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4,241 saints match

  • Saint Donatus of Fiesole
    Saint Donatus of Fiesole

    701–876 · 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 Ripacandida
    Saint Donatus of Ripacandida

    1179–1198 · 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 Zadar
    Saint Donatus of Zadar

    750–811 · 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 Donizetti Tavares de Lima
    Saint Donizetti Tavares de Lima

    1882–1961 · Contemporary

    Donizetti Tavares de Lima (3 January 1882 – 16 June 1961) was a Brazilian Catholic priest. Tavares de Lima was ordained to the priesthood in 1908 and served as a parish priest in various churches across Brazil but was noted for his extensive work at the San Antonio church in Tam…

  • Blessed Dorotea Chávez Orozco
    Blessed Dorotea Chávez Orozco

    1867–1949 · Contemporary · Franciscans

    Vicenta Chávez Orozco (6 February 1867 - 30 July 1949), also known by her religious name María Vicenta de Santa Dorotea, was a Mexican Roman Catholic nun and the founder of the Servants of the Holy Spirit and the Poor.

  • Saint Dorothea of Montau
    Saint Dorothea of Montau

    1347–1394 · 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 Dorotheus of Tyre
    Saint Dorotheus of Tyre

    255–362 · Early Church

    Saint Dorotheus (Greek: Άγιος Δωρόθεος) bishop of Tyre (present-day Lebanon; c. 255 – 362) is traditionally credited with an Acts of the Seventy Apostles (which may be the same work as the lost Gospel of the Seventy), who were sent out according to the Gospel of Luke 10:1.

  • Servant of God Dorothy Day
    Servant of God Dorothy Day

    1897–1980 · Contemporary · Benedictines

    Dorothy Day OblSB (November 8, 1897 – November 29, 1980) was an American journalist, social activist and anarchist who, after a bohemian youth, became a Catholic without abandoning her social activism. She was perhaps the best-known political radical among American Catholics.

  • Servant of God Dorothy Stang
    Servant of God Dorothy Stang

    1931–2005 · Contemporary · Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur

    Dorothy Mae Stang, SNDdeN, (June 7, 1931 – February 12, 2005) was an American-born Brazilian Catholic Religious Sister and missionary. She was murdered in Anapu, Pará, in the Amazon Basin in 2005.

  • 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 Drostan
    Saint Drostan

    610 · 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.

  • Blessed Duns Scotus
    Blessed Duns Scotus

    1266–1308 · Medieval · Order of Friars Minor

    John Duns Scotus OFM was a Scottish Catholic priest and Franciscan friar, university professor, philosopher and theologian. He is considered among the most important philosopher-theologians in Western Christendom during the last part of the medieval period, together with Thomas A…

  • Saint Dunstan
    Saint Dunstan

    909–988 · 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 Eadsige
    Saint Eadsige

    1050 · 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 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 Earconwald
    Saint Earconwald

    630–693 · 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 Hexham
    Saint Eata of Hexham

    700–686 · 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.

  • Blessed Eberhard VI von Nellenburg
    Blessed Eberhard VI von Nellenburg

    1018–1078 · Medieval

    Eberhard VI of Nellenburg (born c. 1015; died March 26, 1078/79 or March 1, 1080) succeeded his father Eppo (died 1034) as Count in the Zürichgau, first appearing in records in 1036/37.

  • Saint Eberhard of Friuli
    Saint Eberhard of Friuli

    810–866 · 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".

  • Venerable Eberhard of Salzburg
    Venerable Eberhard of Salzburg

    1085–1164 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Eberhard was Archbishop of Salzburg, Austria from 1146 until his death in 1164. Eberhard was born to a noble family of Nuremberg, Germany; he became a Benedictine in 1125 at Pruffening, Germany. Later he was made Abbot of Biburg near Regensburg.

  • Saint Eberigisil
    Saint Eberigisil

    600–594 · 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 Ebontius
    Saint Ebontius

    1050–1104 · 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 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.

  • Venerable Edel Quinn
    Venerable Edel Quinn

    1907–1944 · Contemporary

    Edelweiss Mary Quinn, (14 September 1907 – 12 May 1944) known as Edel Quinn was an Irish-born Roman Catholic lay-missionary and Envoy of the Legion of Mary to East Africa.

