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Saint Lucy of Syracuse
Lucia


Author: Staff | Source: CatholicSaints.Info



Detail of a painting of Saint Lucy; oil on panel, 1521, by Domenico di Pace Beccafumi; Pinacoteca Nazionale di Siena, Italy; swiped from Wikimedia CommonsAlso known as

 

 Lucia

 Lucie

 



Memorial

13 December

 

Profile

Rich, young Christian of Greek ancestry. Raised in a pious family, she vowed her life to Christ. Her Roman father died when she was young. Her mother, Eutychia, arranged a marriage for her. For three years she managed to keep the marriage on hold. To change the mother‘s mind about the girl‘s new faith, Lucy prayed at the tomb of Saint Agatha, and her mother‘s long haemorrhagic illness was cured. Her mother agreed with Lucy’s desire to live for God, and Lucy became known as a patron of those with maladies like her mother‘s.

 

Her rejected pagan bridegroom, Paschasius, denounced Lucy as a Christian to the governor of Sicily. The governor sentenced her to forced prostitution, but when guards went to fetch her, they could not move her even when they hitched her to a team of oxen. The governor ordered her killed instead. After torture that included having her eyes torn out, she was surrounded by bundles of wood which were set afire; they went out. She prophesied against her persecutors, and was executed by being stabbed to death with a dagger. Her name is listed in the prayer “Nobis quoque peccatoribus” in the Canon of the Mass.

Legend says her eyesight was restored before her death. This and the meaning of her name led to her connection with eyes, the blind, eye trouble, etc.

 

Born

c.283 at Syracuse, Sicily

 

Died

 Stabbed in the throat c.304 at Syracuse, Sicily

  Her relics are honoured in churches throughout Europe

 

Canonized

Pre-Congregation

 

Name Meaning

Light; bringer of light (= Lucy)

 

Patronage

 

against blindness

against dysentery

against epidemics

 against eye disease

 against eye problems

  against hemorraghes

 against sore eyes

 against sore throats

 against throat infections

 against fire

against poverty

against spiritual blindness

blind people

martyrs

peasants

penitent prostitutes

 poor people

 sick children








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