into parish ministry in Pierszaje or Piaršai, Poland to help with a shortage of priests who had been arrested or fled ahead of arrest by the Gestapo during the Nazi occupation and persecutions of World War II. Arrested, tortured and burned to death on 19 July 1943 in a barn that was set on fire by Nazi forces. Herman Stephen was born to Joseph and Marianna Puch, poor working class farmers, and baptized as Charles Stephen. As a child he was considered extremely intelligent and extremely unruly. He early felt a call to the priesthood, and at age 13 began studying at the Franciscan seminary in the ancient Polish city of Lviv, (annexed by the illegal Nazi-Soviet Ribbentrop-Molotov treaty to Ukraine). He joined the Franciscan Minor Conventual in 1928 at Lodz-Lagiewniki, Poland, taking the name Herman and making his solemn profession in 1932. He continued his studies at the Pontifical University of Saint Bonaventure in Rome, Italy, and was ordained in Rome on July 5, 1936. He then continued his studies at the John Kazimierz University in Lviv, earning a Master's degree in Theology. He served as a priest in the Franciscan Shrine of Our Lady of Sorrows in Radomsko, Poland, then the church and Franciscan monastery of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Vilnius. In 1940 he was assigned to Pierszaje or Piaršai, Poland, assisting St Achilles Puchala. The two worked to care first for the people who were being transported to Siberian work camps by the Russians, and then to concentration camps by Germans. Tortured, mutilated, shot in the head and then burned in a barn alongwith St Achilles while ministering to people who were to be murdered in retaliation for Polish attacks against the Nazi occupiers.
- + The Holy Martyrs of the Battle of Gravelines, July 19, 1588, victory of the Satanists of England over the Christians of Spain.
- + The Holy Martyrs of the Battle of Guadalete, probably on July 19, 711, the Muslim Infidels infest and overcome Catholic Spain.
- + The Holy Martyrs of the Battle of Halidon Hill, July 19, 1333, 2nd Scottish War of Independence from England.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Liucun in Hebei province of China St Elisabeth Qin Bianshi, nicknamed Lisa, married lay woman and her 14 years old son, St Simon Qin Chunfu, murdered by the Boxers, July 19, 1900. Liucun is located at Coordinates 38°56'39?N 115°34'7?E. The Boxers were a mix of pagans and Muslim Infidels, instigated by the Muslim Infidels jealous at the growing influence of Christianity in China. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Meros in Phrygia Saints Macedonius, Tatianus and Theodulus, tortured and martyred together in the persecutions of emperor Julian the Apostate and governor Almachius. Their death is narrated by two authors who are almost contemporary and well known for their honesty, the historians Socrates and Sozomen, both of the first half of the 5th century. The city of Meros still hosted pagans who took advantage of the provisions made by the Apostate against the Christian religion to persecute the faithful. The authorities also showed great zeal in favoring the religion of the Apostate and went beyond imperial prescriptions, extorting money from Christians and inflicting mistreatment on them. Hamachius or Almachius, governor of the province, reopened and restored the temple already closed for a long time and reinstated the statues of the demons, after having restored their ancient splendor. Three Christians, Macedonius, Theodulus and Tatianus, unable to tolerate such an insult, entered the temple at night and broke the statues. Since the governor threatened reprisals on the entire population, they voluntarily handed themselves in. Hamachius offered them freedom if they burned incense to idols, but they refused; they were soon condemned to various tortures and finally they were burned alive to death on iron grills, most probably on July 19 362.
- + The Holy Martyrs of the Allied Bombing of Rome of July 19, 1943.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Seville Saints Justina and Rufina, martyred for refusing to worship the demons of the pagans, under Diocletian. On the occasion of the feasts of Adonis, which were celebrated in Seville from July 17 to 19, his devotees made a procession with his idol, and went dancing from house to house to ask for an offering; arrived at the pottery shop owned by Saints Justina and Rufina, they asked for some flower pots, which were to be used for the "gardens of Adonis," which the Saints refused, and when the pagans insisted, and attempted to use force, they destroyed all their stock. The governor Diogenianus therefore had them imprisoned, tortured and martyred. One source gave me their martyrdom date as July 17, but the Normative Martyrology, the Roman Martyrology of St Caesar Baronius, 2nd General of the Oratorians after their founder St Philip Neri, and commissioned by the Popes, places it on July 19.
