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Maria Regina Martyrum (German: Gedenkkirche Maria Regina Martyrum (actually Gedächtniskirche Maria Regina Martyrum der deutschen Katholiken zu Ehren der Blutzeugen für Glaubens- und Gewissensfreiheit in den Jahren 1933–1945) literally in English Commemorative church Mary Queen of Martyrs of the German catholics in honor of the martyrs for freedom of faith and conscience in the years 1933 ...
In 1884, Father Loyzance purchased 10 acres (4.0 ha) of land on the hill where the village had been located, and erected a small shrine under the title of Our Lady of Martyrs. [9] Father Loyzance subsequently led a pilgrimage of 4,000 people from Albany and Troy to the shrine.
The martyrs are inscribed in the current Roman Martyrology on 19 January. [5] Their feast or commemoration was included on that date in the General Roman Calendar from the 9th century to 1969, when they were excluded because nothing is known with certainty about them except their names, their place of burial (the cemetery Ad Nymphas on the Via ...
Golzar Shahada of Qom or Golzar Shahada Ali Ibn Jafar is a cemetery in Qom, Iran. This cemetery is the burial place of famous and historical people, also burial place of the martyrs of the Iran-Iraq war. This cemetery is the largest cemetery in Qom province. This cemetery is known as the second national cemetery of Iran with 3,000 martyrs ...
The road leading to the cemetery has been named Martyrs' Cemetery Road, and according to the Mafkarat al-Islam was the site of an August 26 2006 attack against a US convoy on the road headed to the cemetery, which destroyed a Humvee and killed three American troops, wounding two others, and a similar attack nine days later. [7] [8]
There is a mausoleum for a Sufi mystic, Khwaja Habibullah Shah (d. 1971) in the Kubur Kassim cemetery [7] [8] The Keramat Bukit Kasita at Bukit Purmei is the royal mausoleum of the last ruler of the Riau-Lingga Sultanate as well as his relatives and members of a Sufi tariqa .
Historical guidebooks state that seven early popes and more than three hundred martyrs were buried in the cemetery. [2] Due to the number of martyrs housed, it was known as the "Queen of the Catacombs" in antiquity. [1] Two known popes were buried in the Catacomb of Priscilla: Pope Marcellinus (296-304) and Pope Marcellus I (308-309). [15]
St. Mary's Church, Bad Homburg; Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Frauenau, Bavaria; Maria Regina Martyrum (St. Mary Queen of the Martyrs Church), Berlin; St. Mary's Church, Berlin