  • Blessed Edgardo Mortara
    Blessed Edgardo Mortara

    1851–1940 · Contemporary · Canons Regular of the Lateran

    The Mortara case (Italian: caso Mortara) was an Italian cause célèbre that captured the attention of much of Europe and North America in the 1850s and 1860s.

  • Saint Edith of Wilton
    Saint Edith of Wilton

    961–984 · 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 Arrowsmith
    Saint Edmund Arrowsmith

    1585–1628 · Reformation · Society of Jesus

    Edmund Arrowsmith, SJ (c. 1585 – 28 August 1628) was one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales of the Catholic Church. The main source of information on Arrowsmith is a contemporary account written by an eyewitness and published a short time after his death.

  • Blessed Edmund Bojanowski
    Blessed Edmund Bojanowski

    1814–1871 · Modern

    Edmund Bojanowski (14 November 1814 - 7 August 1871) was a Polish Roman Catholic and the founder of four separate religious congregations. He studied art and literature during his education in Breslau and Berlin before distinguishing himself during a cholera epidemic in which he…

  • Saint Edmund Campion
    Saint Edmund Campion

    1540–1581 · Reformation · Society of Jesus

    Edmund Campion, SJ (25 January 1540 – 1 December 1581) was an English Jesuit priest and martyr. While conducting an underground ministry in officially Anglican England, Campion was arrested by priest hunters.

  • Blessed Edmund Catherick

    1605–1642 · Reformation

    Edmund Catherick (c. 1605 – 13 April 1642) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He is a Catholic martyr, beatified in 1929. Catherick was probably born in Lancashire about 1605.

  • Blessed Edmund Duke

    1565–1590 · Reformation

    The Dryburne Martyrs: Richard Hill, Richard Holiday, John Hogg and Edmund Duke (all died 27 May 1590) were English Roman Catholic priests and martyrs, executed at Dryburne, County Durham, in the reign of Elizabeth I. They were beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1987.

  • Saint Edmund Gennings
    Saint Edmund Gennings

    1567–1591 · Reformation

    Edmund Gennings (1567 – 10 December 1591), was an English martyr, who was executed during the English Reformation for being a Roman Catholic priest. He came from Lichfield, Staffordshire. Gennings was born at Lichfield in 1567.

  • Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice
    Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice

    1762–1844 · Modern

    Edmund Ignatius Rice, F.P.M., C.F.C. (Irish: Éamonn Iognáid Rís; 1 June 1762 – 29 August 1844) was a Catholic missionary and educationalist who founded two institutes of religious brothers: the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers.

  • Blessed Edmund Sykes

    1587 · Reformation

    Edmund Sykes (born at Leeds; executed at York Tyburn, 23 March 1587) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He is a Catholic martyr, beatified in 1987. He was a student at the English college at Reims, where he was ordained 21 February 1581.

  • Saint Edmund of Abingdon
    Saint Edmund of Abingdon

    1174–1240 · 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.

  • Blessed Edoardo Giuseppe Rosaz
    Blessed Edoardo Giuseppe Rosaz

    1830–1903 · Contemporary · Third Order of Saint Francis

    Edoardo Giuseppe Rosaz (15 February 1830 – 3 May 1903) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate who served as the Bishop of Susa from 1877 until his death and was the founder of the Franciscan Mission Sisters of Susa. He was appointed a bishop at the suggestion of John Bosco.

  • Blessed Edoardo Ripoll Diego
    Blessed Edoardo Ripoll Diego

    1912–1936 · Contemporary · Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary

    Eduardo Ripoll Diego, C.M.F. (Jàtiva, January 9, 1912 – Barbastro, August 15, 1936), was a Spanish religious who was martyred in Barbastro during the Spanish Civil War and is venerated as a blessed by the Catholic Church.

  • Blessed Eduard Müller
    Blessed Eduard Müller

    1911–1943 · Contemporary

    Eduard Müller (20 August 1911  – 10 November 1943) was a German Catholic priest and martyr. He was guillotined in a Hamburg prison by the Nazi authorities in November 1943, along with the three other Lübeck martyrs. Müller was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in 2011.

