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(Pictured: Bernini's monument of the Chair of St. Peter, enclosing the wooden chair recovered by Emperor Charles the Bald from the Mahomettan Infidels, in the foreground, the Protestant Table of the Abomination of Desolation.)
Primary Liturgical Feast of the Day: The Chair of the Apostle St. Peter at Rome, a feast instituted to commemorate the establishment of the Holy See at Rome; the present chair venerated in the Basilica of St. Peter on the Vatican Hill, is a gift from Emperor Charles the Bald, & was recovered by him from Mahomettan Infidels, but it seems that it is not the original & historic Chair of St. Peter; the One Holy Catholic & Apostolic Roman Church celebrates 2 separate Feasts of the Chairs of St. Peter, long predating Charles the Bald: that of his Seat at Rome today, & of his older seat at Antioch in Coelesyria; the 1st Apostasiarch Angelo Joseph Roncalli, has abolished, in 1960, for his Apostate sect, today's feast; it is believed that the original chair of St. Peter in Rome was removed, & stolen, by Mahomettan Infidels during their occupation of Old St. Peter's Basilica in 846 A.D., until they were exterminated from mainland Italy at the Battle of the Garigliano River, led by Pope John X, in June 915 A.D.;
OCTAVE OF CHRISTIAN UNITY: In 1908, the Catholic Church approved Fr. Paul Wattson's proposal of dedicating the 8 days, both fmdays inclusive, of the Feast of the Chair of St. Peter at Rome, Jan. 18, & the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul the Apostle, Jan. 25; heretics were either expelled from the Church of Christ, or seceded from her; Christian Unity can only be achieved by a return to the maternal embrace of the Unstainable Bride of Jesus Christ, also called Uniatism, under some circumstances;

(Pictured: 1. Pre-restoration; 2-4: The image of Our Lady of Hope of Dijon as it currently is, after restoration; 5: Replica with restoration to original form.)
Feast of Notre Dame de Espoir de Dijon or Our Lady of Hope of Dijon: The city of Dijon is the capital of Burgundy, which, before it's conquest by France, was one of the 3 Kingdoms constituting the 3rd, or Ottonian, Roman Empire, the others being Italy & Germany; the present Church of Our Lady of Hope of Dijon was part of the dissolved Monastery of St. Stephen; the original image of Our Lady of Hope of Dijon was a seated lady with the Child Jesus seated on her lap; the Child Jesus was first lost or stolen, then the statue's hands were broken off, lastly, an alteration was attempted to make it into a statue in a standing, rather than a sitting, posture; in the meantime, the statue turned dark & came to be called a "Black Madonna;" the statue has undergone partial restoration, with her original color shade recovered; Our Lady of Hope of Dijon twice saved the city from disaster, once when a huge Swiss-German force attempted to seize Dijon, between Sept. 9-11, 1513 A.D., & Sept. 11, 1944, when Nazi Germany's occupying forces mysteriously withdrew in face of French forces, without offering a battle (link);
The Holy Martyrs of Alexandria in Egypt, 37 evangelists in Egypt, murdered for refusing to worship the Pagan Demons, their names are given as Agathus or Agathius, Ammonius, Aratus, Bastammonius, Bastamus, Bessammonius, Collutus, Cyriacus, Didymus, Dionysius, Dioscorus, Hero, Hippeas, Horpresius, Horus, Oecomeus, Orion, Pantherus, Papas, Papias, Paul, Pethecus, Pinutus, Plesius, Potamon, Protea, Recombus, Recumbus, Romanus, Sarmata, Saturninus, Serapion, Theonas, Thionius & Zoticus, they were noblemen who divided themselves into four parties to evangelize the country, Paul was their leader, & he set Recombus, Papias & Theonas as the captains of the other three bands;
The Holy Martyrs of Astas or Astracus, in Bithynia, Saints Moseus or Moses & Ammonius, soldiers, indicted for financially aiding, & harboring, Christians, they were first condemned to slave in the metal mines, & then burnt alive, in the persecution of Decius, Jan. 18, 250 A.D.;
The Holy Martyrs of Avrille in Angers, France, Saints Charlotte Lucas, Felicity Pricet, Monica Pichery, & Victoria Gusteau, murdered by the Satanists, Criminals, Bandits, Robbers usurping the government of France, in hatred of Jesus Christ & the Christian religion, January 18, 1794 A.D.;
The Holy Martyrs of Carthage in the then Roman province of Africa, now the Arab Settler-Colony called "Tunisia," Saints Lucius, Paul & Successus, bishops of the province; it is said that they participated in the Council of Cathage of 259, & thereafter, were seized & martyred in the Decian persecution, however, Decius died in 251 A.D., the Emperors reigning 259 to 268 A.D. were Valerianus & his son Gallienus;
The Holy Martyrs of Nicaea in Bithynia Saints Cosconius, Melanippus ("Black horse") & Zenonus, as recognized by the Martyrology of St. Jerome;
The Holy Martyrs of Salerno Saints Archelais, Thecla & Susanna; while Diocletian's persecution was raging, to escape the fury of the wicked, they fled from Aemilia-Romagna, where they were leading a holy life as hermitesses, taking refuge in Nola, in a humble and poor place, where they continued as hermitesses, but the fame of their sanctity & virtue, & miracles & healings, spread quickly everywhere & this caused some pagans to denounce them to Leontius, proconsul of Campania, who had them seized & taken to Salerno, his seat; after various tortures, remaining miraculously unharmed, all three virgins were beheaded a mile from Nola, Jan. 18, 293 A.D., their liturgical feast is set for Jan. 19;
The Holy Martyrs of Sebastopolis in the Pontus, St. Athenogenes, Bishop of Pedachthoe, also known as Heracleopolis, in the Pontus, & Companions, in the Diocletianic persecution;
St. Catus, Priest, & Martyr, in Numidia; he is probably part of the Holy Martyrs of Numidia celebrated tomorrow, Jan. 19, which lists a St. Catus;
St. Prisca, Virgin, Martyr at Rome under Emperor Claudius, who, after undergoing many torments, was crowned with martyrdom, Jan. 18, 275 A.D.;
St. Priscilla, Martyr in Rome on the Via Salaria, as recorded in the Martyrology of St. Jerome, it is probable that she is the same as the wife of St. Aquila, disciples of St. Paul the Apostle, it is improbable that she & the latter St. Prisca, both celebrated today, are identical, as they lived separated by more than a century;

