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2,433 saints match
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- Saint Domninus of Vienne
500 · Medieval
Saint Domninus of Vienne (French: Domnin, Domnus, Donnin; d. 536) was a bishop of Vienne in France, venerated as a saint. Domninus was born in the Dauphiné. He succeeded Julian as bishop in 533.
Saint Domnolus of Le Mans600–581 · Medieval
Domnolus (Latin: Domnolus) was Bishop of Le Mans from 558 or 559 until his death on December 1, 581; in the 17th century, the Benedictine Jean Bondonnet designated him a saint.
Saint Dona600 · Medieval
St Dona's Church, Llanddona ) is a small 19th-century parish church in the village of Llanddona, in Anglesey, north Wales. The first church on this site was built in 610. The present building on the site dates from 1873, and was designed by the rector at the time.
Saint Donald of Ogilvy650–716 · Medieval
St. Donald of Sheridan, also known as Donivald or Domhnall, was an eighth-century Scottish saint who lived at Ogilvy, in the former Forfarshire.
- Saint Donat de Besançon
594–660 · Medieval
Donatus (d. after 658) was a bishop of Besançon, founder of the monastery Palatium (later Saint-Paul) in Besançon and author of a rule for nuns. He is venerated as a saint since the 11th century; his feast day is August 7.
- Saint Donato di Montevergine
1219 · Medieval
Saint Donato di Montevergine was born in Salerno and died in 1219 at the Territorial Abbey of Montevergine. He is recognized as a saint.
Saint Donatus of Fiesole701–876 · Medieval
Donatus of Fiesole (died 876) was an Irish teacher and poet, and Bishop of Fiesole. Donatus was born in Ireland to noble parents towards the end of the eighth century.
- Saint Donatus of Jura
535 · Medieval
Donatus (Latin: Donatus; died 535) was a hermit from the Jura Mountains and a saint in the Catholic Church, commemorated on August 19. Saint Donatus was born in Orléans. He lived as a recluse in the Jura Mountains near Sisteron, in Provence.
Saint Donatus of Ripacandida1179–1198 · Medieval · Benedictines
Donatus was a Benedictine monk. He was born in Ripacandida, Italy. He became a Benedictine in 1194, at Petina, Italy.
Saint Donatus of Zadar750–811 · Medieval
Donatus (second half of 8th century Zadar – first half of 9th century), also called Donato of Zara, was a Dalmatian saint who became a bishop and a diplomat for the Dalmatian city-state of Zadar (Zara). His feast day is celebrated on 25 February.
- Saint Donnán of Eigg
550–617 · Medieval
Saint Donnán of Eigg (also known as Donan; died 17 April 617) was a Gaelic priest, likely from Ireland, who attempted to introduce Christianity to the Picts of northwestern Scotland during the Early Middle Ages.
Saint Dorothea of Montau1347–1394 · Medieval
Dorothea of Montau (6 February 1347 – 25 June 1394) was an anchoress and visionary of 14th century Prussia. After centuries of veneration in Central Europe, she was beatified in 1976.
Saint Dositheus of Gaza600–600 · Medieval
Dositheus of Gaza was a sixth century monk and saint. Originally a page, he entered the monastery of Seridus close to Gaza where he became a disciple of Dorotheus of Gaza and died due to a severe illness at a young age.
- Saint Douceline of Digne
1214–1274 · Medieval · Roubaud beguinage
Douceline of Digne (c. 1215/1216 – 1274) was the founder of the Beguines of Marseille and the subject of a vita that survives today, The Life of Douceline de Digne.
- Saint Drausius
576 · Medieval
Drausius served as the Roman Catholic Bishop of Soissons and worked as a presbyter. He died in 576 and is recognized as a saint.
Saint Drostan610 · Medieval
Saint Drostan (d. early 7th century), also known as Drustan, was the founder and abbot of the monastery of Old Deer in Aberdeenshire. His relics were later translated to the church at New Aberdour and his holy well lies nearby.
- Saint Dryhthelm
700–800 · Medieval
Dryhthelm (fl. c. 700), also known as Drithelm or Drythelm, was a monk associated with the monastery of Melrose known from the Historia Ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum of Bede.
Saint Dubricius460–550 · Medieval
Dubricius or Dubric (Welsh: Dyfrig; Norman-French: Devereux; c. 465 – c. 550) was a 6th-century British ecclesiastic venerated as a saint. He was the evangelist of Ergyng (Welsh: Erging) (later Archenfield, Herefordshire) and much of south-east Wales.