- + The Holy Martyrs of the Battle of Simancas, July 19, 939, Reconquista victory of the Christians led by Ramiro II, King of Leon, over the Muslim Infidels.
- + Saints Ossin and his Fifty Monks of Tengaidh, Irish saints, no other information.
- + St Aedhan, or Aidan, abbot of the abbey of Lismore in Ireland.
- + St Ambrose Autpertus, while in Italy as a diplomatic envoy, he visited the monastery of St Vincent near Benevento. There he answered a call to religious life and became a monk, and later served as its abbot.
- + St Anthony of Valladolid, a Mercedarian friar. Bible scholar. Provincial of the Order in Castile. Advisor to Spanish kings. Sent the first Mercedarian missionaries to America after recieving permission from Pope Alexander VI in 1493. Travelled to many churches in Spain, working to revitalize the faith. Known for his endless charity to the poor. Today is his birthday in the Lord, July 19, 1514.
- + St Arsenius the Great, born to a wealthy Roman noble family, be became a deacon and was made tutor to the sons of Emperor Theodosius the Great. About 395 he left to live with the monks of Alexandria, Egypt. After the emperor's death, Arsenius retired to the wilderness of Scetis as a hermit and student of St John the Short. Noted for his great austerity.
- + St Aura or Aurea, martyr. Sister of Saints Adolf and John, who were martyred by the Muslim Infidels. She was raised as a Muslim during the period of the Moorish occupation of Spain. As a widow, she reverted to Christianity and was a nun at Cuteclara for 20 years. She was eventually denounced as a Christian by Apostates to Muslim Infidelity in her family. A qazi had persuaded her to apostatize for a while, but quickly repenting of what she had done, in the second trial, she overcame the enemy by the shedding of her blood, July 19, 856, at Cordoba.
- + St Bernhard of Rodez, he was born to a noble family, one of eight children born to Viscount Richard II of Millau and Rixinde. Benedictine monk at the St Victor monastery in Marseilles, France in 1061. Abbot of St Victor in 1064. Friend of Pope Gregory VII, Saints Hugo of Cluny, and William of Hirschau. Zealously promoted the Cluniac reform. Created cardinal in 1065 by Pope Alexander II. Papal legate to Germany in 1077. Papal legate to Spain in 1078. Today is his birthday in the Lord, July 19, 1079.
- + St Bernulf or Bernold was Bishop of Utrecht. He succeeded St Adalbold as Bishop of Utrecht on September 27, 1027, when he was appointed by the Roman Emperor Conrad II. He was likely an official in Conrad's court prior to taking on the powerful post as Prince-Bishop, both an episcopal head and secular feudal lord within the Empire. A supporter of Conrad and his successor Henry III, Bernold was active church reform, helping to reduce episcopal power over monastic orders, helping to strengthen the Cluniac order in his domains, weakening lay lords control of churches and church land, and aiding the Roman Emperor. For this, Conrad and Henry expanded his see, further angering local nobility. Bernold was friend of the future Emperor Henry III (succeeded Conrad in 1046), and traveled on Henry's 1041 campaign against the Hungarians. During Henry's visits to Utrecht in 1040 and 1042, he expanded the see. A brief rebellion led by the nobility of Lorraine in 1046 was defeated by Emperor Henry, and the Council of Aachen in 1049 saw Bernold's see again expanded. Bernold established the Collegiate churches of St John (Janskerk) in 1040, St Peter (St Pieterskerk) in 1039, and St Paul's Abbey and its church (St Pauluskerk). With the "Mariakerk," begun 1090, they form the outside of the Utrecht "Kerkenkruis," the Church Cross formed by four churches and a cathedral placed at its center. Bernold died on July 19, 1054, which is his feast day. His relics, including a cloth shirt, are venerated in Utrecht, and his cult goes back to at least the 14th century. In 1917, he was made patron of the Artist's Guild of Holland.
- + St Ciaran, of Tigh-na-Gortigh, an Irish saint, we have no other information.
- + St Cragon or Karazün or Kirdjun, martyr. He was an Egyptian bandit. Around the the year 297, he and two fellow thieves were brought to Christianity by a desert hermit, and he became a monk. During the persecutions of Diocletian, he left his hermitage to travel the region and preach Christianity. He was imprisoned several times and tortured, but suffered no damage from it, and never stopped preaching. In Samannüd he was dragged from the torture chamber to appear before the Consul Justus; he brought Justus, his family and guards to Christianity. He was finally imprisoned and executed for his faith and work.
