medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
A modern saint: Margaret Ward (d. 1588) A very rare English female
martyr, Margaret Ward was a gentlewoman in London.....
hanged, drawn, and quartered. MW was canonized in 1970.
I've been interested in the number of Elizabethan recusant martyrs that
Phyllis has put on the list lately. My non-specialist's understanding of
E.'s policy towards Catholics was a sort of early "don't ask, don't tell"
policy. I also understood that she much disliked the more gruesome forms of
execution (e.g. see above). Am I mistaken about this? The number of Eliz.
recusants listed as tortured martyrs seems largish.
John W.
John B. Wickstrom
Kalamazoo College
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-----Original Message-----
From: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
[mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Phyllis Jestice
Sent: Sunday, August 29, 2004 8:43 PM
To: John Wickstrom
Subject: saints of the day 30. August
medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Today (30. August) is the feast day of:
Felix and "Adauctus" (d. c. 304) Felix was a Roman priest, tortured
and executed during the Great Persecution. On the way to execution,
F. so impressed a Christian bystander that he publicly proclaimed his
faith and was taken along and beheaded too. The second man's name is
unknown, so he was called Adauctus---"the added one."
Pammachius (d. 410) Pammachius was a Roman senator, friend of
Jerome, and son-in-law of St. Paula. P. devoted his life to study
and charity; among other works he built a hospice for pilgrims (the
first in the west).
Rumon (aka Ruan, Ruadan, Ronan) (6th cent.) A hopelessly obscure
saint, probably an Irish missionary. A large number of churches in
Devon and Cornwall were named after him. He may be the same person
as St. Ronan, venerated in Brittany (on June 1).
Fantinus (10th cent.) Fantinus was a Basilian monk, abbot of St.
Mercury in Calabria. One day he left the monastery and started
wandering around the countryside preaching imminent destruction.
Sure enough, invading Muslims destroyed his monastery. F. went on to
a number of sites in the eastern Mediterranean, finally dying in
Salonika famous as a miracle-worker.
A modern saint: Margaret Ward (d. 1588) A very rare English female
martyr, Margaret Ward was a gentlewoman in London. She and her Irish
servant were arrested for helping a Catholic priest escape from
prison. They were offered freedom if they would sue for pardon but
they refused and, when they refused to tell where the priest was
hiding, were hanged, drawn, and quartered. MW was canonized in 1970.
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