Saint Dunod600–700 · Medieval
Saint Dunod (variously spelled Dinooth, Dinothus and Dunawd) was the first Abbot of Bangor Iscoed of north-east Wales. Originally a North British chieftain, Dunod was driven by reverses of fortune into Wales.
- Saint Dunod Fawr
505–595 · Medieval
Dynod son of Pabo (Welsh: Dynod or Dunod ap Pabo; Latin: Dunaunt; died c. 595), better known as Dynod the Stout (Welsh: Dynod Bwr) or Dynod Fawr was the ruler of a small kingdom in the North Pennines in the post-Roman Hen Ogledd ("Old North").
Saint Dunstan909–988 · Medieval · Benedictines
Dunstan (c. 909 – 19 May 988) was an English bishop and Benedictine monk. He was successively Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, Bishop of Worcester, Bishop of London and Archbishop of Canterbury, later canonised.
Saint Durand de Bredons1071 · Medieval · Benedictines
Durand de Bredons (died 1071) was a French Benedictine and bishop of Toulouse from about 1058. He was from Bredons in the Auvergne. He was from about 1048 Abbot of Moissac, a Cluniac reformer there.
Saint Dwywe600 · Medieval
Saint Dwywe was a 5th- or 6th-century pre-congregational saint of Wales. She was a native of the ancient Cumbric-speaking kingdoms, which stretched from south-western Scotland down as far as South Yorkshire, and is estimated to have been born between 465 and 585.
Saint Dyfnog650 · Medieval
Saint Dyfnog was an early Welsh saint. His feast day is 13 February. Dyfnog was the son of Medrod ab Caradog Freichfas and a brother of the grandfather of Cwyfen, coming to the area from North Britain.
- Saint Dúnchad mac Cinn Fáelad
700–717 · Medieval
Dúnchad mac Cinn Fáelad (also called Dunichad, Duncad, and Donatus; died 717) was the eleventh abbot of Iona (707–717). He was the son of Cenn Fáelad, and grandson of Máel Coba, of the Cenél Conaill.
Saint Eadburh of Bicester650 · Medieval
Eadburh of Bicester (also Eadburth, or Edburg, death c. 650) was an English nun, abbess, and saint from the 7th century. She has been called a "bit of a mystery"; there have been several Saxon saints with the same name, so it is difficult to pinpoint which one was Eadburh.
Saint Eadsige1050 · Medieval
Eadsige (died 29 October 1050), was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1038 to 1050. He crowned Edward the Confessor as king of England in 1043. Eadsige was a royal priest for King Cnut before Cnut arranged for him to become a monk at Christ Church, Canterbury about 1030.
Saint Eadwold of Cerne835–871 · Medieval
Eadwold of Cerne (c. 835 AD – 29 August c. 900), also known as Eadwold of East Anglia, was a 9th-century hermit, East Anglian prince and patron saint of Cerne, Dorset, who lived as a hermit on a hill about four miles from Cerne. His feast day is 29 August.
- Saint Eanflæd
626–704 · Medieval · Benedictines
Eanflæd (19 April 626 – after 685, also known as Enfleda) was a Deiran princess, queen of Northumbria and later, the abbess of an influential Christian monastery in Whitby, England.
Saint Eanswith614–640 · Medieval · Benedictines
Saint Eanswith (Old English: Ēanswīþ; born c. 630, Kent, England. Died c. 650, Folkestone, England), also spelled Eanswythe or Eanswide, was an Anglo-Saxon princess, who is said to have founded Folkestone Priory, one of the first Christian monastic communities for women in Britai…
Saint Earconwald630–693 · Medieval · Benedictines
Saint Earconwald (also Erkenwald), died 693, was a Saxon prince who served as Bishop of London between 675 and 693 and is the first post-Roman-period Bishop of London to begin the unbroken succession in the Saxon See of London.
Saint Eata of Hexham700–686 · Medieval
Eata (died 26 October 686), also known as Eata of Lindisfarne, was Bishop of Hexham from 678 until 681, and of then Bishop of Lindisfarne from before 681 until 685. He then was translated back to Hexham where he served until his death in 685 or 686.
Saint Eberhard of Friuli810–866 · Medieval
Eberhard (c. 815 – 16 December 867) was the Frankish Duke of Friuli from 846. His name is alternatively spelled Everard, Evrard, Erhard, or Eberard; in Latinized fashion, Everardus, Eberardus, or Eberhardus. He wrote his own name "Evvrardus".
Saint Eberigisil600–594 · Medieval
Eberigisil (died before 593) was Bishop of Cologne, being the fifth well-attested bishop, and the first with a Frankish name. Evergislu's tenure was marked by the unrest brought about by the migration of peoples, which dominated both city and country.
