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After the canonization of the 103 Martyrs, the Catholic Church in Korea felt that the martyrs who died in the other persecutions also need to be recognized. In 2003, the beatification process for 124 martyrs who died in persecutions between 1791 and 1888 began. [ 21 ]
Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church Carrollton: 1962 [23] 1967 St. James Catholic Church Madison: 1995 [24] 1972 St. Anna Catholic Church Monroe [25] 1973 Holy Family Catholic Church Marietta: 1973 [26] 1973 Holy Trinity Catholic Church Peachtree City: 1980 [27] 1975 Prince of Peace Catholic Church Flowery Branch: 2005 [28] 1977 All ...
The Georgia Martyrs are five Spanish Friars Minor murdered in September 1597 "in hatred of the faith" while conducting missionary work in Spanish Florida. Their particular mission took place in what is now the State of Georgia. As of January 2025, they have been formally declared martyrs by the Catholic Church and are set to be beatified.
Churches for Korean Americans or Korean people in the United States. Includes churches that offer services in any language (Korean, English, etc); criteria for inclusion is whether it is meant for ethnic Koreans.
Thomas Son Chasuhn (1838–1866) was one of the Korean Martyrs canonised by the Roman Catholic church in 1984. His feast day is March 30, [1] and he is also venerated along with the rest of the 103 Korean martyrs on September 20. Thomas was a devout Catholic.
Photo taken at Danggogae Catholic Martyrs' Shrine in Seoul, South Korea. John Yi Yun-il (1822 – January 21, 1867) was a Korean Catholic who was killed during the 19th-century Korean persecution of Christians. He was a family man who made his living as a farmer and who also served as a catechist, i.e. a teacher of Christian religion. [1]
John Baptist Yi Kwang-nyol (c. 1800 – July 20, 1839) was one of the 103 Korean Martyrs. His feast day is July 20, [1] and he is also venerated along with the rest of The Korean martyrs on September 20. John embraced Roman Catholicism with his elder brother when he was 28 years old.
Saint Barbara Yi (Korean: 이 바르바라; Hanja: 李巴巴拉; 1825–1839) was a 14-year-old Korean girl who was made a Catholic saint. She was imprisoned for her faith and died during her imprisonment on 27 May 1839, in Seoul, Joseon. She is one of the Martyrs of Korea canonized on 6 May 1984 by Pope John Paul II. [1] [2] [3] [4]