Saint Porcarius (died c. 732), known as Saint-Porchaire in French, was a Benedictine monk, governed the abbey of Lérins, off the coast of the French Riviera, (now known as Île de Saint-Honorat, as the monastery was founded by Saint Honoratus of Arles) at a time when the monastery included over 500 residents. According to tradition, about 732 Porcarius was warned by an angel in a vision that the monastery was about to be attacked by barbarians. Immediately the abbot heeded the warning and sent off to safety all the young students at the abbey and 36 of the younger monks, in a ship. When the ship left fully loaded, he set about preparing the rest of the community for death and prayed with them for courage. The community was attacked by the Saracens, probably Moors from Spain or North Africa, and were massacred, except four who were taken into slavery. Their feast is kept in the diocese of Fréjus, France, and the memorial day of Saint Porcarius and his companions is August 12.
Saint Porcarius | |
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Martyr | |
Died | c. 732 |
Feast | 12 August |
Another less known Catholic figure was known as Porcarius, or in some documents, Porcar: a canon of the cathedral of Nantes, and monk in the Cistercian abbey of Buzay. It would be him, the brother "according to the flesh" which receives, in Nantes, the then abbot Peter Abelard, come to return visit to the count Conan III. [1]