Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Antipope Felix II" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

feast and day
St Albert's feast day is celebrated on November 15.
* 79 – Mount Vesuvius begins stirring, on the feast day of Vulcan, the Roman god of fire.
Hippolytus of Rome ( d. 235 ) is commonly considered to be the earliest antipope, as he headed a separate group within the Church in Rome against Pope Callixtus I. Hippolytus was reconciled to Callixtus's second successor, Pope Pontian, and both he and Pontian are honoured as saints by the Roman Catholic Church with a shared feast day on 13 August.
In the Eastern Orthodox Church he is also considered a saint, his feast day being celebrated on 15 June .< ref >
Pope Gregory VII canonized Ælfheah in 1078, with a feast day of 19 April.
In the late medieval period, Ælfheah's feast day was celebrated in Scandinavia, perhaps because of the saint's connection with Cnut.
The feast day of Titus was not included in the Tridentine Calendar.
In 1969, the Roman Catholic Church assigned the feast to 26 January so as to celebrate the two disciples of Paul, Titus and Timothy, on the day after the feast of the Conversion of St. Paul.
Her feast day, December 16, is still kept in many German dioceses.
His feast day in the Roman Catholic Church falls on 17 March.
Athanasius is venerated as a Christian saint, whose feast day is 2 May in Western Christianity, 15 May in the Coptic Orthodox Church, and 18 January in the other Eastern Orthodox Churches.
His feast day is observed on 2 May, the day of his death.
After the end of the official celebration, the day ended in a huge four-day popular feast and people celebrated with fireworks, as well as fine wine and running naked through the streets in order to display their great freedom.
On 14 July 1879, another feast took place, with a semi-official aspect ; the events of the day included a reception in the Chamber of Deputies, organised and presided over by Léon Gambetta, a military review in Longchamp, and a Republican Feast in the Pré Catelan.
The feast day of Barnabas is celebrated on June 11.
In Ireland – when it was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland – the Bank Holidays Act 1871 established the feast day of St. Stephen as a non-movable public holiday on 26 December.
The latest biography of Khmelnytsky by Smoliy and Stepankov, however, challenges the 27 December date and suggests that it is more likely he was born on 9 November ( feast day of St Zenoby ,< ref >
A Venerable has as of yet no feast day, no churches may be built in his or her honor, and the church has made no statement on the person's probable or certain presence in heaven, but prayer cards and other materials may be printed to encourage the faithful to pray for a miracle wrought by his or her intercession as a sign of God's will that the person be canonized.
A feast day will be designated, but its observance is normally restricted to the Blessed's home diocese, to certain locations associated with him or her, and / or to the churches or houses of the blessed's religious order, if they belonged to one.
The saint is assigned a feast day which may be celebrated anywhere within the Catholic Church, although it may or may not appear on the general calendar or local calendars as an obligatory feast, parish churches may be built in his or her honor, and the faithful may freely and without restriction celebrate and honor the saint.
The Eastern Orthodox Church and Eastern Catholic Church celebrate his feast day on 9 June and also, together with Pope Athanasius I of Alexandria, on 18 January.

