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4,241 saints match

  • Saint Hildegard of Bingen
    Saint Hildegard of Bingen

    1098–1179 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hildegard of Bingen OSB , also known as the Sibyl of the Rhine, was a German Benedictine abbess and polymath active as a writer, composer, philosopher, mystic, visionary, and as a medical writer and practitioner of the Catholic Church during the High Middle Ages.

  • Saint Hildegrim of Châlons
    Saint Hildegrim of Châlons

    760–827 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hildegrim (c. 750 – 19 June 827) was Bishop of Châlons from 804 to 810 and the second abbot of Werden Abbey, after his elder brother Ludger, from 809 until his death. Like his brother Ludger, Hildegrim was of Christian Frisian noble descent.

  • Saint Hippolytus
    Saint Hippolytus

    170–235 · Early Church

    Hippolytus of Rome was a bishop of Rome and one of the most important Christian theologians of the second and third centuries whose provenance, identity, and corpus remain elusive to scholars and historians.

  • Saint Hoger

    900–915 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hoger is a German male name (from Latin Hogerus) and a surname. Notable people with the name include:

  • Blessed Honorat Koźmiński
    Blessed Honorat Koźmiński

    1829–1916 · Contemporary · Order of Friars Minor Capuchin

    Honorat Koźmiński (16 October 1829 – 16 December 1916), born Florentyn Wacław Jan Stefan Koźmiński, was a Polish priest and professed member from the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin who went on to establish sixteen religious congregations.

  • Saint Honorata de Pavia

    450–500 · Medieval

    Honorata of Pavia (died 11 January 500 in Pavia), sister of Bishop Epiphanius (+496), was a consecrated virgin and Catholic saint. Details of her life come from Ennodius's biography of her brother.

  • Saint Honorius
    Saint Honorius

    550–653 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Honorius (died 30 September 653) was a member of the Gregorian mission to Christianize the Anglo-Saxons from their native Anglo-Saxon paganism in 597 AD who later became Archbishop of Canterbury.

  • Saint Honorius of Brescia
    Saint Honorius of Brescia

    550–600 · Medieval

    Honorius of Brescia was born in 550 in Brescia and served as a Catholic priest and bishop. He died in 600 and is recognized as a saint in the Catholic Church.

  • Saint Honoré de Buzançais

    1250 · Medieval

    Saint Honoré de Buzançais was born in Buzançais and died in Thénezay in 1250. He is a saint within Catholicism.

  • Venerable Honoré de Paris
    Venerable Honoré de Paris

    1566–1624 · Reformation · Order of Friars Minor Capuchin

    Honoré de Paris was a Catholic priest of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, born in Paris in 1566 to Jean Bochart de Champigny. A citizen of the Kingdom of France, he died in Chaumont in 1624. He holds the status of Venerable within the Catholic Church.

  • Saint Hormisdas
    Saint Hormisdas

    450–523 · Medieval

    Pope Hormisdas was the bishop of Rome from 20 July 514 to his death on 6 August 523. His papacy was dominated by the Acacian schism, started in 484 by Acacius of Constantinople's efforts to placate the non-Chalcedonians.

  • Saint Hosius of Corduba
    Saint Hosius of Corduba

    256–357 · Early Church

    Hosius of Corduba (c. 256–359), also known as Hosius the Confessor, Osius or Ossius, was a bishop of Corduba (now Córdoba, Spain) and an important and prominent advocate for Homoousion Christianity during the period when the Arian controversy divided early Christianity.

  • Saint Hosokawa Gracia
    Saint Hosokawa Gracia

    1563–1600 · Reformation

    Akechi Tama (明智たま, Akechi Tama), usually referred to as Hosokawa Gracia (細川ガラシャ, Hosokawa Garasha), (1563 – 25 August 1600) was a member of the aristocratic Akechi family from the Sengoku period.

  • Saint Hrotsvitha
    Saint Hrotsvitha

    935–968 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hrotsvitha (c. 935–973) was a secular canoness who wrote drama and Christian poetry under the Ottonian dynasty. She was born in Bad Gandersheim to Saxon nobles and entered Gandersheim Abbey as a canoness.

