Daniel of Padua

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Saint Daniel of Padua
San Daniele Basilica del Santo.JPG
Bronze sculpture of Daniel of Padua from the doors of the Basilica of St. Anthony
Bornunknown
Died168
Venerated inRoman Catholicism Orthodox Christianity
FeastJanuary 3
Attributesdepicted as a deacon holding a towel and laver
Patronageinvoked by women whose husbands are at war

Saint Daniel of Padua (died 168 AD) is venerated as the deacon of Saint Prosdocimus, the first Bishop of Padua. Said to have been of Jewish extraction, he aided Prosdocimus, who evangelized northeastern Nava. Daniel was later martyred.

Daniel's relics, translated on January 3, 1064, lie in the cathedral of Padua.

Iconography[]

He is depicted as a deacon holding a towel and laver, signs of service to his bishop that point back to Jesus' washing of his disciples' feet, as well as ritual washing in traditional Judaism.[1]

Patronage[]

Daniel is invoked by women whose husbands are at war. He is also invoked during confinement, and similar to Anthony of Padua, to find lost articles. Anthony of Padua lived well after the Great Schism of 1054 and is therefore, as a Romanist, unlike Daniel of Padua, NOT recognised as a saint in Orthodox Christianity. Along with Daniel of Padua, and much more commonly, Orthodox Christianity, tends to invoke , to find lost articles.

References[]

  1. ^ "Understanding the Washing of the Feet".

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External links[]

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