feast and Roman
He is celebrated in many churches on his feast days: 30 January in the Old-Calendar Eastern Orthodox Church and the Coptic Orthodox Church ; 17 January in the New-Calendar Eastern Orthodox Church, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, the Roman Catholic Church and the Coptic Catholic Church.
St. Columbanus is named in the Roman Martyrology on 23 November, but his feast is kept by the Benedictines and throughout Ireland on 24 November.
The Roman Catholic Church did not commemorate Saint Cyril in the Tridentine Calendar: it added his feast only in 1882, assigning to it the date of 9 February.
Her feast day, at the time, was not included in the Roman Calendar.
In the 1969 revision of the Roman Catholic calendar of saints, it was decided to leave the celebration of the feast of St Peter of Verona to local calendars, because he was not as well known worldwide, and Saint Catherine's feast was restored to its traditional date of April 29.
Western Rite churches ( Roman Catholic, Lutheran ) celebrate his feast day on 29 December, Eastern-rite on 19 December.
His Roman Catholic feast day of 9 June conforms to his date of death.
In the Roman Catholic calendar of saints Gregory Nazianzen's feast day is on January 2.
Historian Nicholas Rogers, exploring the origins of Halloween, notes that while " some folklorists have detected its origins in the Roman feast of Pomona, the goddess of fruits and seeds, or in the festival of the dead called Parentalia, it is more typically linked to the Celtic festival of Samhain, derived from the Old Irish Samuin meaning " summer's end ".
In the Roman Catholic Church, the twelve minor prophets are read in the Breviary during the fourth and fifth weeks of November, which are the last two weeks of the liturgical year, and his feast day is January 15.
Her feast day is celebrated on the Roman Catholic calendar of saints on 16 October.
On 4 September 1483, referring to the feast as that of " the Conception of Immaculate Mary ever Virgin ", he condemned both those who called it mortally sinful and heretical to hold that the " glorious and immaculate mother of God was conceived without the stain of original sin " and those who called it mortally sinful and heretical to hold that " the glorious Virgin Mary was conceived with original sin ", since, he said, " up to this time there has been no decision made by the Roman Church and the Apostolic See.
His feast day is on June 28 in the Roman Catholic calendar of saints, where it was inserted for the first time in 1920 ; in 1960 it was transferred to July 3, leaving June 28 for the Vigil of the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, but in 1969 it was returned to June 28, the day of his death.
Although Barlaam was never formally canonized, Josaphat was, and they were included in earlier editions of the Roman Martyrology ( feast day 27 November ) — though not in the Roman Missal — and in the Eastern Orthodox Church liturgical calendar ( 26 August in Greek tradition etc.
The feast day of Saint John in the Roman Catholic Church, which calls him " Saint John, Apostle and Evangelist ", and in the Anglican Communion, which calls him " John, Apostle and Evangelist ", is on 27 December.
Pope John XXIII removed this feast from the General Roman Calendar in 1960, along with various other second feasts of a single saint.
* May 1 is the feast of St. Joseph the worker in the Roman Catholic calendar.

feast and martyr
He is not to be confused with another Saint Agapetus, an Early Christian martyr with the feast day of 6 August.
In the 13th century, the feast of Saint Melchiades ( as he was then called ) was included, with the mistaken qualification of " martyr ", in the Roman Calendar for celebration on 10 December.
In 1969 it was removed from that calendar of obligatory liturgical celebrations, and his feast was moved to the day of his death, 10 January, with his name given in the form " Miltiades " and without the indication " martyr ".
In the Tridentine Calendar it was given the rank of " Simple " and celebrated as the feast of a martyr.
Thereafter, the feast of Saint Felix I, no longer mentioned in the General Roman Calendar, is celebrated on his true day of death, 30 December, and without the qualification of " martyr ".
Timothy is venerated as an apostle, saint and martyr by the Eastern Orthodox Church, with his feast day on 22 January.
It remained so until 1969, when Pope Lucius's feast was moved in the Roman Martyrology to the day of his death and omitted from the General Calendar, partly because of the baselessness of the title of " martyr " with which he had previously been honoured.
John Fisher's beheading created yet another ironic parallel with that of the martyrdom of St John the Baptist who was also beheaded ; his death also happened on the feast day of St Alban, the first martyr of Britain.
The feast day is sacred to ethnic Serbs ( Serbian Orthodox Christians ), who transformed the pagan Slavic god ( deity ) of war, fertility and abundance " Svetovid " ( Vid ) into the Sicilian martyr ( St. Vitus )-who exorcised the evil out of Diocletian's son, at the time of the final Christianization of the Serbs during the rule of Basil I ( 867 – 886 ) by Byzantine missionaries of Constantinople Cyril and Methodius.
Although earlier editions of the Roman Martyrology commemorated Saints Faith, Hope and Charity on 1 August and their mother Sophia on 30 September, the present text of this official but professedly incomplete catalogue of saints of the Roman Catholic Church has no feast dedicated to the three saints or their mother: the only Sophia included is an early Christian virgin martyr of Picenum in Italy, commemorated with her companion Vissia on 12 April ; another early Christian martyr, Saint Faith ( Fides ), of Aquitania ( southern France ), is celebrated on 6 October, a Saint Hope ( Spes ), an abbot of Nursia who died in about 517, is commemorated on 23 May, and no saint Charity ( Caritas ) is included, although saints with somewhat similar names, Carissa and Carissima, are given, respectively under 16 April and 7 September.
* Irene of Rome ( died c. 288 ), wife of martyr Saint Castulus, feast day January 22
In the 13th century the patronage was attributed to one of the several saints by the name of Magnus who share a feast day on 19 August, probably St Magnus of Anagni ( bishop and martyr, who was slain in the persecution of the Emperor Decius in the middle of the 3rd century ).
* the martyr Eleutherius of Constantinople ( feast day: February 20 )
He is venerated as a saint and martyr in the Roman Catholic Church, being honored with a feast day on February 2 under the name St. Bruno of Saxony.

0.390 seconds.