  • Blessed Hryhorij Lakota
    Blessed Hryhorij Lakota

    1883–1950 · Contemporary

    Hryhoriy Lakota, also known as Gregor Lakota (Ukrainian: Григорій Лакота, Polish: Grzegorz Łakota; 31 January 1883 – 12 November 1950), was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic auxiliary bishop who suffered religious persecution and was martyred by the Soviet Union.

  • Blessed Hryhoriy Khomyshyn
    Blessed Hryhoriy Khomyshyn

    1867–1947 · Contemporary

    Hryhoriy Khomyshyn (also Hryhorij Khomyshyn, Ukrainian: Григорій Лукич Хомишин, Polish: Grzegorz Chomyszyn) was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic bishop and hieromartyr. Khomyshyn was born on 25 March 1867 in the village of Hadynkivtsi, eastern Galicia, in what is now Ternopil Oblast.

  • Saint Hubertus
    Saint Hubertus

    655–727 · Medieval

    Hubert of Liège (Latinized: Hubertus) (c. 656 – 30 May 727 A.D.) was a Christian saint who became the first bishop of Liège in 708 A.D. He is a patron saint of hunters, mathematicians, opticians and metalworkers.

  • Saint Hugh Canefro
    Saint Hugh Canefro

    1148–1233 · Medieval · Knights Hospitaller

    Ugo Canefri (1148 – 8 October 1233), also known as Ugo da Genova, was an Italian crusader and subsequently a health worker. Canefri was born, probably in 1148, into the family of the counts of Canefri: feudal lords of Gamondio (today Castellazzo Bormida), Fresonara and Borgo Rov…

  • Blessed Hugh Cook Faringdon
    Blessed Hugh Cook Faringdon

    1539 · Reformation · Benedictines

    Hugh Faringdon, O.S.B. (died 14 November 1539), earlier known as Hugh Cook, later as Hugh Cook alias Faringdon and Hugh Cook of Faringdon, was an English Benedictine monk who presided as the last Abbot of Reading Abbey in the town of Reading in Berkshire, England.

  • Blessed Hugh Taylor

    1585 · Reformation

    Hugh Taylor (died 25 November 1585) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He is a Catholic martyr, beatified in 1987. Born at Durham, Taylor arrived at Reims on 2 May 1582 and was ordained a priest. He was sent on the English mission on 27 March 1585.

  • Saint Hugh of Châteauneuf
    Saint Hugh of Châteauneuf

    1053–1132 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hugh of Châteauneuf (French: Hugues de Châteauneuf, 1053 – 1 April 1132), also called Hugh of Grenoble, was the Bishop of Grenoble from 1080 to his death. He was a partisan of the Gregorian reform and opposed to the Archbishop of Vienne, later Pope Callixtus II.

  • Blessed Hugh of Fosses
    Blessed Hugh of Fosses

    1093–1164 · Medieval · Premonstratensians

    Hugues de Fosses (*ca. 1093, Fosses-la-Ville; +10.02.1164, Prémontré) was a Norbertine Abbot and successor of Saint Norbert as the Abbot of Prémontré Abbey, the mother house of the Premonstratensians. The Order and the Catholic Church venerate him as a Blessed.

  • Saint Hugh of Lincoln
    Saint Hugh of Lincoln

    1135–1200 · Medieval · Carthusian Order

    Hugh of Lincoln OCart (c. 1140 – 16 November 1200), also known as Hugh of Avalon, was a Burgundian-born Carthusian monk, bishop of Lincoln in the Kingdom of England, and Catholic saint. His feast is observed by Catholics on 16 November and by Anglicans on 17 November.

  • Saint Hugh of Noara
    Saint Hugh of Noara

    1170 · Medieval · Cistercians

    Hugh of Noara or of Novara, also known as Ugo of Novara and Hugo of Novara, was a Cistercian monk and a disciple of Bernard of Clairvaux. French by birth, he served as the first abbot of Novara Abbey, Sicily, where he remained until his death in 1170.

  • Saint Hugh of Rouen
    Saint Hugh of Rouen

    730 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hugh of Rouen (died 730) was the son of Duke Drogo of Champagne and his wife Anstrudis. He entered the church and became archbishop of Rouen in 722. Hugh was the grandson of Pepin of Heristal and Plectrude on his father's side, and of Waratton and Ansfledis on his mother's.

