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Joseph of Cupertino (Copertino), OFM Conv. (Italian: Giuseppe da Copertino; 17 June 1603 – 18 September 1663) was an Italian Conventual Franciscan friar who is honored as a Christian mystic and saint.
Test takers - Joseph of Cupertino; Teutonic Knights - George; Tin miners - Piran; Tinsmiths - Joseph of Arimathea, Piran. Tinsmiths in Paris - Maturinus; Theater performers - Clare of Assisi, [5] Genesius; Thieves who repent - Nicholas of Myra; Theologians - Augustine of Hippo, [8] John the Evangelist; Therapists - Dymphna; Thomasites - Kateri
Joseph is the patron saint of the New World [113] and of many countries (Austria – especially venerated in Carinthia, Styria, and Tyrol, [114] Croatia – proclaimed as a patron saint of Kingdom of Croatia by Croatian Sabor on 9 June 1687 [115]) and of several main cities (Karlovac [116]), dioceses and administrative regions (Karlovac County ...
The litany of Saint Joseph was sanctioned by Pope Pius X in 1909. After the usual petitions to the Holy Trinity and one to the Blessed Virgin, the litany is composed of twenty-five invocations expressing the virtues and dignities of Joseph. [6] Furthermore, Pius X composed a Prayer to Saint Joseph the Worker for the sanctification of labor. [7] [8]
Joseph of Leonessa, OFMCap, (Italian: Giuseppe da Leonessa) (1556 – February 4, 1612) was an Italian Capuchin friar and is a saint of the Catholic Church commemorated on February 4. Life [ edit ]
The English proper noun Justus shares the same origin than ancient Greek Ioustos (with the capital letter); [1] Saint Joseph, the father of Jesus, was named the "righteous" in Matthew 1:19, an English translation of the Greek honorific title dikaios, which occurs frequently in the Gospels. [2]
Joseph of Arimathea is venerated as a saint by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches, and in some Protestant traditions. The traditional Roman calendar marked his feast day on 17 March, but he is now listed, along with Saint Nicodemus, on 31 August in the Martyrologium Romanum .
Birth record (parish of St. John in Vilna, 226/1835) Raphael was born Józef Kalinowski to a noble "szlachta" family in the city of Vilnius (Vilna). At the time he was born, the area was known as a Russian partition, though it had formerly been part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.