St. Agatha | Female St. of nurses and victims of rape.
St. Agnes the Female St. protects over victims of rape.
St. Alice | Female St. of blind and paralyzed.
St. Angela the Female St. protects over widows.
St. Anne | Female St. of women in labor.
St. Barbara the Female St. protects over artillery and architects.
St. Bernadette | Female St. of lourdes.
St. Bertha the Female St. protects over healing cancer.
St. Bridget | Female St. of sweden.
St. Catherine the Female St. protects over secretaries and miscarriages.
St. Cecelia | Female St. of musicians, poets, and singers.
St. Christina the Female St. protects over archers and manners.
St. Clare | Female St. of television.
St. Dorothy the Female St. protects over brides and florists.
St. Dymphna | Female St. of mental illnesses, runaways, and insanity.
St. Elizabeth the Female St. protects over widows and young brides.
St. Emily | Female St. of single women.
St. Flora the Female St. protects over the abandoned.
St. Frances | Female St. of emigrants.
St. Genevieve the Female St. protects over women's army corps.
St. Gertrude | Female St. of west indies.
St. Helen the Female St. protects over archeologists.
St. Joan of Arc | Female St. of frand, virgins, and soldiers.
St. Julia the Female St. protects over poverty.
St. Lidwina | Female St. of skaters and invalids.
St. Louise the Female St. protects over widows.
St. Lucy | Female St. of eyes, eye diseases, and salespersons.
St. Mary Magdeline the Female St. protects over petulence.
St. Margaret | Female St. of pregnant women.
St. Martha the Female St. protects over cooks and dieticians.
St. Mary Magdeline | Female St. of flight crew and aviation.
St. Mildred the Female St. protects over aid to the poor.
St. Monica | Female St. of alcholoism and mothers.
St. Regina the Female St. protects over poverty.
St. Rita | Female St. of healing of wounds and loneliness.
St. Rose the Female St. protects over vanity.
St. Teresa | Female St. of tuberculosis.
St. Tekakwitha the Female St. protects over lily of the mohawks.
St. Our Lady of the Screws | Female St. of us navy seabees and italy.
List of Female Patron Saints, List of Female Saints,List of Saints, Female Saints
List of Female Saints | Famous Female Saints,Pictures Female saints,Female saint names.
St. Paul | Egyptian Hermit and founder of Monastic life in Thebes, January15
St. Anthony | Founder of monastic life in the desert of Egypt, January 17
St. Fulgentius | Bishop of Ruspe, Tunisia, January 1st
St. John the Alms Giver | Patriarch of Alexandria, January 23
St. Gelasius | Bishop of Rome and third African Pope (492-496), March 1
SS. Perpetua and Felicity | Martyred in Carthage along with 6 others companions, March 7
St. Maximilian (Marmilian) | Martyred at Theveste, Numidia after refusing to serve in the Roman army, March 12
St. Benedict the Black | Sicilian, son of African parents; the first African to be canonized through the regular canonical process, April 4
St. Zeno | Born at Cherchell, Algeria; missionary in Verona, Italy, where he become Bishop of Verona (c. 362), April 12
St. Marcellinus | He was an African missionary to France, April 20
St. Athanasius | Bishop of Alexandria, May 2
St. Orsiesius | Abbot of Tabennisi Monastery, Egypt, June 15
St. Cyril of Alexandria | Patriarch of Alexandria (412-444), June 27
SS. Timothy and Maura | Husband and wife martyred in Southern Egypt, May 3
St. Isdore of Chios | Alexandrian army officer beheaded for his faith, May 15
St. Josephine Bakhita | Sudanese slave girl born in 1869. She was later sold to an Italian Consol who took her to Italy where she eventually became free. She was baptized and later joined the Canossian Sisters in Vincenza, Italy, lived a holy life, and beatified May 17, 1992. She was canonized on October 1st 2000. Her feast is 8 February.
