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298 saints match
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- Saint Ableberto de Cambrai
650–645 · Medieval
Ableberto, also known as Emeberto (died in Ham, first half of the 7th century), was Bishop of Cambrai and Arras during the first half of the 7th century and is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.
- Saint Adalberto da Como
700 · Medieval
Adalberto of Como (died 7th century) was an Italian bishop of Illyrian origin. He was the fifteenth bishop of Como and is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. According to Paolo Giovio, he was originally from Illyria.
Saint Adalgisio di Thiérache600–670 · Medieval
Adalgis of Thiérache, also known as Saint Adalgis, Saint Algis, or Saint Algise, died on June 2, 670, was a monk of Irish origin and a disciple of Saint Fursey of Péronne. He was a missionary in Thiérache and the founder of parishes in the Diocese of Laon in Picardy.
Saint Adalrich950–973 · Medieval
Saint Alaric, also known as Alaric of Ufenau, born Adalric of Swabia or Adalric of Einsiedeln, was born around 950. He was a monk at the Abbey of Einsiedeln and later a hermit on the island of Ufenau. He died on September 29, 973.
- Saint Adelphe de Remiremont
670 · Medieval
Saint Adelphus of Remiremont (died 670) was a monk and abbot of the monastery of Habendum, founded in Remiremont by Saint Romaric. His feast day is September 11. He was trained at Luxeuil, where he retired at the end of his life and died.
- Saint Adolfo de Cambrai
650 · Medieval
Adulf (Arras, 7th century – Arras, May 19, 728) was Bishop of Cambrai and Arras in the first half of the 8th century and is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.
- Saint Aetius
838 · Medieval
Aetios was a 9th-century Byzantine patrician and general, a saint of the Orthodox Church, and one of the 42 Martyrs of Amorium. His feast day is celebrated by the Orthodox Church on March 6.
Saint Agrippanus602 · Medieval
Agrève or Égrève, sometimes called Agripan (in Latin: Agripanus), was a bishop of Le Puy-en-Velay who died a martyr on February 1, 602. He is nicknamed the "Apostle of the Boutières" due to his extensive missionary activity in that region.
- Saint Agrippinus of Como
600–615 · Medieval
Agrippinus (6th century – 617) was the thirteenth bishop of Como. He is venerated as a saint, particularly in the Diocese of Como, although during the Schism of the Three Chapters he sided with the faction that had broken communion with the Pope.
- Saint Aimo
1173 · Medieval · Benedictines
Saint Aimo (also Aymon or Hamon) (born in Landecob near Rennes, France; died 1173) was a mystic and a monk at Savigny Abbey. He was born in the village of Landecob, Brittany, near Rennes. Aimo entered the monastery of Savigny in Savigny, Normandy.
Saint Alberto da Prezzate1025–1095 · Medieval · Benedictines
Albert of Pontida, also known as Albert of Prezzate and Albert Prezzati (born in Prezzate in 1025; died in Pontida, Lombardy, on September 2, 1095), was a Lombard nobleman and knight who became a Benedictine monk and founder. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.
- Saint Aldegrin de Baume
939 · Medieval · Benedictines
Aldegrin, also known as Adegrin or Adalgrin, called "of Baume," died in 939. He was a former knight who later became a Benedictine monk and a student of Odo of Cluny. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, and his feast days are June 4 and November 19.
- Saint Aldemaro di Capua
985–1070 · Medieval · Benedictines
Aldemar of Capua (or Aldemario), known as the Wise (Capua, 985 – Bucchianico, March 24, 1070), was a Benedictine monk of the Abbey of Monte Cassino, later abbot of San Lorenzo in Capua, and a founder and reformer of numerous monasteries in central and southern Italy.
Saint Altfried of Münster750–849 · Medieval
Saint Altfried (died April 22, 849) was Bishop of Münster and abbot of the monasteries of Werden and Helmstedt. Following the death of his predecessor Gerfried, Altfried was appointed the third Bishop of Münster in 839.
Saint Amador of Tucci900–855 · Medieval
Amador of Tucci was a Catholic priest and martyr born in Martos, Jaén (Spain). He was executed in Córdoba during the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula for proclaiming and defending the name of Christ under Islamic rule.
- Saint Amantius of Wintershoven
668 · Medieval
Amantius of Wintershoven was one of the so-called saints of Wintershoven. He was a deacon who belonged to the companions assigned to Amandus when he presented his plans for missionary work to Pope Martin I around 650.
- Saint Amarant de Moissac
722 · Medieval · Benedictines
Amarandus of Moissac (Southern France?, mid-7th century – Albi, 722) was a Benedictine monk, abbot of Moissac, and bishop of Albi. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church.
Saint Amico di Avellana1040 · Medieval
Amico of San Pietro Avellana (Camerino, 920 or 930 – San Pietro Avellana, November 3, 1040 or 1050) was an Italian Christian monk of the Benedictine Order. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.