  • Blessed Humbeline of Jully
    Blessed Humbeline of Jully

    1092–1141 · Medieval · Cistercians

    Humbeline of Jully (c. 1091 – c. 1136) was a Benedictine nun in 11th-12th century France, who was beatified in the Roman Catholic Church in 1703 by Pope Clement XI.

  • Saint Humbertus

    800–870 · Medieval

    Hunberht or Humberht was a medieval Bishop of Elmham. Hunberht was consecrated by 824. The twelfth-century Annals of St Neots says that he crowned Edmund the Martyr as king at Burna on Christmas Day 856, but no source is known for this statement.

  • Saint Humilis of Bisignano
    Saint Humilis of Bisignano

    1582–1637 · Reformation · Order of Friars Minor

    Humilis of Bisignano (Italian: Umile da Bisignano) (1582 – 26 November 1637) was a Franciscan friar who was widely known in his day as a mystic and wonderworker. He has been declared a saint by the Catholic Church.

  • Saint Hyacinth of Caesarea
    Saint Hyacinth of Caesarea

    96–108 · Early Church

    Hyacinth (Greek: Ὑάκινθος, Hyakinthos; died 108 AD) was a young Christian living at the start of the second century, who is honored as a martyr and a saint by both the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church.

  • Saint Hyacinth of Poland
    Saint Hyacinth of Poland

    1185–1257 · Medieval · Dominican Order

    Hyacinth (Polish: Święty Jacek or Jacek Odrowąż; c. 1185 – 15 August 1257) was a Polish Dominican priest and missionary who worked to reform the women's monasteries in his native Poland. Educated in Paris and Bologna, he was a Doctor of Sacred Studies.

  • Blessed Hyacinthe-Marie Cormier
    Blessed Hyacinthe-Marie Cormier

    1832–1916 · Contemporary · Dominican Order

    Hyacinthe-Marie Cormier (8 December 1832 – 17 December 1916) was a French Dominican friar and religious priest, who served as the 76th Master of the Order of Preachers from 1904 until 1916. Cormier was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 20 November 1994.

  • Saint Hyginus
    Saint Hyginus

    142 · Early Church

    Pope Hyginus (Greek: Υγίνος) was the bishop of Rome from c. 138 to his death in c. 142. Tradition holds that during his papacy he determined the various prerogatives of the clergy and defined the grades of the ecclesiastical hierarchy.

  • Saint Hædde

    650–705 · Medieval · Benedictines

    Hædde (died 705) was a medieval monk and Bishop of Winchester. Hædde is believed to have been born in Headingley, Leeds, and became a monk of Whitby Abbey.

  • Blessed Hélène Marie de Chappotin de Neuville
    Blessed Hélène Marie de Chappotin de Neuville

    1839–1904 · Contemporary · Sisters of Mary Reparatrix

    Hélène Marie Philippine de Chappotin de Neuville (Nantes, 21 May 1839 – Sanremo, 15 November 1904), known as Mary of the Passion (French: Mère Marie de la Passion), was a French religious sister and missionary, who founded the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary in British India in 1…

  • Saint Iarlaithe mac Loga
    Saint Iarlaithe mac Loga

    445–540 · Medieval

    Iarlaithe mac Loga , also known as Jarlath , was an Irish priest and scholar from Connacht, remembered as the founder of the monastic School of Tuam and of the Archdiocese of Tuam, of which he is the patron saint.

  • Saint Ibar of Beggerin
    Saint Ibar of Beggerin

    500–502 · Medieval

    Ibar mac Lugna, whose name is also given as Iberius or Ivor, was an early Irish saint, patron of Beggerin Island, and bishop. The saint is sometimes said to have been one of the "Quattuor sanctissimi Episcopi" ("The four most sacred bishops") said to have preceded Saint Patrick i…

  • Saint Ida of Louvain

    1211–1290 · Medieval

    Ida of Louvain (died around 1300) was a Cistercian nun of Roosendael Abbey in the 13th-century Low Countries who is officially commemorated in the Catholic Church as blessed. Ida was born into a well-to-do family in Leuven, Duchy of Brabant (now Belgium).

