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

The reading

September 5

The feast of St. Lawrence Justinian, first Patri- - arch of Venice, who, by glorious miracles and virtues, illustrated the episcopal dignity which he received against his will on this day. His birthday is the 8th of January. — In the suburbs of Rome, blessed Victorinus, bishop and martyr, in the time of Nerva Trajan. Being renowned for sanctity and miracles, he was elected bishop of Amiterno by the whole people, but afterwards he was banished, with other servants of God, to Contigliano, where spring forth fetid sulphurous waters, and was suspended with his head downward by order of the judge Aurelian. Having for the name of Christ endured this torment for three days, he was gloriously crowned, and went victoriously to our Lord. His body was taken away by the Christians, and buried with due honors at Araiterno. — Also, at Porto, the birthday of St. Her cul anus, martyr. — At Capua, the holy martyrs Quinctius, Arcontius, and Donatus. — The same day, St. Romulus, prefect of Trajan's court. For reproving the cruelty of the emperor towards Christians, he was scourged with rods, and beheaded. — At Melitine, in Armenia, the martyrdom of the holy soldiers Eudoxius, Zeno, Macarius, and their companions to the number of eleven hundred and four, who threw away their military belts, and were put to death for the confession of Christ, in the persecution of Diocletian. — At Constantinople, the holy martyrs Urbanus, Theodore, Menedemus, and their ecclesiastical companions, seventy-seven in number, who were put in a ship by the command of the emperor Valens, and burned on the sea for the Catholic faith. — In the neighborhood of Terouanne, in the monastery of Sithiu, St. Bertin, abbot. — At Toledo, St. Obdulia, virgin.

Source: The Roman Martyrology, Baltimore, 1916, John Murphy Company; local raw text lines 9308-9350.