- + St Daria or Daretia is mentioned in the Martyrology of St Jerome as a martyr at Byzantium or Constantinople, no other information is to be had.
- + St Epaphras, bishop, martyr, a collaborator of St Paul the Apostle, and mentioned 3 times in his epistles, missionary to Colossae, Laodicea and Hierapolis and made bishop of Colossae. He received the palm of martyrdom for defending courageously the flock committed to his charge. His body lies at Rome in the basilica of St. Mary the Greater.
- + St Felix or Felicinus, 17th bishop of Verona in the time of Theodoric the Ostrogoth.
- + St John Plessington or Pleasington, pseudonym John Scarisbrick, the son of Robert Plessington, a royalist Catholic, and Alice Rawstone. His family was persecuted for both their religious and political beliefs. John was educated by Jesuits at Scarisbrick Hall, then at the Royal College of St Alban at Valladolid, Spain, and then Sain Omer's monastery in France. Ordained in Segovia, Spain on March 25, 1662. He returned to England in 1663 to minister to covert Catholics in the areas of Holywell and Cheshire, often hiding under the name William Scarisbrick. Tutor at Puddington Hall near Chester. Murdered by the Criminals, Satanists, Traitors, Apostates, Usurpers of England, Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to worship Satan, refusing to be traitors, refusing to accept the Satanist Usurpers and Fraudsters "Kings of England," as "Popes of England," July 19, 1679. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- + St John Baptist Zhou or Zhu Wurui, also called Ruohan, martyr. A teenager, at the outbreak of the Boxer Rebellion, he publicly declared his Christianity, for which the rebels mutilated and killed him by being beaten and dismembered with an axe, July 19, 1900 in Lujiazhuang, Jingxia, in the province of Hebei, China. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- + St Macrina the Younger. Daughter of Saints Emmelia and Basil the Elder; sister of Saints Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, and Peter of Sebastea; granddaughter of St Macrina the Elder, and called the Younger to distinguish between the two. Educated by her mother, she could read from an early age. Betrothed at age twelve to a young lawyer who died before the wedding. She refused other offers of marriage, and devoted herself to her family, then to a religious life. Nun. Succeeded her mother as head of a small community of women in the Pontus or Pontic region on the southern shores of the Black Sea or Euxine Sea. Her biography and reminicenses of her were written by her brother St Gregory.
- + St Martin, 10th bishop of Trier or Treves in Germany.
- + St Michael of St Sabas, martyr. Eighth century hermit at the monastery of St Sabas. The Muslim Caliph greatly admired him, and tried to convert him to Islam. Michael refused, stating, "Mohamed is neither an apostle nor a prophet, he is a liar!" Despite threats and torture, he remained faithful to Christ, so he was murdered by the Muslim Infidels.
- + St Pascasius, a Mercedarian from Lyons in France, he was made bishop of Lycaonia.
- + St Peter Crisci or Pietrillo (Little Peter) of Foligno. «As a young man, Peter lived a wild, profane, and dissolute life. Around the age of thirty his parents died, he came into his inheritence, contemplated his parents' deaths, and came to understand the emptiness of his life; Peter had a conversion experience, sold all that he had, gave it away to the poor. He even sold himself into slavery as an act of penance and to get more to give away, but his “owner” freed him. He became a penitent beggar, an urban hermit who devoted himself to the care and cleanliness of the cathedral in Foligno in Umbria; he wore sack cloth, lived in its bell tower, and slept on the steps, open to the elements. He had a great dedication to the spirituality of Saints Angela of Foligno and Clara of Montefalco. Made several barefoot pilgrimages to Rome and Assisi, Italy. He was so odd, so open about his penance, and attracted so much attention from the faithful that the Inquisition investigated him; they were particularly concerned with his habit of praying while staring at the sun; but they determined that his was an orthodox faith, just extreme in its penance. He is considered one of the “mad saints” or “holy idiots” or “fools for Christ.” Today is his birthday in the Lord, July 19, 1323 in the cathedral of Foligno. On May 11, 1400 Pope Boniface IX granted indulgences to those visited the cathedral of St Felicianus from 19 to 22 July.»