Saint Ebontius1050–1104 · Medieval · Benedictines
Ebontius (died 1104), also known as Ebon, Pontius, or Ponce, was Bishop of Barbastro, Spain, after its recapture from the Moors. Born in Comminges, Haute Garonne, France, he became a Benedictine and abbot before accepting the See of Babastro.
Saint Ebrulf626–706 · Medieval · Benedictines
Ebrulf (Evroul, Evroult, Ebrulfus, Ebrulphus) (517–596) was a Frankish hermit, abbot, and saint. Ebrulf was of noble birth, born at Bayeux. He was a courtier at the Merovingian court of Childebert I, serving as a cup-bearer to the king and an administrator of the royal palace.
Saint Ecclesius532 · Medieval
Saint Ecclesius (died 532) was bishop of Ravenna from AD 521 to 532. He is best known as the founder of the Basilica of San Vitale in Ravenna.
- Saint Ecgberht of Ripon
639–729 · Medieval · Benedictines
Ecgberht (or Egbert, and sometimes referred to as Egbert of Rath Melsigi) (died 729) was an Anglo-Saxon monk of Northumbria. After studying at Lindisfarne and Rath Melsigi, he spent his life travelling among monasteries in northern Britain and around the Irish Sea.
- Saint Edburga of Minster-in-Thanet
650–751 · Medieval · Nuns of the order of Saint Benedict
Saint Edburga of Minster-in-Thanet (also known as Eadburh and Bugga) was a princess of Wessex, and abbess of Minster-in-Thanet. She is regarded as a saint. Edburga was the only daughter of King Centwine and Queen Engyth of Wessex.
Saint Edeyrn600 · Medieval
Saint Edeyrn (c. 6th century) was a pre-congregational saint of Wales, related to Vortigern and the royal house of Powys and the brother of Saint Aerdeyrn and Elldeyrn.
Saint Edgar of England944–975 · Medieval
Edgar (or Eadgar; c. 944 – 8 July 975), also known as Edgar the Peacemaker and the Peaceable, was King of the English from 959 until his death in 975. He became king of all England on his brother Eadwig's death.
- Saint Edith fan Tamworth
950 · Medieval
Saint Edith of Tamworth was an English religious figure from the mid-10th century. Edith was the eldest daughter from the first marriage of King Edward the Elder and Egwina. She was the sister of Athelstan of England.
- Saint Edith of Aylesbury
650 · Medieval
Eadgyth of Aylesbury also known as Eadridus was a Dark Ages Catholic saint from Anglo-Saxon England. She is known to history mainly through the hagiography of the Secgan Manuscript, but also the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle One of her sisters was Eadburh of Bicester; the other, Wilbur…
Saint Edith of Polesworth850–960 · Medieval
Saint Edith of Polesworth (also known as Editha or Eadgyth; died ?c. 960s) was an Anglo-Saxon abbess venerated in the Kingdom of Mercia. She is traditionally associated with Polesworth Abbey in Warwickshire and the royal center of Tamworth in Staffordshire.
Saint Edith of Wilton961–984 · Medieval · Benedictines
Edith of Wilton (c. 961 – c. 984) was an English saint, nun and member of the community at Wilton Abbey, and the daughter of Edgar, King of England (r. 959–975) and Saint Wulfthryth.
Saint Edmund I920–946 · Medieval
Edmund I or Eadmund I (920/921 – 26 May 946) was King of the English from 27 October 939 until his death in 946. He was the elder son of King Edward the Elder and his third wife, Queen Eadgifu, and a grandson of King Alfred the Great.
Saint Edmund of Abingdon1174–1240 · Medieval
Edmund of Abingdon (also known as Edmund Rich, St Edmund of Canterbury, Edmund of Pontigny, French: St Edme; c. 1174 – 1240) was an English Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Canterbury.
- Saint Edmund of Scotland
1100–1100 · Medieval · Benedictines
Edmund or Etmond mac Maíl Coluim (c. 1070 – after 1097) was a son of Malcolm III of Scotland and his second wife, Margaret of Wessex. He may be found on some lists of Scottish kings, but there is no evidence that he was king.
Saint Edmund the Martyr841–869 · Medieval
Edmund the Martyr (also known as St Edmund or Edmund of East Anglia, died 20 November 869) was king of East Anglia from about 855 until his death.
Saint Edward the Confessor1066 · Medieval
Edward the Confessor (1003/1005 – 5 January 1066) was King of the English from 1042 until his death in 1066. He was the last reigning monarch of the House of Wessex. Edward was the son of Æthelred the Unready and Emma of Normandy.