Bureaucrats, Moderators (CommentStreams), Interface administrators, Push subscription managers, Suppressors, Administrators
12,446
edits
m (Tom moved page St. Michael de Sanctis to Saint Michael de Sanctis) |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Saints | {{Saints | ||
|SaintName= Saint Michael de Sanctis | |SaintName=Saint Michael de Sanctis | ||
|SaintStage= Saint | |SaintStage=Saint | ||
|SaintBirthDate= 29 | |FeastDay=April 10 | ||
|SaintBirthPlace= Vic, Catalonia, Crown of Aragon (now Spain) | |SaintBirthDate=1591-09-29 | ||
|SaintBirthCoordinates= 41. | |SaintBirthPlace=Vic, Catalonia, Crown of Aragon (now Spain) | ||
|SaintDeathDate= 10 | |SaintBirthCoordinates=41.9301, 2.2546 | ||
|DeathPlace= Valladolid, Crown of Castile (now Spain) | |SaintDeathDate=1625-04-10 | ||
|SaintDeathCoordinates= 41. | |DeathPlace=Valladolid, Crown of Castile (now Spain) | ||
|SaintCauseOfDeath= Natural causes (fever and exhaustion) | |SaintDeathCoordinates=41.6521, -4.7245 | ||
|NotableAddress1= Monastery of the Trinitarians, Barcelona, Spain | |SaintCauseOfDeath=Natural causes (fever and exhaustion) | ||
|NotableCoordinates1= 41. | |NotableAddress1=Monastery of the Trinitarians, Barcelona, Spain | ||
|NotableAddress2= Monastery of the Discalced Trinitarians, Valladolid, Spain | |NotableCoordinates1=41.3851, 2.1734 | ||
|NotableCoordinates2= 41. | |NotableAddress2=Monastery of the Discalced Trinitarians, Valladolid, Spain | ||
|NotableCoordinates2=41.6521, -4.7245 | |||
|BeatificationDate=1779-05-24 | |||
|Beatifier=Pope Pius VI | |||
|BeatificationLocation=Rome, Papal States (now Italy) | |||
|Canonized=Yes | |||
|CanonizationDate=1862-06-08 | |||
|BeatificationDate= 24 | |Canonizer=Pope Pius IX | ||
|Beatifier= Pope Pius VI | |CanonizationLocation=Rome, Papal States (now Italy) | ||
|BeatificationLocation= Rome, Papal States (now Italy) | |SaintMiracle1=Healing of a blind woman in 1778 | ||
|Canonized= Yes | |SaintMiracle2=Cure of a paralyzed man in 1861 | ||
|CanonizationDate= | |Profession=Trinitarian Friar, Priest | ||
|Canonizer= Pope Pius IX | |ReligiousAffiliation=Order of the Discalced Trinitarians | ||
|CanonizationLocation= Rome, Papal States (now Italy) | |Patronage=Cancer patients, Vic (Catalonia), purity | ||
|SaintMiracle1= Healing of a blind woman in 1778 | |Attributes=Trinitarian habit, cross, chalice, Eucharist | ||
|SaintMiracle2= Cure of a paralyzed man in 1861 | |PrimaryShrine=Church of San Nicolás, Valladolid, Spain | ||
|Profession= Trinitarian Friar, Priest | |||
|ReligiousAffiliation= Order of the Discalced Trinitarians | |||
|Patronage= Cancer patients, Vic (Catalonia), purity | |||
|Attributes= Trinitarian habit, cross, chalice, Eucharist | |||
|PrimaryShrine= Church of San Nicolás, Valladolid, Spain | |||
}} | }} | ||
Saint Michael de Sanctis, born on September 29, 1591, in Vic, Catalonia, was a Discalced Trinitarian friar whose austere life and mystical ecstasies marked him as a saint of purity and devotion. Orphaned by 6, he rejected a merchant’s apprenticeship to pursue religious life, joining the Trinitarians at 12 and later the stricter Discalced branch in 1607, ordained a priest by 1615. Known for his Eucharistic fervor—often levitating in rapture during Mass—he served as superior in Valladolid, guiding his order with humility despite frail health. He died on April 10, 1625, at 33, from fever and exhaustion, his sanctity affirmed by miracles during and after his life, leaving a legacy of spiritual intensity in 17th-century Spain. | Saint Michael de Sanctis, born on September 29, 1591, in Vic, Catalonia, was a Discalced Trinitarian friar whose austere life and mystical ecstasies marked him as a saint of purity and devotion. Orphaned by 6, he rejected a merchant’s apprenticeship to pursue religious life, joining the Trinitarians at 12 and later the stricter Discalced branch in 1607, ordained a priest by 1615. Known for his Eucharistic fervor—often levitating in rapture during Mass—he served as superior in Valladolid, guiding his order with humility despite frail health. He died on April 10, 1625, at 33, from fever and exhaustion, his sanctity affirmed by miracles during and after his life, leaving a legacy of spiritual intensity in 17th-century Spain. | ||