St. Julia of Tunisia | Slave girl crucified for her faith, May 22
St. Charles Lwanga and Companions | Martyrs, canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1964. The 22 young court servant were martyred for their faith by the Buganda King Mwanga in 1886. Along with them were 80 young Anglicans. June 3
St. Onuphrius | Egyptian hermit, June12
St. Shenute | Founder of monastic life in Egypt, July 1
St. Anatolius | Philosopher and scientist of Alexandria, July 3
St. Pantaenus | Head of Alexandrian Catechetical School and missionary to Persia (Iran), July 9
St. Eugenius | Archbishop of Carthage, July 13
St. Speratus and companions | The 12 martyrs of Scillum, Carthage, Tunisia, July 17
St. Aurelius | Archbishop of Carthage, Tunisia, July 20
St. Victor I | Bishop of Rome and first African Pope (189-199), July 23
St. Rutilius | North African martyr, August 2
Blessed Isidore Bakanja | A Congolese labourer and catechist martyred for his faith, 8 August
Blessed Victoire Rasoamanarivo | Foundress of the Catholic Action in Madagascar, beatified in 1989, August 21
153 martyrs of Utica | Thrown into a pit of quicklime in Utica, Tunisia, August 24
St. Monica | Mother of St Augustine of Hippo, widowed at age 40, August 27
St. Poemen | A desert monk known for his holiness, and who encouraged frequent Communion, August 27
St. Augustine of Hippo | Bishop of Hippo Regius (modern Annaba) on coast of Algeria, Doctor of the Church, August 28
St. Moses the Black | A slave, gang leader, who after conversion died a martyr of non-violence on August 28, his feast day. That date providentially coincides with the march to Washington by 200,000 African Americans in 1963, August 28
Blessed Ghebre Mikha'el | Ethiopian priest and martyr, September 2
St. Donatian and Companions | Martyrs, six Bishops of the Ecclesiatical province of Byzaccne (present day Tunisia and Algeria); killed for their faith by the Arian Vandals, September 6
St. Nemesia and Companions | 9 Bishops, several deacons and lay persons who died in a marble quarry in North Africa, September 10
St. Maurice and his Theban Legion (from Egypt) | Martyrs, who were killed at Agauno, Switzerland for refusing to sacrifice to pagan divinities, September 22
St. Matthew | Apostle and Evangelist. According to one ancient tradition, he was the first evangelizer of Nubia (modern Sudan), September 21
St. Raissa | Virgin and martyr from Alexandria, September 22
St. Cassian of Tangiers | A lawyer who resigned and became Christian and died as a martyr, December 3
St. Melchiades | Bishop of Rome and second African Pope (311-314), December 10
SS. Aizan and Sazan | Twin Brothers; Aizan was the first Christian Emperor of the Kingdom of Axum, Ethiopia, October 1
St. Thais | Egyptian penitent, converted after many years as a prostitute, October 8
St. Cerbonius | African missionary Bishop in Italy, October 10
St. Michael Aragave | One of the first Ethiopian Monks, October 11
St. Sarmata | A disciple of St. Anthony of Egypt, martyred by Saracens in the Egyptian desert, October 11,5000 African martyrs and confessers of the faith
African martyrs deported and killed for their faith by the Vandal King Huneric, October 12
Commemoration of the Saints of the Ethiopian Church: St. Frumentius (Abba Salama) and Aedesius
Syriac monks and founders of the Church in Ethipia, October 27
St. Elesbaan | An Ethiopia King who died as a monk in Jerusalem, October 27
St. Martin de Porres | Born in Peru, son of a Spanish father and an African slave mother, who became a pharmacist at an early age and later joined the Dominican Order, where he continued to dispense medicine to the poor, while living a humble and austere life, with great devotion to the Eucharist, November 3
St. Pierius | Head of the Catechetical School in Alexandria, November 4
St. Achilias | Head of religious instruction in Alexandria, November 7
St Nennas | An Egyptian soldier in Phygia, who fled from persecution and became a hermit, November 11
St. Arcadius and companions | Martyrs, victims of the Arian Kind of the Vandals, Genseric, November 13
St. Lalibala (Ghebre Mesqel) | An Ethipian Emperor revered for his faith, October 27
St. Tekla Hymanot | A great Ethipian reformer of monasticism, October 27
St. Gelasius | Bishop of Rome and third African Pope (492-496), liturgical reformer, who orderded the reception of Communion under both species, November 21
St Cathrine of Alexandria | Virgin and martyr who suffered martyrdom in Alexandria. Her relics are said to be kept in the monastery of St. Catherine on Sinai, November 25
Blessed Anuarite Nengapeta | Virgin and martyr, a member of the Holy Family Sister in Congo Kinshasa, martyred by the Simba rebels, December 1
St. Peter Martyr of Alexandria | Patriarch of Alexandria during the Roman persecution, December?
St. Irene Appear Martyr of Lesbos (about 1451 - April 9 1463) is an Orthodox saint martyred at the hands of Turkish soldiers with girlfriends St. Raphael and Nicholas on Bright Tuesday (9 April) in 1463, ten years after the fall of Constantinople.
For nearly five centuries, the inhabitants of Lesbos to visit the ruins of a monastery near the village of Thermi, from north to west of the capital Mytilene on Tuesday bright. These people have forgotten specific reasons for the annual haj pilgrimage, but I remembered that the killing of Turkish soldiers by the old monks in the monastery for many years.
The discovery of relics
Angelos Rallis devout decided to build a church on the ruins of the monastery in 1959. Workers discovered it on July 3, the relics of St. Raphael of Lesbos, because they are cleared of debris, and shortly thereafter St. Raphael, together with the Saint began to Nicholas and Irene, which appears on many of the inhabitants of Lesbos and told them stories of their lives. After opening the residents of St. Irene Lesbos place her grave, and ammunition was discovered March 12, 1961 in the mud drum, which was subjected to torture.
