Spiridon

St. Spiridon was a Bishop of Tremithus on Cyprus. He had been tortured during the Galerian persecution, but adhered to Christianity. He is known to have attended the council of Nicaea in 325 AD. He died in 348. As he had worked numerous miracles and his body did not decay after death, he was declared a saint. When Cyprus was threatened by Turkish invasion, his body was removed to Constantinople and in 1453, shortly before the fall of the city, to Corfu. He became Corfu's patron saint, and his body is located in St. Spiridon in Corfu-city. The sandals of his relics have to be replaced every year, therefore he is known as the walking saint. There is a procession with the Saint's relics every year on 11 August to commemorate the lifting of the Osmanic siege in 1716.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
duc de berry
jim mather
certification path validation algorithm
lonsdale (hundred)
higham, kent
michael matheson
malatestiana library
timeline of new zealand history
ken freedman
tyria moore
savio river
kawasaki frontale
lari (georgia)
mike chunn
christoval de acuna
penguin sweater
eleutheria i thanatos
ibm 2250
robert henry clarence
china burma india theater of world war ii
electrical impedance tomography
david baldacci
wormleybury
gbe languages
udomporn polsak
bag of holding
talia winters
laure manaudou
x2 train
magnificent seven
master aircrew
anunaasika
caveman (movie)
ledo road
ruby cabernet
mystery girl
roger clinton
sms nrnberg
mustang cup
george engelmann
erik poppe
eagle vale, new south wales
the hump
antarctic fur seal