Overlooking her slightly forbidding countenance, Saint Mathilda was noted for her great piety and for her charitable works. Her feast day is March 14th.
She is the patron of:
Misbehaving/disappointing children
Large families
Falsely accused persons.
People ridiculed for their piety.
Queens
Widows
Saint Mathilda pray for us!
From Catholic Online: (This blurb is so badly written! I have had not had time to edit the whole thing yet. Who writes these things??)
St. Mathilda was the daughter of Theodoric, a Saxon Count. At an early age she was placed in the monastery of Erfurt under the care of Maud, her grandmother, who was Abbess of the monastery which she had entered after the death of her husband.
Here St. Mathilda learned needlework and acquired the love of labor, prayer and spiritual reading. She remained in the convent until her parents gave her in marriage, in 913, to Henry "the Fowler," so called from his fondness for hawking.
He became Duke in 916 on the death of his father, and in 919 he was chosen to succeed Conrad as King of Germany.
The pious Queen adorned the throne by her many virtues. She visited and comforted the sick and the afflicted, instructed the ignorant, succored prisoners, and endeavored to convert sinners, and her husband concurred with her in her pious undertakings.
After twenty-three years of married life, King Henry died, in 936. After King Henry died, the Queen had a Mass offered up for the repose of his soul. From that moment she renounced all worldly pomp.
Her sons were Otho, Henry, and Bruno.
Otho became King of Germany in 937, and in 962 he was crowned Emperor at Rome
Henry was Duke of Bavaria
St. Bruno edified the Church as Archbishop of Cologne.
Her two sons, Otho and Henry, entered into a contest for the crown.
The Queen favored the former, a fault she expiated by great suffering, for both these sons subjected her to a long and cruel persecution.
She died in 968. Her feast day is March 14th.
No comments:
Post a Comment