Saint Amico di Rambona901–1100 · Medieval · Benedictines
Amico (Monte Milone, 10th century – Monte Milone, 996) was an Italian abbot, venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. The name Amico is of Frankish origin and was widespread in Italy around the 11th century; the abbot is often confused with other saints of the same name from…
- Saint Anastasius of Cluny
1020–1085 · Medieval
Anastasius of Cluny, O.S.B. (Venice, Italy, 11th century; Pamiers, modern-day France, 1085), was a scholar who joined the monastery of Mont-Saint-Michel (France) and later lived as a hermit on a neighboring island, until Hugh of Cluny visited him and persuaded him to join the Ben…
Saint Andrea da Fiesole Scoto900 · Medieval
Andrew of Scotland, also known as Andrew of Fiesole (Ireland, ... – 9th century), was a disciple of Saint Donatus, his philosophy teacher, and a pilgrim with him to Rome. From Donatus, who became a bishop, Andrew received the title of archdeacon of Fiesole.
- Saint Andrés de Chio
1438–1465 · Medieval
Andrew of Chios (1438–1465) was a saint of the Catholic Church. At the age of 27, he arrived in Constantinople as a pilgrim. He was offered the opportunity to join the Ottoman army, but he refused. For this, he was sentenced to death by beheading.
- Saint Anne de Novgorod
1056 · Medieval
Of Scandinavian origin, Anne of Novgorod lived in the 11th century. She became the Princess of Novgorod and married Yaroslav the Wise. A few years later, upon the death of her husband, she founded the Saint Irene Monastery in Kyiv, Ukraine. Anne died in 1056.
- Saint Antonino di Milano
671 · Medieval
Antonin of Milan was Archbishop of Milan in Lombardy during the 7th century, serving from 669 until his presumed death on October 31, 671, or according to some controversial historians, as early as 661. Antonin of Milan was recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church.
Saint Arcade de Novgorod1165 · Medieval
Arcady of Novgorod (died 1163) was Bishop of Novgorod and the successor of Niphon, as well as the first bishop elected by the city's veche. His feast days are September 18 (dormition) and February 10 (Synaxis of the Bishops of Novgorod).
- Saint Arcontius
740 · Medieval
Arcontius (died Viviers, 8th century) was Bishop of Viviers in the second half of the 8th century and is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Information about this Bishop of Viviers is scarce.
- Saint Arnoul de Mouzon
750 · Medieval
Arnoul of Mouzon (born and died at an unknown date in the 8th century) was, according to tradition, an obscure pilgrim who was murdered by brigands, buried, and forgotten. It was the miracles surrounding his tomb and relics that convinced the Church of his sanctity.
- Saint Arnoul des Yvelines
500–535 · Medieval
Arnoul of Yvelines (Arnoult, Arnoul, or Arnulfus), known as Saint Arnoult, is a legendary saint who is said to have been Bishop of Tours. The burial site attributed to him became the village where he is honored, Saint-Arnoult-en-Yvelines.
Saint Arsenio da Armo810–904 · Medieval
Arsenius of Armo (Reggio Calabria, 810 – Armo, 904) was a Basilian monk who lived in the 9th century. The events of his life are known through the Bios of Saint Elias the Speleot, who was his disciple and companion until his death.
Saint Arsenius of Tver1410 · Medieval
Bishop Arsenius (died March 2, 1409, Tver) was a bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church, Bishop of Tver, and author of the oldest recension of the Kiev Caves Patericon (the Arsenian recension).
Saint Athanasius the Recluse of Kyiv Caves1176 · Medieval
Athanasius of the Kiev Caves, also known as Athanasius the Recluse (died c. 1176), was an Orthodox saint and a monk of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra. Information about his life is scarce and comes primarily from his biography in the Kiev Caves Patericon.
- Saint Ató d'Oña
1044 · Medieval · Benedictines
Ató of Oña or Adó (in Latin Atto or Attus, in Spanish Atón; Aragon or Catalonia, second half of the 10th century – Oña, Burgos, c. 1044) was an Aragonese bishop who retired as a hermit to the Monastery of San Salvador de Oña. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church.
- Saint Aurelio de Córdoba
825–852 · Medieval
Saint Aurelius (from the Latin aurelius, golden, valuable as gold) (Córdoba, 825 – ibid., July 27, 852) was a Christian martyred during the Caliphate of Abd al-Rahman II and canonized by the Catholic Church alongside his wife, Saint Natalia.
Saint Ausano di Milano567 · Medieval
Ausano (Milan, ... – Milan, ...; fl. 6th century) was Archbishop of Milan shortly after the middle of the 6th century. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church, which commemorates him on September 3 in the Roman Martyrology.
