
Also known as
- Liduina
- Lidwid
- Lidwina
- Lijdwine
- Lydwid
- Lydwine
Profile
Her father was a poor noble, and her mother a poor commoner. Lydwina early evinced a devotion of Our Lady of Schiedam. Injured in an ice-skating accident at age 16, the broken rib caused gangrene to set in, and Lydwina became paralyzed and suffered for decades. She spent her time praying, meditating, and offering her pain to God.
She developed a devotion to the Eucharist. Given to ecstatic visions in which she was shown Heaven and Purgatory, participated in Christ’s Passion, and was visited by saints. Legend says that she had the gift of inedia, and that her only food for her last 19 years was the Eucharist. Miracles occurred at her bed side. Sometimes accused of being possessed, she was tested by priests. Blind her last seven years. Her final vision was of Christ administering last rites to her. Biography written by Thomas a Kempis.
Born
- 14 April (Easter) 1433 at Schiedam, Netherlands of natural causes
- against sickness
- against bodily ills
- ice skating
- prolonged suffering
- roller skating
- sick people
- skaters
- skating
- —
- Schiedam, Netherlands
- crippled woman holding a crucifix
- crippled woman receiving a branch of roses from an angel
- crippled woman receiving a lily from the angel
- crippled woman with a cross and rosary
- girl falling on ice while skating
- girl working on embroidery
Storefront
Additional Information
- Book of Saints, by the Monks of Ramsgate
- Catholic Encyclopedia
- Catholic Online
- Katherine Rabenstein
- Lives of the Saints, by Father Alban Butler
- New Catholic Dictionary
- Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints
- uCatholic
- Wikipedia
MLA Citation
- “Saint Lydwina of Schiedam“. Saints.SQPN.com. 15 April 2013. Web. 24 May 2013. <>