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Petroc of Cornwall
June 4, founder


Source: Catholicsaints.info



Also known as
    •    Petrock
    •    Pedrog
    •    Perreuse
    •    Perreux
    •    Petrocus
    •    Petrox
Memorial
    •    4 June
Profile
Younger son of King Glywys. On his father‘s death, the people of Glywysing called for Petroc to take the crown of one the country’s sub-divisions, but Petroc wanted a religious life, and went to study in Ireland.
Several years later he returned to Britain, landing on the River Camel in Cornwall. Directed by Saint Samson to the hermitage of Saint Wethnoc. Wethnoc agreed to give his cell to Petroc in order that he could found a monastery on the site.


After 30 years as abbot, Petroc made a pilgrimage to Rome, Italy. On his return, just as he reached Newton Saint Petroc, it began to rain. Petroc predicted it would soon stop, but it rained for three days. In penance for presuming to predict God‘s weather, Petroc returned to Rome, then to Jerusalem, then to India where he lived seven years on an island in the Indian Ocean.


Petroc returned to Britain with a wolf companion he had met in India. Founded churches at Saint Petrox and Llanbedrog. In Cornwall, with the help of Saint Wethnoc and Saint Samson, he defeated a mighty serpent that King Teudar of Penwith had used to devour his enemies. He then left his monastery at Llanwethinoc to live as a hermit in the woods at Nanceventon, some fellow monks following his example at Vallis Fontis. While in the wilderness, a hunted deer sought shelter in Saint Petroc’s cell. Petroc protected it from the hunter, King Constantine of Dumnonia, and converted the king to Christianity in the bargain.


Petroc later moved deep into the Cornish countryside, encountering the hermit Saint Guron. Guron moved south allowing Petroc, with the backing of King Constantine, to establish a monastery called Bothmena (the Abode of Monks) at the site of the hermitage.
Died
    •    c.594 at Treravel, Padstow, Cornwall (in modern England) of natural causes while on the road
    •    buried at Padstow
    •    relics stolen in 1177 and given to the Abbey of Saint Meen
    •    relics later returned to the Bothmena monastery
    •    relics destroyed during the English Reformation
Canonized
    •    Pre-Congregation
Patronage
    •    Bodmin, Cornwall
    •    Caernarfonshire, Wales
    •    Cornwall, England
    •    Devon, England
    •    Exeter, Devonshire, England
    •    Hollacombe, Devonshire, England
    •    Little Petherick, Cornwall
    •    Nansfenten, Cornwall
    •    Llanbedrog, Wales
    •    Lydford, Devonshire, England
    •    Newton Saint Petrock, Devonshire, England
    •    Padstow, Cornwall
    •    Saint-Méen, France
    •    South Brent, Devonshire, England
    •    Trevalga, Cornwall
    •    West Anstey, Devonshire, England
Representation
    •    bishop holding a church
    •    bishop with a stag
    •    bishop with a wolf
    •    coracle
    •    stag
    •    wolf








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