Saint Margaret of England
Appearance
Saint Margaret of England | |
---|---|
Born | Hungary |
Died | 1192 Abbey of Sauvebénite, Auvergne, France |
Venerated in | Cistercian Order |
Feast | 3 February |
Patronage | the dying |
Saint Margaret of England OCist (died 1192) was born in Hungary to an Englishwoman who was related to Thomas Becket, the murdered Archbishop of Canterbury.
When she was grown, Margaret took her mother with her on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and they then settled in Bethlehem, where they lived austere lives of penance. Her mother died there in the Holy Land. After that Margaret made pilgrimages to the Virgin of Montserrat in Spain, and then to Our Lady of Le Puy in Le Puy-en-Velay, in the Auvergne region of France.
She then became a Cistercian nun at the Abbey of Sauvebénite near Le Puy, where she died. Miracles were reported at her tomb and it became a pilgrimage site. Margaret's feast day is observed on 3 February.
References
- Farmer, David Hugh. (1978). The Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
External links
- St. Margaret of England - Catholic Online
Categories:
- 1192 deaths
- 12th-century Christian saints
- 12th-century Hungarian people
- 12th-century Hungarian women
- 12th-century French people
- 12th-century French women
- Cistercian nuns
- Cistercian saints
- French Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- Hungarian Cistercians
- Hungarian emigrants to France
- Hungarian people of British descent
- Hungarian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- Medieval Hungarian saints
- Medieval French saints
- Wonderworkers
- Female saints of medieval Hungary
- Female saints of medieval France
- 14th-century French people
- 14th-century French women
- English religious biography stubs
- Saint stubs