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The sick, asthma sufferers, nurses and carers - Bernadette; Those who serve the sick - Peter of Saint Joseph de Betancur [25] Skin disease, Saint Anthony's fire - Anthony; Skin diseases, victims of child abuse - Germaine Cousin; Sleepwalking, epilepsy, insanity, mental illness - Dymphna; Smallpox - Matthias
bodily ills, [1] sick people, sickness Juliana Falconieri, O.S.M. , (1270 – 19 June 1341) [ 2 ] was the Italian foundress of the Religious Sisters of the Third Order of Servites ( Mantellate Sisters or the Servite Tertiaries).
Dymphna is the patron saint of mental illness. [5] The US National Shrine of St. Dymphna is located inside St. Mary's Catholic Church in Massillon, Ohio. [6] The shrine was destroyed by a fire in 2015, but reopened in December 2016 and is still open to pilgrims and visitors. St.
Colette of Corbie, PCC (13 January 1381 – 6 March 1447) was a French abbess and the foundress of the Colettine Poor Clares, a reform branch of the Order of Saint Clare, better known as the Poor Clares. She is honored as a saint in the Catholic Church.
Servers the sick - Saint Peter of Saint Joseph de Betancur [26] Shepherds - Bernadette of Lourdes, [5] Cuthbert, Cuthman, Dominic of Silos, Drogo of Sebourg, George, Germaine Cousin, Julian the Hospitaller, Raphael the Archangel, Regina, Solange; Shoemakers - Crispin, Gangulphus, Peter the Apostle, Theobald of Provins; Shorthand writers ...
Statue of St. Juliana in Jesuit church in Heidelberg, Germany. Juliana of Nicomedia (Greek: Ίουλιανή Νικομηδείας) is an Anatolian Christian saint, said to have suffered martyrdom during the Diocletianic persecution in 304. She was popular as a patron saint of the sick during the Middle Ages, especially in the Netherlands.
He was canonized on Oct. 10, 1982, by Pope St. John Paul II, Scorsese said. Kolbe was given the titles of confessor and "martyr of charity," fulfilling the promises he made to the Virgin Mary at ...
A pious child, she spent her time giving religious instruction to neighbors and also cared for those who were poor. [1] Venegas joined the Association of the Daughters of Mary on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception 1898. Later, she established a small group of women devoted to the plight of the ill.