Martyrdom
When Turkish troops invaded Lesvos, 12 years old) and Maria St. Irene and her parents and Basil, the mayor of the village, rushed to the cradle of a monastery near the Mother of God Thermi warning the monks. Soldiers who were killed at the hands of the holy Abbot St. Raphael of Lesbos in when they saw the holy deacon of St. Nicholas of Lesvos, then proceeded to kill St. Nicholas.
Signed Patriot Memory is one of the weapons of Irene and threw him by her parents. When she saw her parents, and put soldiers in a large bowl of mud and began to fire beneath it, leaving Irene stifling inside. Soldiers killed her parents, a teacher also beheaded a village named Theodore and his cousin was killed 15 years), of St. Helen Irene. Thus, received the Irene and her family and neighbors the crown of martyrdom.
Catholic saints | List of female saints | Catholic female saints | Female saints names | Female Patron saints
Sixth - 6th-century Christian Female SaintsFemale Saints List - Female Patron SaintsAnastasia the PatricianArthelaisAthrachtBrigid of KildareClotildeColumba the VirginGenevieveSaint ItaMabynScholasticaSaint SilviaSaint Wenna
Female Catholic saint names confirmation
Arilda
Breage
Domnina of Syria
Saint Eluned
Elwen
Gobnait
Hilaria (monk)
Saint Lelia
Saint Materiana
Saint Paula
Pulcheria
Quiteria
Saint Shushanik
Theodora of Alexandria
Saint Xenia the Righteous of RomeIrish Female Saints
Saint Afra
Agape, Chionia, and Irene
Agnes of Rome
Antonia and Alexander
Anastasia of Sirmium
Anysia of Salonika
Saint Apollonia
Simplicius, Faustinus and Beatrix
Saint Bibiana
Catherine of Alexandria
Charitina of Amisus
Constantina
Demiana
Dorothea of Alexandria
Dorothea of Caesarea
Elen (saint)
E cont.
Emerentiana
Emmelia of Caesarea
Euphemia
Saint Fabiola
Saint Fausta
Saint Gorgonia
Helena (Empress)
Honorina
Saint Isidora
Julian and Basilissa
Quiricus and Julietta
Justina of Padua
Saint Lucy
Macrina the Younger
Macrina the Elder
Margaret the Virgin
Mary of Egypt
Menodora, Metrodora, and Nymphodora
St. Mohrael
Saint Monica
Nana of Iberia
Nonna of Nazianzus
Saint Pelagia
Pelagia of Tarsus
Philomena
Saint Rais
Sarah the Martyr
Saint Theoclia
Saint Ursula
Vasilissa (child martyr)
Victoria of Albitina
Saint Agatha is the Female Saint of nurses and victims of rape.
Saint Agnes the Female Saint protects over victims of rape.
Saint Alice is the Female Saint of blind and paralyzed.
Saint Angela the Female Saint protects over widows.
Saint Anne is the Female Saint of women in labor.
Saint Barbara the Female Saint protects over artillery and architects.
Saint Bernadette is the Female Saint of lourdes.
Saint Bertha the Female Saint protects over healing cancer.
Saint Bridget is the Female Saint of sweden.
Saint Catherine the Female Saint protects over secretaries and miscarriages.
Saint Gertrude is the Female Saint of west indies.
Saint Helen the Female Saint protects over archeologists.
Saint Joan of Arc is the Female Saint of frand, virgins, and soldiers.
Saint Cecelia is the Female Saint of musicians, poets, and singers.
Saint Christina the Female Saint protects over archers and manners.
Saint Clare is the Female Saint of television.
Saint Dorothy the Female Saint protects over brides and florists.
Saint Dymphna is the Female Saint of mental illnesses, runaways, and insanity.
Saint Elizabeth the Female Saint protects over widows and young brides.
Saint Emily is the Female Saint of single women.
Saint Julia the Female Saint protects over poverty.
Saint Lidwina is the Female Saint of skaters and invalids.
Saint Louise the Female Saint protects over widows.
Saint Lucy is the Female Saint of eyes, eye diseases, and salespersons.
Saint Mary Magdeline the Female Saint protects over petulence.
Saint Margaret is the Female Saint of pregnant women.
Saint Flora the Female Saint protects over the abandoned.
Saint Frances is the Female Saint of emigrants.
Saint Genevieve the Female Saint protects over women's army corps.
Saint Rita is the Female Saint of healing of wounds and loneliness.
Saint Rose the Female Saint protects over vanity.
Saint Teresa is the Female Saint of tuberculosis.
Saint Tekakwitha the Female Saint protects over lily of the mohawks.
Saint Our Lady of the Screws is the Female Saint of us navy seabees and italy.
Saint Martha the Female Saint protects over cooks and dieticians.
Saint Mary Magdeline is the Female Saint of flight crew and aviation.
Saint Mildred the Female Saint protects over aid to the poor.
Saint Monica is the Female Saint of alcholoism and mothers.
Saint Regina the Female Saint protects over poverty.