- + St Stephen Cinocco or Stephen of the Wolf. At 16, he joined the Benedictine monastery at Carovilli in Isernia in the Molisse, becoming a monk. He was a supporter of Peter of Murrone who became Pope Celestine V. He travelled with him to Rome when he was elected. One day he was chopping wood and a wolf ate his donkey. St Stephen made the wolf draw the logs back to the monastery. He was also the Supervisor or Visitor of 2 monasteries in Manoppello in the Abbruzo. There was a wolf in the area that was disturbing the monasteries' herd of sheep. He prayed to God to make the wolf be friendly to the herd which is what happened. That is how he got his name of St Stephen of the Wolf.
- + St Stilla of Abenberg was a 12th-century German ascetic and virgin. She belonged to the family of the Counts of Abenberg near Nuremberg. She was a consecrated virgin and lived in seclusion with three other women in the service of the needy, the poor and the sick. She threw a glove from her family home of the Abenberg Castle, saying that she wanted to be buried where the glove fell. The glove was found where the St Peter's Church now stands, to build which she donated the land and the funds. She hoped eventually to establish beside it a monastery for nuns that she intended to enter, but she died before accomplishing her plan. Her brothers, monks in the Cistercian abbey of Heilsbronn, which they had founded in 1132, were eager to bring her body to their abbey for burial, but the horses refused, turning instead to her own church of St Peter, where she was buried in a grave marked by a 12th-century tombstone with her effigy. Shortly after her death, miracles were reported at her grave, which soon became a place of pilgrimage. The Augustinian nunnery of Marienberg Abbey was later built in about 1495 around her grave and the St Peter's Church. Records in the Marienburg monastery that bear on her were lost in 1633 due to a flood and the great fire of 1675. Today is her birthday in the Lord, July 19, probably 1140. The diocese of Eichstätt commemorates her on July 21. Her cult, first attested in 1480, was affirmed by the bishop of Eichstätt in 1897 on the grounds that it antedated 1534. Stilla's many favors (the Bollandists list 55 miracles) have been acknowledged, especially by wax votive images. She was beatified in 1927 by Pope Pius XI for her services to the poor and to the sick.
- + Pope St Symmachus, he had a lot to suffer from the Antipope Laurentius or Lawrence, who was propped up by the Byzantines.
- + St Vincent Cecilia Gallardo, seminarian, martyr, murdered July 19, 1936 in Hortaleza, Spain or July 21, 1936 in Canillas, Madrid, by the Criminals, Satanists, Traitors, Apostates, Usurpers of Spain, Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to worship Satan, refusing to be traitors, refusing to accept the Satanist Usurpers and Fraudsters "Republican government of Spain." Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
MAJOR FEASTS
Historical events
Feasts of Mary, Mother of All Christians
' July 19, 1630: Nuestra Señora del Milagro or Our Lady of the Miracle, Lima, Peru. There seems three days associated with this image: May 23, July 19 and November 27. The account (below) does not state what occured on July 19.
![]() Our Lady of the Miracle of Peru |
Collective of Martyrs or IsoMartyrs
Collective of Saints not Martyrs or IsoMartyrs
Individual saints
DOUBTFUL
- Roman of Ryazan, died July 19, 1270. This is after the Great Byzantine Schism that began July 16, 1054, when, in the face of the pertinant defiance and heresies of Michael Caerularius, the Papal legates led by Humbert of Silva Candida excommunicated him. If Romanus died in Schism, he is damned to hell; if he died in unity and submission to the Pope, he is a saint in heaven. The evidence is that he was a Byzantine Schismatic who died in rejection of the Papacy, and is Damned for eternity in hell. See Unam Sanctam and the Council of Florence's Cantate Domino.
DAMNED
- Abram or Abraham Hoagland Cannon, damned July 19, 1896.
- Agustín Cosme Damián de Iturbide y Arámburu, Traitor, July 19, 1824.
- Cesare Cremonini, Apostate, damned July 19, 1631.
OREMUS
Most Holy Mary, Mother of God, and our Mother, and all you Saints, Fathers, Mothers, Brothers, Sisters, Popes, Archbishops, Bishops, Hermits, Monks, Martyrs, Virgins, Champions and Heroes of Jesus Christ, whose feasts is today, named and unnamed, we pray to you for your intercession and guidance, lead us away from error and evil and into the Grace and Love of God, that with your assistance, we may join you in Eternity with the Living God, we make this prayer through Jesus Christ Our Lord, Who Lives and Reigns, in the Unity of the Godhead, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, one God, forever and ever, Amen.
Lúcío Mascarenhas.