- a
religious service held
during the
night leading to a
Sunday or
other feastday. The
Latin term vigilia, from
which the word is
derived meant a
watch night...
- M****
according to the
General Roman Calendar of 1954 keep the July 13th
feastday; but the
feast has been
removed from the
General Roman Calendar since 1960...
- Patrick.
Feastday: 22
March Darerca of
Killeevy (also
known as
Saint Monenna), late 5th/early 6th
century Abbess of Killeevy, Co Armagh.
Feastday: 6 July...
-
after Peter. The
Confession of
Peter is also the name of a
liturgical feastday celebrated by
several Christian churches,
often as part of the W**** of...
-
written by Cogitosus. Additionally,
several Irish calendars relating to the
feastdays of
Christian saints (sometimes
called martyrologies or feastologies) contained...
-
Damascus (4 December)
Saint Stephen the
Sabaite (nephew of John of Damascus,
feastday 28 October)
Saint Theodulph of
Orleans (18 December)
Saint Hildegard of...
- the
office of Pope, on this
feast of the
Transfiguration on
Mount Tabor—
Feastday of the Holy Face, of the
Order of
which you are the
Founder and Father...
-
lawyer episcopus puerorum "bishop of the boys"; a
layperson who on some
feastdays braided his hair,
dressed as a
bishop and
acted in a "ludicrous" manner...
-
commemoration on 25 October. The
Battle of
Agincourt was
fought on
Saint Crispin's
feastday. (The
English tradition placed the
twins at
Canterbury rather than Gaul...
- True Cross. For this reason, the
monastery also
celebrates a
patronal feastday on
September 14, the
feast of the
Elevation of the Holy Cross. The library...