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1st century AD: Galilee: 3 July 72 AD: Mylapore, Chennai (presently Santhome) The Apostle of India, who came to Tamilakam, present day Kerala and Tamil Nadu, and was martyred on St.Thomas Mount. 3 July (solemnity in India) St. Bartholomew the Apostle: 1st century AD: Cana, Galilee: 1st century AD: Armenia
Blessed Leo of Saint-Bertin 1163 Blessed Raymund of Fitero (Raymond, Ramon Sierra) 1163 Eberhard Nuremberg, Germany: 1164: Rein Abbey, Gratwein, Styria, Austria: Archbishop of Salzburg: Elizabeth of Schonau: 1129: Germany: 1164: Bonn, Germany: Blessed Hartman 1164 Bishop of Brixen: Blessed Hugh of Fosses: 1093 1164 Adalgott 1165 Bishop of Chur
Haralayya or Guru Haralayya was a 12th-century great saint and poet of Vachana sahitya in India. He joined Anubhava Mantapa, the hall created by Basava, ...
A Christian depiction of Josaphat, 12th century manuscript. Barlaam and Josaphat, also known as Bilawhar and Budhasaf, are Christian saints. Their story tells of the conversion of Josaphat to Christianity. According to tradition, an Indian king persecuted the Christian Church in his realm.
The Nijasharana Shri Ambigara Chowdaiya (also spelled Caudayya) was a Koli [1] saint, poet and social critic in 12th century India. He was a ferryman or boatman who went to Kalyan, joined the Virasaiva movement there and followed Lingayatism.
Jayadeva (CE 1170), Indian Sanskrit poet and devotee; Jayatirtha (1345–1388) Jiva Goswami (c. 1513–1598) Kabir (c. 15th century), Indian saint and mystic; Kalki Bhagwan (born 1949) [16] [17] Kamlesh D. Patel, also known as Daaji (born 28 September 1965) Kanakadasa (1509–1609) Kanhopatra (c. 15th century), Marathi literature; Kanwar Saheb
With the addition of Sundarar and his parents to the sequence, this became the canonical list of the 63 saints. [6] In the 12th century, Sekkizhar added a twelfth volume to the Tirumurai called Periya Puranam in which he expands further on the stories of each of 63 Nayanars. [1] [2] [4]
Anubhava Mantapa, established by Basavanna in the 12th century C.E., is a religious complex located in Tipranth, Basavakalyan, in the Bidar district of Karnataka. It is the first religious parliament in the world, whose name is literally translated as "experience pavilion", and was an academy of mystics, saints and philosophers of the lingayat faith in the 12th century.