Regina (martyr)
Saint Regina | |
---|---|
Born | Autun, France |
Died | Alesia, France |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church |
Feast | September 7th |
Attributes | depicted as experiencing the torments of martyrdom, or as receiving spiritual consolation in prison by a vision of a dove on a luminous cross. |
Patronage | against poverty, impoverishment, shepherdesses, torture victims[1] |
Saint Regina (Regnia, French: Sainte Reine) (3rd century) was a virgin martyr and saint of the pre-schism Christian Church. Regina was born in Autun, France, to a pagan named Clement. Her mother died at her birth and her father placed her with a Christian nurse who baptized her. Regina helped out by tending the sheep.[2] She communed with God in prayer and meditated on the lives of the saints. At the age of fifteen, she was betrothed to the proconsul Olybrius, but refused to renounce her faith to marry him, for which she was tortured and was beheaded at Alesia in the diocese of Autun, called Alise-Sainte-Reine after her.
Her martyrdom is considered to have occurred either during the persecution of Decius, in 251, or under Maximian in 286.
Veneration[]
Honored in many Martyrologies, Regina's feast is celebrated on 7 September[2] or in the Archdiocese of Paderborn on 20 June. In the past, a procession was held in her honor in the town of Dijon. However, her relics were transferred to Flavigny Abbey in 827. The history of the translation of Regina was the subject of a 9th-century account.
There are many places in France named Sainte-Reine after her.
References[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Regina. |
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wood, James, ed. (1907). The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne. Missing or empty |title=
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- 3rd-century deaths
- People from Autun
- 3rd-century Gallo-Roman people
- 3rd-century Christian martyrs
- 3rd-century Christian saints
- Gallo-Roman saints
- Ante-Nicene Christian female saints
- Ancient torture victims
- 3rd-century Roman women
- People executed by decapitation
- Executed Roman women
- Executed French women