July 19 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

July 18 - Eastern Orthodox Church calendar - July 20

The Eastern Orthodox cross

All fixed commemorations below are celebrated on August 1 by Old Calendar.[note 1]

For July 19th, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on July 6.

Saints

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Pre-Schism Western saints

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Post-Schism Orthodox saints

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Other commemorations

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Notes

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  1. ^ The notation Old Style or (OS) is sometimes used to indicate a date in the Julian Calendar (which is used by churches on the "Old Calendar").
    The notation New Style or (NS), indicates a date in the Revised Julian calendar (which is used by churches on the "New Calendar").
  2. ^ "In Cappadocia, the holy virgin Marcina, sister of St. Basil the Great and St. Gregory of Nyssa."[7]
  3. ^ He is recorded in the Patmos Codex 266, without biographical details. However the "Diocese of Panedus" is not found anywhere; it was probably a reference to "Panios", which was located at Herakleia in Thrace.
  4. ^ "At Treves, St. Martin, bishop and martyr."[7]
  5. ^ "At Seville, in Spain, the martyrdom of the holy virgins Justa and Rufina. Arrested by the governor Diogenian, they were stretched on the rack and lacerated with iron claws, then imprisoned, and subjected to starvation and various tortures. Lastly Justa breathed her last in prison, and Rufina had her neck broken while confessing Christ."[7]
  6. ^ Surnamed also 'the Roman' and 'the deacon', being actually a Roman deacon. He was called by Theodosius the Great to Constantinople to become the tutor of Arcadius and Honorius, the Emperor's sons (c 383). After ten years in that office (c 393) he abandoned the court and retired to the desert of Skete as a hermit. He remained a hermit for the rest of his life, living in various places in Egypt, always weeping over the feebleness of Arcadius and the foolishness of Honorius. He reposed at the rock of Tröe near Memphis.
  7. ^ "At Scete, a mountain in Egypt, St. Arsenius, a deacon of the Roman church. In the time of Theodosius, he retired into a wilderness, where, endowed with every virtue and shedding continual tears, he yielded his soul to God."[7]
  8. ^ Born in Sardinia, he became Pope of Rome in 498. Energetic and competent, despite the activities and accusations of enemies, he built many churches in Rome.
  9. ^ "At Rome, pope St. Symmachus, who for a long time had much to bear from a faction of schismatics. At last, distinguished by holiness, he went to God."[7]
  10. ^ Born in France, he went to Italy as an envoy and visited the monastery of St Vincent near Benevento, where he became a monk. Eventually he became abbot.
  11. ^ Born in Cordoba in Spain and a daughter of Muslim parents, in her widowhood she became a Christian and a nun at Cuteclara, where she remained for more than twenty years. She was then denounced as a Christian by her own family and beheaded.
  12. ^ "At Cordova, St. Aurea, virgin, who repented of a fault she had committed, and in a second combat overcame the enemy by the shedding of her blood."[7]
  13. ^ See: (in Russian) Роман Ольгович. Википедии. (Russian Wiki How).
  14. ^ See: (in Russian) Софроний (Смирнов). Википедии. (Russian Wiki How).
  15. ^ See: (in Russian) Нило-Сорская пустынь. Википедии. (Russian Wiki How).

References

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Sources

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Greek Sources
Russian Sources