Nobility Newsletter: "October 4 – St. Francis called the Sultan a heretic to his face" and other posts
- October 4 – St. Francis called the Sultan a heretic to his face
- Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Saves the Philippines from the Invading Dutch Fleet – Part 1
- Labour MPs consider Royal 12% profit insufficient, demand more control
- Palace reminds joggers to be polite
- MacArthur rebukes the Congressmen who insulted him
- The Feudal Bond Involved Mutual Responsibility
- October 3 – Military turned monk
- October 3 – Mother Théodore Guérin
- October 3 – Enemy of King St. Louis, but still his friend in Christ
- October 5 – St. Galla
- October 6 – Princes and popes coveted the advice of this silent man
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:18 PM PDT
St. Francis of Assisi Founder of the Franciscan Order, born at Assisi in Umbria, in 1181 or 1182 — the exact year is uncertain; died there, 3 October, 1226. His father, Pietro Bernardone, was a wealthy Assisian cloth merchant. Of his mother, Pica, little is known, but she is said to have belonged to a [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:17 PM PDT
(1st in a 2-part series) THE BATTLES OF LA NAVAL DE MANILA Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Saves the Philippines from the Invading Dutch Fleet Inside the Dominican church of Santo Domingo in Quezon City sits in celestial splendor and glory one of the most venerated and beloved image of the Most Holy [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:16 PM PDT
According to The Guardian: Gareth Thomas, chair of the Co-op party's group of 33 Labour MPs, said…"Modernising the rules governing the crown estate could, for example, allow it to invest in up-and-coming property markets… or in new technology businesses…" The estate manages the £8.6bn of land and property that the crown owns, but which the [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:15 PM PDT
According to AFP: Japanese joggers are being warned to mind their manners when they run around the Imperial Palace in central Tokyo, after a spate of rudeness. Officials say tourists and older visitors to the grounds have complained of runners crashing into them from behind and then trotting off without saying sorry. While the emperor’s [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:12 PM PDT
While Chief of Staff, MacArthur was called before a Congressional Committee to make a report. It is the intolerant practice of some congressmen and senators to throw monkey-wrenches into the wheels of progress in an attempt to make themselves important in the eyes of their constituents back home. Instead of constructively trying to get at [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:11 PM PDT
The strength of this feudal bond leads James Westfall Thompson to observe that "no more intensely personal form of government was ever conceived than that of feudalism, and the cardinal principle of it was mutual responsibility."(1) That is to say, it was not a unilateral bond of submission, but a highly personal bond in which [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:10 PM PDT
St. Gérard, Abbot of Brogne Born at Staves in the county of Namur, towards the end of the ninth century; died at Brogne or St-Gérard, 3 Oct. 959. The son of Stance, of the family of dukes of Lower Austrasia, and of Plectrude, sister of Stephen, Bishop of Liège, the young Gérard, like most men [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:09 PM PDT
Many of the early pioneers faced the hardships of this country where wars, famine and disease were the norm. Leaving everything behind, heroic souls came not only to save the souls of Indian nations, but also to minister to these frontier families. One such person was St. Mother Théodore Guérin, who became the eighth American Saint [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:08 PM PDT
St. Thomas of Hereford (THOMAS DE CANTELUPE). Born at Hambledon, Buckinghamshire, England, about 1218; died at Orvieto, Italy, 25 August, 1282. He was the son of William de Cantelupe and Millicent de Gournay, and thus a member of an illustrious and influential family. He was educated under the care of his uncle, Walter de Cantelupe, [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:05 PM PDT
A Roman widow of the sixth century; feast, 5 October. According to St. Gregory the Great (Dial. IV, ch. xiii) she was the daughter of the younger Symmachus, a learned and virtuous patrician of Rome, whom Theodoric had unjustly condemned to death (525). Becoming a widow before the end of the first year of her [...]
Posted: 02 Oct 2013 10:04 PM PDT
St. Bruno Confessor, ecclesiastical writer, and founder of the Carthusian Order. He was born at Cologne about the year 1030; died 6 October, 1101. He is usually represented with a death's head in his hands, a book and a cross, or crowned with seven stars; or with a roll bearing the device O Bonitas. His [...]
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