Nobility Newsletter: "September 12 – The Holy Name of the Virgin Mary; in thanksgiving for the victory over the Turks at Vienna" and other posts
September 12 – The Holy Name of the Virgin Mary; in thanksgiving for the victory over the Turks at Vienna
Buckingham Palace exhibit displays the gowns, robes, jewels and floral arrangements from Queen Elizabeth’s coronation 60 years ago
In her anguish, the Marchioness of Cadiz appeals to her husband’s mortal enemy to rush to his aid
800 Years Ago Today, Simon de Montfort Crushed the Albigensians at Muret
Video – Redefeating the Turks: the Battle of Vienna, September 12, 1683
September 13 – St. John Chrysostom
September 14 – The man who saved Canada from the French Revolution
September 14 – Formerly a sign of abject disgrace, it now adorns even crowns and crests
September 15 – The noble apostle of purgatory
September 15 – Grandmother of Good King Wenceslaus
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:13 PM PDT
The Festival of the Holy Name of the Virgin Mary Pope Innocent XI extended this feast to the universal Church as a solemn thanksgiving for the relief of Vienna, when it was besieged by the Turks in 1683. The Turks had formerly laid siege to Vienna, under Solyman the Magnificent, in 1529, in the reign [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:12 PM PDT
According to The New York Times: "The Queen's Coronation 1953" (until Sept. 29) …exhibition's most extraordinary elements are the queen's…21-foot, violet velvet train, which was held up by her six maids of honor, and the peers' costumes tipped with ermine tails. • The purple velvet Robe of Estate was embroidered…using 18 different types of gold [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:11 PM PDT
The perilous situation of the Christian cavaliers pent up and beleaguered within the walls of Alhama, spread terror among their friends, and anxiety throughout all Andalusia. Nothing, however, could equal the anguish of the Marchioness of Cadiz, the wife of the gallant Roderigo Ponce de Leon. In her deep distress, she looked round for some [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:10 PM PDT
At the Battle of Muret on 12 September 1213 the Crusading army of Simon IV de Montfort defeated the Catharist, Aragonese and Catalan forces of Peter II of Aragon, at Muret near Toulouse. Simon IV de Montfort was the leader of the Albigensian Crusade to destroy the Cathar heresy and incidentally to join the Languedoc [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:08 PM PDT
Before he set out, Sobieski had sent a letter to Innocent XI, in which he wrote: "When the good of the Church and Christianity is concerned I shed my blood to the last drop, together with the whole kingdom. Since my kingdom and I are two bulwarks of Christianity". To commemorate Sobieski's victory Pope Innocent [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:05 PM PDT
St. John Chrysostom (Chrysostomos, “golden-mouthed” so called on account of his eloquence). Doctor of the Church, born at Antioch, c. 347; died at Commana in Pontus, 14 September, 407. John — whose surname “Chrysostom” occurs for the first time in the “Constitution” of Pope Vigilius (cf. P.L., LX, 217) in the year 553 — is [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:04 PM PDT
Marquis de Louis-Joseph Montcalm-Gozon A French general, born 28 Feb., 1712, at Candiac, of Louis-Daniel and Marie-Thérèse de Lauris; died at Quebec 14 Sept., 1759. He was descended from Gozon, Grand Master of Rhodes of legendary fame, The warlike spirit of his ancestors had given rise to the saying: “War is the tomb of the [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:03 PM PDT
The Cross could not be decently mentioned amongst Romans, who looked upon it as an unlucky omen, and as Cicero says, not to be named by a freeman. However, the Emperor Constantine attributed his victory in the Quintian fields, near the bridge Milvius, to the Cross of the Christians, the inscription of which he caused [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:02 PM PDT
St. Catherine of Genoa (also known as Caterina Fieschi Adorno.) Born at Genoa in 1447, died at the same place 15 September, 1510. The life of St. Catherine of Genoa may be more properly described as a state than as a life in the ordinary sense. When about twenty-six years old she became the subject [...]
Posted: 11 Sep 2013 10:01 PM PDT
St. Ludmilla Wife of Boriwoi, the first Christian Duke of Bohemia, born at Mielnik, circa 860; died at Tetin, near Beraun, 15 September, 921. She and her husband were baptized, probably by St. Methodius, in 871. Pagan fanatics drove them from their country, but they were soon recalled, and after reigning seven more years they [...]
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