Dr. John (Ellsworth) Hutchison-Hall

Eastern Orthodox Christian theologian, historian, philosopher, and cultural commentator.

            

Home » Orthodox Saints of the Pre-Schism See of Rome 9th December (NS) — 26th November (OS) 2023


Orthodox Saints of the Pre-Schism
See of Rome
9th December (NS) — 26th November (OS) 2023

by | 9th December 2023 | Orthodox Western Saints

26th November (OS)

AMATOR, first Bishop of Autun in Burgundy (east-central France) and is remembered for evangelising the Gallic Aedui tribe. St. Amato reposed in 270.

BASOLUS (BASLE), a monk near Reims (north-eastern France), St. Basolus was an acclaimed wonderworker who spent the last forty years of his life as a hermit on a hill overlooking the city. St. Basolus reposed in 620.

CONRAD of CONSTANCE, Bishop of Constance in Germany from 934, until his repose in 975. During his time as bishop, St. Conrad made three pilgrimages to the Holy Land, and accompanied Otto I the Great, Holy Roman Emperor (r. 936–973) to Rome.

MARTIN of ARADES, a priest-monk at the Royal Abbey of St. Peter of Corbie (abbaye royale Saint-Pierre de Corbie) in Picardy (northern France), Court Chaplain, and spiritual father to Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia Charles Martel (†741). St. Martin reposed in 726.

SIRICIUS, thirty-eighth Pope of Rome from 384 until his repose in 399. St. Siricius was the first Pope of Rome to issue a decretal calling for clerical celibacy (386), and presided at the synods which excommunicated Jovinian in 392 and 393.

VACZ, an eleventh century hermit in Visegrád in present-day Hungary.

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9th December (NS)

BALDA, the third Abbess of Jouarre (Abbaye Notre-Dame de Jouarre) in present-day north-central France. St. Balda reposed in the late seventh century and her relics were enshrined at the Abbey of Nesle-la-Reposte in the Champagne-Ardenne region.

CYPRIAN, a monk at Périgueux, who ended his life as a hermit near the Dordogne River, where the present-day village of Saint-Cyprien, Dordogne is located. Saint Cyprian reposing in 586. St. Gregory of Tours (17th November) was the author of a biography of St. Cyprian.

ENGUERRAMMUS (ANGILRAM the WISE), a monk and later Abbot of Saint-Riquier in Picardy. St. Enguerrammus reposed in 1045.

ETHELGIVA (ÆTHELGIFU), a daughter of King St. Alfred the Great (26th October), St. Ethelgiva received monastic tonsure and lived a life of great sanctity, culminating in serving as the first Abbess of Shaftesbury. St. Ethelgiva reposed in 896.

LEOCADIA (LOCAIE), a martyr in Toledo, who was condemned to death at the beginning of the Diocletianic Persecution (303–313), but miraculously died in prison before she could be tortured.

PETER, SUCCESSUS, BASSIAN, PRIMITIVUS, and COMPANIONS, (Date Unknown), aside from being listed in ancient martyrologies, nothing is known of the group of martyrs in North Africa.

PROCULUS, an early Bishop of Verona. Though he suffered greatly for the Faith during the Diocletianic Persecution (303–313), St. Proculous reposed peacefully circa 320.

RESTITUTUS, (Date Unknown), little is known of this saint, save he was a Bishop of Carthage, possibly a martyr, and a sermon in his honour was preached by St. Augustine of Hippo (28th August). However, any further information, including the sermon, is no longer extant.

SYRUS, (First Century ?), the first Bishop of Pavia in Lombardy. A tradition states he was appointed by the Apostles, and there is a legend that St. Syrus was the boy with the five loaves mentioned in John 6:9.

VALERIA, said to have been converted by, and a spiritual daughter of, St. Martial of Limoges (30th June), martyred by beheading. It is highly likely her existence is apocryphal.

WOLFEIUS, William of Worcester writes that St. Wolfeius was the first hermit of St. Benet Hulme in Norfolk, England. Nothing further is known of him, it is believed he reposed in the early eleventh century.

Prior to the Schism the Patriarchate of Rome was Orthodox, and fully in communion with the Orthodox Church. As Saint John of Shanghai and San Francisco +1966 said “The West was Orthodox for a thousand years, and her venerable Liturgy is far older than any of her heresies”.

Details of British Saints excerpted from Orthodox Saints of the British Isles.
Details of continental saints from these sources.

In many cases there are several spelling versions of the names of saints from the British Isles. I use the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography version as the primary version with the more prevalent version in parenthesis e.g. Ceadda (Chad) of Lichfield.