Friday, September 11, 2009

Catholic Wonderworkers: 12th Century

12th Century
St. Adelelmus of France (Benedictine abbot) [†1100] - (1)

St. Adjutor of Vernon (Benedictine monk & hermit) [†4/30/1131] - (1)

St. Aimo of Savigny (Benedictine hieromonk) [†4/30/1173] - (1) ecstasies

St. Albert of Montecorvino (bishop) [†4/5/1127] - (1)

Bl. Albert of Siena () [†1/7/1181] - (1)

St. Aleth of Dijon (married laywoman) [†4/4/1105] - (1)

St. Atto of Pistoia (Vallombrosan abbot) [1070-5/22/1155] - (1) incorrupt body

St. Bartholomew of Farne (Tostig: Benedictine hieromonk) [†1193] - (1) ; (2)

St. Bartholomew of Simeri () [1050-8/19/1130] - (1)

St. Benedict of Cagliari () [2/17/1120] - (1)

St. Benedict the Bridge Builder of Hermillon (shepherd) [1163-4/14/1184] - (1)
Bl. Benedict Ricásoli of Coltiboni () [1040/1/20/1107] - (1) incorrupt body; (2)

St. Benno of Meissen (bishop) [1010-6/16/1106] - (1) many posthumous miracles when his relics were transferred in 1285

St. Bernard of Clairvaux (Church Doctor) [1090-8/21/1153] – (1) resurrecting the dead; (2)
Bl. Bernard the Penitent of France () [†4/19/1182] - (1)

St. Bernard of Tiron () [1046-4/14/1117] - (1)

St. Bernard of Valdeiglesias (Benedictine Cistercian monk) [†8/19/1155] - (1)

Bl. Bertha de'Alberti of Cavriglia of Italy (Vallombrosan abbess) [1106-3/24/1163] - (1) foresaw her death

St. Berthold of Mount Carmel () [†3/29/1195] - (1)

St. Bertrand of Comminges (reformer bishop) [1050-10/16/1123] - (1)

St. Burchard of Beinwil () [1100-5/18/1192] - (1)

St. Canute Lavard of Denmark (martyr) [1096-1/7/1131] - (1)

St. Christina of Markgate (nun) [1097-12/5/1160] - (1) ecstasies; (2) visions

Bl. Conrad of Seldenbüren (Benedictine lay-brother & martyr ) [1070-5/2/1126] - (1)

St. Dominic of the Causeway () [†5/12/1109] - (1)

St. Drogo of France (Benedictine hermit) [1105-4/16/1186] - (1) bilocation: attended mass and worked fields simultaneously
Bl. Eberhard of Obermarchtal () [†4/17/1178] - (1)

St. Edmund Rich of Abingdon (Archbishop of Canterbury) [1180-11/16/1241] - (1) ; (2) ; (3)

St. Elizabeth Schonau (abbess) [1126-6/18/1164] - (1)

St. Emilina of Longeville (discalced Cistercian nun) [1115-10/27/1178] - (1) "sometimes prophesied about visitors before they arrived;" (2) other prophecies; (3) other mystical gifts

King St. Eric IX of Sweden () [1120-5/18/1160] - (1)

Bl. Evermod of Ratzeburg (bishop) [1100-2/17/1178] - (1) freed prisoners of Count Henry of Ratzeburg when he broke their chains by sprinking Easter holy water on them

Bl. Folcold of Bern () [†4/12/1149] - (1)

St. Frederick of Marie Gaarde () [1100-3/3/1175] - (1) Bl. Sibrand of Marie Gaarde mentions 14 posthumous healings before 1230

St. Galgano of Italy (Galgano Guidotti: Monte Siepe hermit) [1148-12/5/1181] - (1) converted after vision of St. Michael the Archangel; (2) after saying that giving up his former lifestyle would be as easy as cutting rocks with a sword, he thrust his sword into a stone up to the hilt despite expecting sword to snap

St. Gerlac of Valkenberg (tree-dwelling hermit) [1100-1/5/1172] - (1) vision of St. Gervase the Martyr of Milan on 1/5/1170

Bl. Gerold of Bellelay () [†3/29/1180] - (1)

Bl. Gerund of Roggenburg () [1100-11/18/1170] - (1)

Bl. Gilbert of Neufontaines (abbot founder of Praemonstratensian monastery there) [1076-6/6/1152] - (1)

Bl. Godfrey of Cappenberg () [1097-1/13/1127] - (1)

Bl. Godfrey the German () [†5/24/1156] - (1)

St. Godric of Finchale () [1069-5/21/1170] - (1)

St. Grimo of Ursberg () [1100-3/2/1173] - (1)

Bl. Gunthild of Biblisheim () [†2/21/1131] - (1)

St. Helen of Sköfde (martyred blue-blooded widow) [†7/31/1160] - (1) healings of sick at her tomb; (2) healings of cripples at her tomb; (3) stone coffin floated to Tiisvilde a spring gushed forth where it landed

St. Henry of Coquet () [†1/16/1127] - (1)

St. Henry of Uppsalla (bishop-martyr) [†1/19/1156] - (1)

St. Herluka of Bernried () [1060-3/18/1127] - (1)

Bl. Hildegard of Bingen () [1098-9/17/1179] - (1) visions of luminous objects starting at age three; (2) vision of God Who ordered her to record everything she saw and heard in the visions: "And it came to pass...when I was 42 years and 7 months old, that the heavens were opened and a blinding light of exceptional brilliance flowed through my entire brain. And so it kindled my whole heart and breast like a flame, not burning but warming...and suddenly I understood of the meaning of expositions of the books..."; (3) punished with sickness for hesitating to record these visions from God: "But although I heard and saw these things, because of doubt and low opinion of myself and because of diverse sayings of men, I refused for a long time a call to write, not out of stubbornness but out of humility, until weighed down by a scourge of God, I fell onto a bed of sickness."