St. Volusianus, 7th Bishop of Tours, possible Martyr, he was made captive by the Goths in Toulouse, & in exile gave up his soul to God;
St. Wulfrid or Wilfred or Ulfrid, Martyr, English missionary in Sweden, he was tortured & martyred by a mob of pagans for cutting down a tree worshipped as associated with the Demon Thor, Jan.18, 1028 A.D.;

St. Andrew Grego of Peschiera, Dominican priest & travelling preacher for 45 years, Apostle of the Valtellina which is now a part of Lombardy in Italy & of the neighbouring areas of what is now Switzerland, what is now called the "Graubunden," where the Albigensian heresy had taken root, working to bring the people back to Christianity, he is usually depicted with a book with a snake emerging from it, referring to an incident where Albegensian heretics brought a book that they said would explain their beliefs, he told them to open it, to their great consternation, a serpent emerged from it, the heretics saw the error of their ways, & reverted to Christianity, he died January 18, 1485 A.D, aged 85 (b. 1400) in the Dominican convent at the Dominican monastery of Morbegno, which he had established, in the Valtellina, now in the province of Sondrio, in Lombardy, Italy; he was beatified (cultus confirmatio) by Pope Pius VII, Sept. 26, 1820;

St Beatrix the Younger of Este, born 1230 to a family of the Norman Dukes of Apulia & was herself the daughter of the Marquis of Ferrara, she was also a niece of St. Beatrice the Elder of Este, for who she was named, she was betrothed but her fiance succumbed to his wounds after a battle, just before their wedding day; Beatrice refused to return home, but attended by some of her maidens, devoted herself to the service of God, following the Benedictine rule, at the convent of St. Anthony in Polesine, at San Lazzaro just outside of Ferrara, her cult was approved by Pope Clement XIV (cultus confirmatio), & Pope Pius VI established her liturgical feast for Jan. 19 (link);
St. Christina, Augustinian nun at the monastery of St. Lucia in Aquileia, Italy; in June 1505 A.D., she put away her baptismal name of Matthea Ciccarelli, & took the new name of Christina; Prophetess, & wonderworker or thaumaturge, on the feast of Corpus Christi, Christina was seen to levitate, & the image of a Host in a golden pyx radiated from her breast, a further vision on Good Friday caused invisible stigmata & the pains of the Crucifixion which remained until the next day; died Jan. 18, 1543 at Aquileia in Venetia, buried in the church of the monastery of St. Lucia; cultus confirmatio 1841 by Pope Gregory XVI;
St. Day, also called Ayde, Dei, Die, Dye & They, venerated in the remnant British lands of Cornwall & Wales, where he is the patron saint of St. Day in Cornwall, near Redruth; seems different from St. Day of Brittany; it is extremely improbable that he is the Irish St. Deicola of Lure;
St. Day, also called Ayde, Dei, Die, Dye & They, venerated in the British refugee lands of Brittany; seems to be different from St. Day of Cornwall & Wales; it is extremely improbable that he is the Irish St. Deicola of Lure;
St. Deicola, Irish missionary, the older brother of St. Gallen, he studied at Bangor Abbey under St. Comgall & St. Columbanus; in 567 A.D., he evangelized Austrasia & Burgundy, & was one of the twelve who accompanied St. Columbanus to France & helped found the abbey of Luxeuil; when Columbanus was exiled by Thierry II, Deicola, too old to accompany him, founded the monastery of Lure in the Vosges, near where he retired as a hermit;

St. Fatius or Fazzio, a very skilled goldsmith in Verona, ("fatius" is a Latin word meaning maker, or fabricator, etc.), his business opponents developed a vicious hatred for him, due to which, he emigrated to Cremona, where he worked & gave away his earnings to the poor; he later embarked on pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James the Apostle at Compostela, & to Rome; upon his return to his native Verona, he was falsely accused by old opponents, arrested, tried & aquitted; he immediately returned to Cremona, where he founded the Order of the Holy Ghost, charged with the care of pilgrims & the sick; died Jan. 18, 1272 A.D., at age of 82;
St. John of Laers, one of the first Mercedarians, he received the Mercedarian habit together with St. Peter Nolasco & was his lieutenant; famed as a wonderworker or thaumaturge, he often commanded the stormy sea waves to calm, saving the lives of many sailors;
St. Leobard, anchorite or hermit in Tours, a man of wonderful abstinence & humility;
St. Liberata, Virgin at Como;

St. Margaret of Hungary, Virgin, wonderworker or thaumaturge, died Jan. 18, 1282, A.D., at age 27 (link);
St. Scoth, Virgin, Irish nun, as remembered in the Irish Martyrologies of Tallaght, Donegal & Gorman;
ETERNALLY DAMNED: (See Council of Florence Decree Cantate Domino)
John Barrera y Mendez, 13 years old "Catholic" Communist captured, & executed, by the Guatemalan Resistence (Counter-Revolutionaries or Contras), Jan. 18, 1980, the Antichurch, or Whore Church, the most Satanist entity in Salvation history as yet, has "canonized" him as a "Saint" as part of the Communist "Martyrs of Quiche;"