Roman Martyrology
The daily memory of martyrs, confessors, virgins, bishops, doctors, and holy witnesses.
Martyrology source
1916 Baltimore edition
The Roman Martyrology, Baltimore, 1916, published by John Murphy Company.
This is selectable text generated from the local source of record. It is not a feast, rank, color, or fasting determination.
Choose a date
Daily navigation
July 14
The reading
July 14
At Lyons, the demise of St. Bonaventure, Cardinal and bishop of Albano, confessor and doctor of the Order of Minorites, most celebrated for his learning and holiness of life. — At Rome, St. Justus, soldier under the tribune Claudius. A miraculous cross appearing to him, he believed in Christ, was baptized, and bestowed his goods on the poor. Arrested afterwards by the prefect Magnetius, he was scourged, had a heated helmet put on his head, and was thrown into the fire, but without injury even to a hair of his head, Finally, he yielded up his soul in the confession of the Lord. — At Sinope, in Pontus, the martyrs St. Phocas, bishop of that city. Under the emperor Trajan, after having been imprisoned, bound, struck with the sword and exposed to the fire for Christ, he took his flight to heaven. His remains were brought to Vienne, in France, and deposited in the church of the holy apostles. — At Alexandria, St. Heraclas, bishop, whose fame was so great that the historian Africanus repaired to Alexandria to see him, as he himself testifies. — At Carthage, St. Cyrus, bishop, on whose festival St. Augustine spoke of him to his people. — At Como, St. Felix, first bishop of that city. — At Brescia, St. Optatian, bishop. — At Daventry, in Belgium, St. Marcellin, priest and confessor. — At Rome, St. Camillus de Lellis, confessor, founder of the Clerks Regular who minister to the sick. Renowned for virtues and miracles, he was numbered among the saints by the Sovereign Pontiff, Benedict XIV.
Source: The Roman Martyrology, Baltimore, 1916, John Murphy Company; local raw text lines 7139-7176.