  • Saint Ignace Kim Che-jun

    1796–1839 · Modern

    Ignatius Kim Che-jun is a saint who is one of the Korean Martyrs. He was born in Myonch’on, Ch’ungch’ong, Korea, in 1796, and was beheaded in Seoul on September 26, 1839. He was beatified in July 1925 and canonized on May 6, 1984.

  • Venerable Ignacia del Espíritu Santo
    Venerable Ignacia del Espíritu Santo

    1663–1748 · Modern · Religious of the Virgin Mary

    Ignacia del Espíritu Santo luco, also known as "Mother Ignacia" (February 1, 1663 – September 10, 1748) was a Filipino religious sister of the Catholic Church.

  • Saint Ignacy Kłopotowski
    Saint Ignacy Kłopotowski

    1866–1931 · Contemporary

    Ignacy Kłopotowski (20 July 1866 – 7 September 1931) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Sisters of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Loreto (1920); he founded this congregation with the assistance of the Polish nuncio Achille Ratti - the future Pope Pius XI.

  • Blessed Ignasi Casanovas Perramón
    Blessed Ignasi Casanovas Perramón

    1893–1936 · Contemporary · Piarists

    Ignacy Casanovas Perramón, SchP (born Ignasi Casanovas Perramón on June 15, 1893, in Igualada; died September 16, 1936, in Òdena) was a Spanish priest of the Piarist Order.

  • Venerable Ignatius Capizzi

    1708–1783 · Modern

    Ignatius Capizzi was a Catholic presbyter, writer, and theologian born in 1708 in Bronte. He died in 1783 in Palermo and is recognized by the Catholic Church as the Venerable.

  • Blessed Ignatius Choe In-cheol

    1801 · Modern

    Ignatius Choe In-cheol was a member of the Catholic Church born in Seoul. He died by decapitation in Seoul in 1801 and is recognized as a blessed.

  • Saint Ignatius Maloyan
    Saint Ignatius Maloyan

    1869–1915 · Contemporary

    Ignatius Maloyan, ICPB (Armenian: Իգնատիոս Մալոյան, April 8, 1869 – June 11, 1915), born as Shukrallah Maloyan, was an Armenian Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Mardin from 1911 to 1915.

  • Venerable Ignatius Spencer
    Venerable Ignatius Spencer

    1799–1864 · Modern · Passionists

    Ignatius of St Paul, C.P. (born George Spencer; 21 December 1799 – 1 October 1864) was an English Catholic priest and nobleman as a son of the 2nd Earl Spencer.

  • Saint Ignatius of Laconi
    Saint Ignatius of Laconi

    1701–1781 · Modern · Order of Friars Minor Capuchin

    Ignazio da Laconi (Sardinian: Ignatziu dae Làconi) (10 December 1701 - 11 May 1781) - born Vincenzo Peis - was a Roman Catholic professed religious born in Sardinia, and a member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin.

  • Saint Ignatius of Santhià
    Saint Ignatius of Santhià

    1686–1770 · Modern · Order of Friars Minor Capuchin

    Ignatius of Santhià (5 June 1686 – 22 September 1770), born Lorenzo Maurizio Belvisotti, was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and a professed member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin.

  • Saint Ignazio Clemente Delgado

    1762–1838 · Modern · Dominican Order

    Ignacio Clemente Delgado Cebrián (born in the village of Villafeliche, Province of Zaragoza, Kingdom of Spain, on November 22, 1762 – died in prison in Nam Dinh, Tonkin, on July 25, 1838) was a Dominican friar and 19th-century Spanish Catholic missionary who became a bishop and i…

  • Blessed Ildefonso Fernández Muñiz

    1897–1936 · Contemporary · Benedictines

    Ildefonso Fernández Muñiz was a Benedictine Catholic priest born in 1897 in Muros de Nalón, Spain. He died in 1936 in Barbastro from a gunshot wound and is recognized as a blessed of the Latin Church.

  • Venerable Ilia Corsaro

    1897–1977 · Contemporary

    Ilia Corsaro (October 4, 1897 – March 23, 1977) was an Italian Catholic nun and founder of the Eucharistic Missionary Sisters, an order dedicated to catechetical, educational, and charitable work for youth, the poor, and families.