Bl. Hildegun of Schönau () [†4/20/1188] - (1) ; (2)

St. Homobonus Tucingo of Cremona (married layman) [1150-11/13/1197] - (1)

Bl. Hugh of Bonnevaux () [1120-4/1/1194] - (1)

St. Hugh of Cluny [1024-4/28/1109] - (1)

St. Hugh of Grenoble () [1052-4/1/1132] - (1)

St. Ida of Boulogne () [†4/13/1113] - (1)

Bl. Ida of Park () [†5/26/mid-12th c.] - (1)

Bl. Idesbald of Dunes () [1090-4/18/1167] - (1) incorrupt body

St. Isidore the Laborer (farmer) [1070-5/15/1130] - (1) posthumously appeared to King Alfonso VIII of Castile and showed him hidden path by which he surprised Moors and won in Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa on 7/16/1212; (2) Philip III of Spain cured of deadly disease when he touched Isidore's holy relics; (3) ploughed the field with angels; (4) resurrected his master's daughter; (5) made a freshwater fountain burst from the arid land to quench his master's thirst; (6) his son fell into a deep well and he prayed with his wife Maria Torribia and the well water miraculously rose bringing his son to the ground alive and well; (7) incorrupt body
Bl. Joan of Aza (noble laywoman and mother of St. Dominic de Guzman) [d. 8/8/1190] - (1)

St. John of Matera/Pulsano () [†1139] - (1)

St. John of Meda () [†9/26/1159] - (1)

Bl. John of Salerno (Dominican preacher & friary founder) [1190-8/9/1272] - (1)

St. John Theristus () [†2/24/1129] - (1)

St. John I of Valence () [1070-4/21/1146] - (1)

St. Jón Ögmundsson of Hólar () [1052-4/23/1121] - (1)

St. Lawrence O'Toole of Dublin () [1128-11/14/1180] - (1)

St. Leopold III the Valiant of Austria (Margrave of Austria) [1073-11/15/1136] - (1)
St. Magnus Orknøyjarl () [1076-4/16/1115] - (1)

St. Malachy O'More of Ireland (Maelmhaedhoc O'Morgair: ) [1094-11/2/1148] - (1) resurrecting the dead; (2) prophecy of 112 popes after his death; (3) ; (4)
St. Margaret of England () [†2/3/1192] - (1)

Bl. Markward of Wilten () [1100-5/6/1142] - (1)

St. Mechthild of Diessen () [1125-5/31/1160] - (1)

St. Norbert () [1080-6/6/1134] - (1) ; (2)

Bl. Odo of Novara () [1100-1/14/1198] - (1)

Bl. Ollegarius of Barcelona (incorrupt Archbishop of Tarragona) [1060-3/6/1137] - (1)

St. Otto of Bamberg () [1062-6/30/1139] - (1)

St. Peter of Juilly (Benedictine monk & preacher) [†6/23/1136] - (1)

Bl. Peter the Venerable of Montboissier () [1092-12/25/1156] - (1)

St. Peter of Tarantaise () [1102-5/8/1174] - (1)

Bl. Radobo of Park () [†4/17/1150] - (1)

St. Ranieri of Pisa () [1117-6/17/1161] - (1)

St. Raymond Gayrard of Toulouse (archdeacon & widower) [†7/3/1118] - (1)

Bl. Robert of Arbrissel (monk & preacher) [1047-2/24/1116] - (1) vision of Christ Crucified, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and St. John the Theologian

St. Robert of Newminster () [1100-6/7/1157] - (1)

St. Rosalia of Palermo (blue-blooded virgin anchoress) [1130-9/4/1160] - (1)

Bl. Stilla of Abenberg () [†1132] - (1)

St. Theotonius of Coimbra () [1086-2/18/1166] - (1)

St. Thomas Becket of Canterbury (Archbishop and martyr of Canterbury) [12/21/1118-12/29/1170] - (1)
St. Thorlac of Iceland (bishop of Skalholt) [1133-12/23/1193] - (1) incorrupt body

St. Ubaldo Baldassini of Gubbio (bishop) [1085-5/16/1160] – (1) incorrupt body

St. Waltheof of Melrose () [1095-8/3/1159] - (1)

Bl. Walto of Wessobrünn () [1090-1156] - (1)

St. William Firmatus () [†1103] - (1)

St. William the Great of Maleval (hermit) [d. 2/10/1157] - (1) prophecies; (2) other miracles; (3) foresaw his repose
St. William Tempier of Poitiers (bishop) [†1197] - (1)

St. William of Vercelli () [1085-6/25/1142] - (1)

St. William of Windberg () [1000-4/20/1145] - (1)

St. William of York (two-time Archbishop of York) [d. 1154] - (1)
Bl. Wirno of Form Back (Benedictine abbot) [†3/10/1127] - (1)

St. Wulfric of Haselbury () [†1154] - (1)

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