Janeir-11-acem Sogglem Santam
Menology Entries for January 11:
Feast of Notre Dame du Bessiere or Our Lady of Bessiere in the neighborhood of Boisseuil in the Limousin: The Limousin is one of the areas that the Deformation infected. Here, a heretic was notorious for waylaying, & mocking, pilgrims to Our Lady of Bessiere. One day, however, he found his house afire, &, in the flames, he & his neighbors saw an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary frowning down upon him, an occurrence which brought about his reversion to the Catholic faith;
Feast of the Madonna della Vetrana in Castellana Grotte near Bari in the Puglia: The name Vetrana may mean either "Old," or, may mean "measles," in the local dialect. The Madonna della Vetrana is a painting dating from around 1300 inside a small stone church. From Dec. 23, 1690 A.D., the plague began to spread in the region, and all six of the children of Adrian, Count of Conversano, & his wife Isabella Caracciolo, besides the local people, caught the epidemic. To save them from sure death, two priests Frs. Cajetan Lanero & Josaphat Pinto fervently interceded with the Blessed Virgin Mary before her sacred icon, &, on Jan. 11, 1691, both saw an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary rebuking the plague & ordering it to stop, & instructing them to anoint the infected with oil from her lamps so that they would be cured, & burning everything that has been in contact with the infected, so that the people of the region be saved; in gratitude, the people of the region celebrate the Feast of Fanove at Castellana Grotte, the night of Jan. 11 & carrying into Jan. 12, with pilgrimages, processing images of the Madonna della Vetrana, & lighting bonfires in commemoration of the bonfires lit the night of Jan. 11, 1691; the sacred icon is now housed in the Santuario Convento Maria Santissima della Vetrana, Strada Comunale, Via del Convento, 40, 70013 Castellana Grotte BA, Italy;
(Pictured: Restored original Icon of the Madonna della Vetrana, a statue of the Madonna della Vetrana, the present shrine, Google map location, Demonic parody black "mass" of the Great Modernist Apostasy, the Protestant Abomination of Desolation of Luther, Cranmer, Bugnini & Montini, desecrating the shrine).
Feast of the Madonna della Vetrana in Castellana Grotte near Bari in the Puglia: The name Vetrana may mean either "Old," or, may mean "measles," in the local dialect. The Madonna della Vetrana is a painting dating from around 1300 inside a small stone church. From Dec. 23, 1690 A.D., the plague began to spread in the region, and all six of the children of Adrian, Count of Conversano, & his wife Isabella Caracciolo, besides the local people, caught the epidemic. To save them from sure death, two priests Frs. Cajetan Lanero & Josaphat Pinto fervently interceded with the Blessed Virgin Mary before her sacred icon, &, on Jan. 11, 1691, both saw an apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary rebuking the plague & ordering it to stop, & instructing them to anoint the infected with oil from her lamps so that they would be cured, & burning everything that has been in contact with the infected, so that the people of the region be saved; in gratitude, the people of the region celebrate the Feast of Fanove at Castellana Grotte, the night of Jan. 11 & carrying into Jan. 12, with pilgrimages, processing images of the Madonna della Vetrana, & lighting bonfires in commemoration of the bonfires lit the night of Jan. 11, 1691; the sacred icon is now housed in the Santuario Convento Maria Santissima della Vetrana, Strada Comunale, Via del Convento, 40, 70013 Castellana Grotte BA, Italy;
Pope St. Hyginus, who suffered a glorious martyrdom in the persecution of Emperor Antoninus Pius, at Rome, Jan. 11, 142 A.D.;
The Holy Martyrs of Alexandria in Egypt, Saints Peter, Severus, & Leucius, in the Diocletianic persecution, Jan. 11, 309 A.D.;
St. Alexander, Bishop of Fermo or of Piceni in the Marches, Martyr under Decius;
St. Salvius, Martyr in the former Roman Africa, now largely the Arab SettlerColony called "Tunisia;" St. Augustine preached, on his birthday, to the Church of Carthage;
St. Salvius, Bishop of Amiens, Martyr, Jan. 11, 625 A.D., he was a wonderworker or thaumaturge;
St. Anastasius & his 9 Companions, including St. Nonnonsus, Monks at the monastery of Suppentonia, now called Castel Sant Elia or Castello, near Mount Soractes or Soratte, in the province of Viterbo, in Latium or Lazio; Pope St. Gregory the Great wrote that an angel appeared to summon Anastasius & all these 9 monks, who all subsequently died one after the other (link); the story of St. Nonnonsus or Nonosius seems to be hopelessly conflated with that of St. Nonnonsus or Nonosius of Molzbichl in Carinthia, now a suburb of Spittal an der Drau, feast on Sept. 2, & whose relics were translated to the Cathedral of Freising;
St. Honorata, Virgin, at Pavia;
St. Leucius, Bishop of Brindisi, Confessor;
St. Palaemon, Abbot in the Thebais, who was the teacher of St. Pachomius;
St. Theodosius, Abbot of Magariassum in Cappadocia, who, after great sufferings for the Catholic faith, finally rested in peace;