Saint Austind d'Aush1000–1068 · Medieval · Benedictines
Austind of Auch (or Ostent of Auch, Saint Austind), born around 1000 in Bordeaux (Gironde) and died on July 26, 1068, in Auch (Gers), was abbot of Saint-Orens from 1047 to 1049, then archbishop of Auch from 1049 to 1068.
Saint Aḥmad ibn ʻĀshir1364 · Medieval
Ahmed ben Mohammed ben Omar ben Achir al-Andaloussi, known as Sidi ben Achir or Ahmed ben Achir (variant: ben Acher), born in Jimena in the region of Cadiz, Al-Andalus, and died in 1364 in Salé, is one of the principal saints of the city of Salé, alongside Sidi Abdellah ben Hasso…
- Saint Balsamus van Cava
1232 · Medieval
Blessed Balsamus of Cava (died Cava, November 24, 1232) was an Italian clergyman. He was a Benedictine monk and served as the 10th abbot of Cava between 1208 and 1232. In 1928, Balsamus was beatified by Pope Pius XI. His feast day is November 24.
- Saint Beat de Cerbi
1100–1001 · Medieval
Beatus of Cerbi or Beado (County of Toulouse or France?, 11th century – Sant Beado, La Guingueta d'Àneu, Pallars Sobirà, 11th century) is a legendary figure who, according to tradition, died in Cerbi, a village in the Àneu Valley where the hermitage of Sant Beado is located.
- Saint Beata Eustochio
1444–1469 · Medieval · Benedictines
Eustochium (born Lucrezia) Bellini (Padua, 1444 – Padua, 1469) was an Italian religious sister. She is considered the patroness of those who suffer from spiritual and physical tribulations. She is venerated as a blessed by the Catholic Church.
- Saint Benedict of Massérac
701–845 · Medieval
Benito de Massérac (8th century – 845, Nantes), also known as Benedict of Macerac or Benedict of Massérac, was a Greek abbot and hermit in Nantes, in present-day France. He is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church, and his liturgical feast is celebrated on October 22.
- Saint Beocca
870 · Medieval
Beocca (died 870) was a hieromartyr, abbot of Chertsey, and a saint in the Roman Catholic Church. His feast day is April 10. A Danish invading army destroyed the monasteries at Chertsey and Barking, which had been founded by Saint Erkenwald for himself and his sister, Saint Ethe…
- Saint Betton of Sens
850–918 · Medieval
Betton (also Beton or Béton) of Sens, also known as Saint Betton (born in Sens or Orléans, mid-9th century – died in Auxerre in February 918), was a Frankish religious figure from northern Burgundy during the 9th and 10th centuries.
Saint Blimond673 · Medieval
Blimond or Blidemundus (died 650 or 673), abbot of Leuconay and who died at Leuconay (the former name of Saint-Valery-sur-Somme), was a Frankish religious figure and restorer of the Abbey of Saint-Valery-sur-Somme. He is recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church.
- Saint Bobuleno di Bobbio
501–652 · Medieval
Bobulenus, or Bobolenus (Greece, 6th century – Bobbio, 653), was an Italian Christian monk, abbot, and missionary of the Columbanian rule. Possibly of Greek origin, he took his name from the town of Bobbio, where he took his monastic vows.
- Saint Bonaventure Tolomei
1250–1348 · Medieval · Dominican Order
Bonaventure Tolomei, or Saint Bonaventure Tolomei (Siena, ?? – 1348), was a Dominican who, after a libertine adolescence, cared for plague victims and died of the plague. His feast day is December 27.
Saint Boris of Rostov986–1015 · Medieval
Boris Vladimirovich (c. 990s – July 24, 1015; baptized as Roman) was the Prince of Rostov (c. 1010–1015). He was a son of the Kievan Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich, born either to Princess Anna or to an unknown Bulgarian woman.
Saint Béatrice d'Assise1205–1260 · Medieval
Beatriz of Assisi (born c. 1205, Assisi – 1260, ibid.) was the daughter of the nobleman Favarone Offreduccio and Ortolana, and the sister of two other saints, Saint Clare of Assisi and Saint Agnes of Assisi.
Saint Bérégise d'Andage670–725 · Medieval
Saint Bérégise of Andage (or Bergis), born around 670 in the locality of Spange near Emptinne in the province of Namur, Belgium, and died on October 2, around 725, at the Abbey of Saint-Hubert in the Belgian Ardennes province of Luxembourg, was a cleric trained at the Abbey of Sa…
- Saint Candida the Younger
586 · Medieval
Candida (died 586) was a wonderworker of Naples. Her feast day is September 10. Known as Candida the Younger, Saint Candida was an exemplary wife and mother from Naples. According to the Roman Martyrology, she was renowned for her miracles.
- Saint Caradog Fynach
1100–1124 · Medieval
Caradog the Monk was born to a good family in Brecknockshire during the 11th century (died 1124), receiving a lay education and training in harp playing.