- Thailand celebrates birthday of Catholic-educated Queen Sirikit
- Prince Charles accused of too many meetings with ministers
- The Empress who challenged the political correctness of her times
- Principle of Authority as Coordinator
- August 16 – His incorrupt right hand is treasured as the most sacred relic in Hungary
- August 16 – Apostle of the North
- August 17 – Her great beauty aroused the jealousy of the queen
- August 18 – The Empress who found the True Cross
- Military Order of Calatrava – the knights who slept in armour
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:15 PM PDT
According to Catholic News Agency: Catholics in Thailand are joining in prayer to celebrate the 81st birthday of Queen Sirikit…which is celebrated as both a national holiday and Mother's Day in the country. More than 250 Catholic schools and institutions also gathered with thousands of students and parents to pray and show respect for the [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:14 PM PDT
According to The Telegraph: You have to admire the anti-monarchists' persistence, if not their wisdom… Their latest target is the Prince of Wales, who stands accused…of exercising undue political influence by having 36 meetings with Coalition ministers over three years… …a future King should acquaint himself with the governance of the nation. Think of the [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:12 PM PDT
The Empress [Augusta Victoria] had always sympathized with the Roman Catholic Church, though the rumor that she had joined it had no justification. But she had many Catholic friends, and she was by nature adverse to any kind of persecution, be it religious or political. The Kulturkampf had been for her a source of great [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:11 PM PDT
This complementary interplay of authority and vital flux differs completely from modern conceptions of authority as being despotic and tyrannical. Leaders must lead based on perceptions of what society needs and where it wants to go. Those manifesting the vital flux have every right to defend themselves should they be forced to act in a [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:10 PM PDT
St. Stephen of Hungary First King of Hungary, born at Gran, 975; died 15 August, 1038. He was a son of the Hungarian chief Géza and was baptized, together with his father, by Archbishop St. Adalbert of Prague in 985, on which occasion he changed his heathen name Vaik (Vojk) into Stephen. In 995 he [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:09 PM PDT
St. Hyacinth Dominican, called the Apostle of the North, son of Eustachius Konski of the noble family of Odrowacz [or Odrowaz]; born 1185 at the castle of Lanka, at Kamin, in Silesia, Poland…; died 15 August, 1257, at Cracow. Feast, 16 Aug. A near relative of Saint Ceslaus, he made his studies at Cracow, Prague, [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:08 PM PDT
St. Beatrix da Silva A Portuguese nun, died 1 September, 1490. In Portuguese she is known as Blessed Brites. She was a member of the house of Portalegre and descended from the royal family of Portugal. She accompanied the Portuguese Princess Isabel to Spain, when she married John II of Castile. There Beatrix seems to [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:07 PM PDT
Saint Helena (also known as Saint Helen, Helena Augusta or Helena of Constantinople) The mother of Constantine the Great, born about the middle of the third century, possibly in Drepanum (later known as Helenopolis) on the Nicomedian Gulf; died about 330. She was of humble parentage; St. Ambrose, in his "Oratio de obitu Theodosii", referred [...]
Posted: 14 Aug 2013 10:01 PM PDT
Founded in Castile, in the twelfth century, as a military branch of the great Cistercian family. In the Cistercian Order, then only recently formed (1098), there had been a large number of knights or sons of knights. In Calatrava, on the contrary, those who had been monks became knights. Monastic life has been called “a [...]
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