Saint Conrad of Piacenza
- Memorial
- 19 February
- Profile
- Born to the nobility.
Married Euphrosyne, the daughter of a nobleman.
One day while hunting he ordered attendants to set fire to some brush in order to flush out the game.
A strong wind carried the flames to nearby fields, forests, towns and villages, and Conrad fled in panic.
An innocent peasant was imprisoned, tortured into a confession and condemned to death for the fire.
Remorseful, Conrad stepped forth to confess, saving the man.
He then paid for the damaged property.
Conrad and his wife saw the hand of God in the dramatic events, and chose to give the poor everything they owned.
They then separated: she to a Poor Clare monastery, he to a group of Franciscan tertiary hermits.
Conrad lived such a life of piety that his reputation for holiness spread quickly; had the gift of healing.
Visitors destroyed his solitude, so he fled to a the valley of Noto in Sicily where he lived 36 years in prayer as a hermit.
Legend says that when the Bishop of Syracuse visited him, the bishop asked if Conrad had anything to offers guests.
Conrad said he would check in his cell.
He returned carrying newly made cakes, which the bishop accepted as a miracle.
Conrad returned the bishop's visit, and made a general confession to him.
As he arrived, he was surrounded by fluttering birds, who escorted him back to Noto.
Conrad died kneeling before a crucifix.
- Born
- 1290
- Died
- 1350 of natural causes
- Canonized
- 1625
- Patronage
- against hernias
- Representation
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Franciscan hermit with a cross upon which birds perch
bearded, old man with a tau staff, bare feet, Franciscan cincture, and small birds fluttering around him
old man with stags and other animals around him
- Additional Information
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Google Directory
Book of Saints, by the Monks of Ramsgate
Our Sunday Visitor's Encyclopedia of Saints, by Matthew Bunson, Margaret Bunson, and Stephen Bunson
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