  • Blessed Eduard Profittlich
    Blessed Eduard Profittlich

    1890–1942 · Contemporary · Society of Jesus

    Eduard Gottlieb Profittlich, SJ (11 September 1890 – 22 February 1942) was a German Catholic prelate who served as Apostolic Administrator of Estonia from 1931 until his death in a Soviet prison in 1942. He took Estonian citizenship in 1935 and was made an archbishop in 1936.

  • Blessed Eduardo Francisco Pironio
    Blessed Eduardo Francisco Pironio

    1920–1998 · Contemporary

    Eduardo Francisco Pironio (3 December 1920 – 5 February 1998) was an Argentine Catholic prelate who served in numerous departments of the Roman Curia from 1975 to 1996. He was named a cardinal in 1976 and Cardinal-Bishop of Sabina-Poggio in 1995.

  • Venerable Edvige Carboni
    Venerable Edvige Carboni

    1880–1952 · Contemporary · Third Order of Saint Francis

    Edvige Carboni (2 May 1880 – 17 February 1952) was an Italian Roman Catholic from Sardinia who relocated to Rome and became well known among the faithful and religious alike for her ecstasies and angelic visions.

  • Blessed Edward Bamber
    Blessed Edward Bamber

    1600–1646 · Reformation

    Edward Bamber (alias Reading) (b. c. 1600, at the Moor, Poulton-le-Fylde, Lancashire; executed at Lancaster 7 August 1646) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He was beatified in 1987. Bamber was born the son of Richard Bamber, at Carleton, Poulton-le-Fylde, Lancashire.

  • Blessed Edward Detkens
    Blessed Edward Detkens

    1885–1942 · Contemporary

    Edward Detkens (1885–1942) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest. He was imprisoned in the Nazi Sachsenhausen concentration camp and died at Dachau. He is one of the 108 Martyrs of World War II. He is buried at Powązki Cemetery.

  • Blessed Edward Grzymała
    Blessed Edward Grzymała

    1906–1942 · Contemporary

    Edward Grzymała (29 September 1906 – 10 August 1940) was a Polish and Roman Catholic priest. He was imprisoned in the Nazi concentration camp at Sachsenhausen. He died at the concentration camp in Dachau. In 1999, he was beatified by Pope John Paul II.

  • Blessed Edward James
    Blessed Edward James

    1557–1588 · Reformation

    Edward James (c.1557 – 1 October 1588) was an English Catholic priest and martyr. James was born at Barton, Breaston, near Long Eaton, Derbyshire.

  • Blessed Edward Jones
    Blessed Edward Jones

    1590 · Reformation

    Edward Jones (died 6 May 1590) was a Welsh priest and martyr of the Roman Catholic Church. He has been beatified in 1926 with the other Douai Martyrs. He was born in Llanelidan in Dyffryn Clwyd. He was baptised an Anglican in the Diocese of St Asaph.

  • Blessed Edward Kaźmierski
    Blessed Edward Kaźmierski

    1919–1942 · Contemporary

    Edward Kaźmierski (1 October 1919 – 24 August 1942) was a Polish Roman Catholic anti-Nazi resistance fighter. He was born in Poznan. He was one of the "Poznań Five", who were guillotined in a prison in Dresden for their spiritual work and resistance against the Nazi occupation.

  • Blessed Edward Klinik
    Blessed Edward Klinik

    1919–1942 · Contemporary

    Edward Klinik (21 July 1919 – 24 August 1942) was a Polish Roman Catholic anti-Nazi resistance fighter. One of the Poznań Five (Poznańska Piątka), he was guillotined in a prison in Dresden for his resistance work.

  • Blessed Edward Oldcorne
    Blessed Edward Oldcorne

    1561–1606 · Reformation · Society of Jesus

    Edward Oldcorne alias Hall (1561 – 7 April 1606) was an English Jesuit priest. He was known to people who knew of the Gunpowder Plot to destroy the Parliament of England and kill King James I; and although his involvement is unclear, he was caught up in the subsequent investigati…