On-line Calendar of Saints DaysHome PageWelcome to the "On-line Calendar of Saints Days" Note: This document was produced as a research tool for Medieval and Renaissance studies, so it focuses on people recognized as saints in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. The saints indexed here are those you might find listed in the calendars of Medieval and Renaissance manuscripts. For information on saints from later periods (by which I mean c. 1500 to the present) you will have to look elsewhere (try the Catholic Online Saints Pages). For Greek Saints Days, see the Orthodox Ministry Access Calendar. If you don't mind seeing some ads, you can Search this site. Enter the calendar now, or read the following: The "On-line Calendar of Saints Days" is a hypertext guide to the feast days of Christian saints as celebrated in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. It is based on several different dictionaries of saints (but primarily on the 1960 edition of Hermann Grotefend's Taschenbuch der Zeitrechnung). Unlike many of those other dictionaries, however, this one is organized by date, rather than by the name of the saint. When you look up a day, you will find the names of the saints that were celebrated on that day, together with the names of some of the places in which the feast was especially important. If you were to select "January 12" for example, you would find the following entry:
This tells you that January 12th was the feast day of saints named Benedict, John, and Satyrus. In the entry for Benedict, you can see that this saint was the Benedict known as "Biscop," an abbot at Wearmouth, in northern England, and a confessor. In addition, you can see that, according to Grotefend's Taschenbuch (GTZ), his cult was especially important at Durham. The various abbreviations that appear in the entry above indicate the sources from which the information was drawn. The sources consulted for this project were:
Some entries still contain references to sources used in an experimental phase of this project. These are:
If a feast is listed as "common," that means that it appears on that date in most of the sources consulted. If no source is given for a particular listing, that means the feast is pretty much universal. The various sources consulted use different spellings for the various saints names. When a choice of spellings exists, I have generally used the Anglicized spelling employed by Holweck (F.G. Holweck, A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints (St. Louis: B. Herder, 1924. Reprint. Detroit: Gale Research, 1969)). If you wish to check on variant spelling, you will have to look in Holweck, or some other source. This document was created as a research tool for Medieval and Renaissance studies. It can be used, for example, as an aid to localizing manuscripts containing calendars (Books of Hours, missals, breviaries, etc.). To do this, you would have to go through the entire calendar of the manuscript you wish to localize, checking each saint against the names listed under the corresponding date in the on-line calendar. Many of these saints will be listed as "common" and will not aid in localizing your manuscript. Others will be identified as particular to certain regions, or cities, or even churches. Note the localities attached to the names of such saints. When you are finished, you will have a list of localities in which certain place names occur more frequently that others (for example, "Paris" might appear more often than any other place name). This list will give you a good idea of where your calendar was intended to be used. The On-line Calendar of Saints Days is maintained by Glenn Gunhouse. Comments, criticisms, and corrections should be sent to him at (ggunhouse@gmail.com). If you find this site useful, you might also be interested in the Hypertext Book of Hours. Last modified July 3, 2024 |