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July 24 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

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July 24 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
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July 23 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - July 25

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The Eastern Orthodox cross

All fixed commemorations below are celebrated on August 6 by Old Calendar.[note 1]

For July 24th, Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar commemorate the Saints listed on July 11.

Saints

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Pre-Schism Western saints

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Post-Schism Orthodox saints

New martyrs and confessors

  • Abbot Ambrose;
  • Hieromonks Arcadius, Ioannicius, Jonah, Joseph, Nicanor, Athanasius, Theophan, Serapion, Nicostratus, and Julian;
  • Monks Ioannicius, Herman, Nazarius, Parthenius, Potapius, and Dorymedon.

Other commemorations

  • Repose of Blessed Monk Tikhon of Turukhan, on the Yenisei River in Siberia (1682)[4][36]
  • Uncovering of the relics (1994) of Venerable Dalmatus,[note 19] Abbot and founder of the Dormition Monastery in Siberia (1697)[13][30][33]

Notes

  1. The notation Old Style or (OS) is sometimes used to indicate a date in the Julian Calendar (which is used by churches on the "Old Calendar").
    The notation New Style or (NS), indicates a date in the Revised Julian calendar (which is used by churches on the "New Calendar").
  2. "At Tyro, in Tuscany, on lake Bolsena, St. Christina, virgin and martyr. Believing in Christ, and breaking up her father's gold and silver idols to give them to the poor, she was cruelly scourged by his command, subjected to other most severe torments, and thrown with a heavy stone into the lake, from which she was drawn out by an angel. Then under another judge, who succeeded her father, she bore courageously still more bitter tortures. Finally, after she had been shut up by the governor Julian in a burning furnace for five days without any injury, and after being cured of the sting of serpents, she ended her martyrdom by having her tongue cut out, and being pierced with arrows.".[9]
  3. Probably born in Rome, she was a virgin martyred near Lake Bolsena in Tuscany.[10]
  4. Name days celebrated today include:
    • Christina (Χριστίνα).
  5. "Also, the holy martyrs Meneus and Capito."[9]
  6. This unknown saint is recorded in the Jerusalemtic Canonarion (on page 100).
  7. KONDAK, TONE 3:
    "Today your truly-glorious memory shines forth, O Noble Passion-Bearers of Christ, Boris and Gleb, summoning us to praise Christ our God. Therefore, hastening to your reliquary, we receive the gift of healing through your prayers, Holy Ones, for you are Divine physicians."[20]
  8. "At Merida, in Spain, St. Victor, a military man, who, with his two brothers, Stercatius and Antinogenes, by various torments consummated his martyrdom in the persecution of Diocletian."[9]
  9. "At Rome, on the Tiburtine road, St. Vincent, martyr."[9]
  10. "At Sens, St.Ursicinus, bishop and confessor."[9]
  11. An adherent of Priscillianism, he was converted by St Ambrose and renounced his errors at the Council of Toledo (400). Soon afterwards he became Bishop of Astorga in Spain.
  12. See: (in Spanish) Dictino. Wikipedia. (Spanish Wikipedia).
  13. "These brothers, two holy youths, were put to death by the pagans for having embraced the Christian Faith, in the cell of the hermit who had instructed and baptised them. When Christianity was established in that province, they were greatly venerated, and a church erected over their sacred remains. It is said that the head of St. Wulfhad was carried to Rome by one who was sent to solicit their canonization, and on his return left by him to the Church of St. Lawrence at Viterbo."[27]
  14. "In the annals of Belgium and the Gallic Martyrolgy, CHRISTIANA is said to have been the daughter of one of the English kings, who was a pagan. The Virgin was instructed in the Faith by an Angel, who directed her to receive holy baptism. After this she withdrew to the Continent, and took up her abode at Dilkeven, where, after a holy life, she died the death of a Saint. In the year 1092, on the 2nd September, her sacred remains were translated to Dendermund, and there she was honoured among the chief patrons of the place."[27]
  15. The commume Lagrave has an archaeological site of the early Middle Ages (Troclar) which was excavated from 1971 to 1998. Archaeological work has restored the monastery of nuns founded by St. Sigolène early 7th century and confirmed the local oral tradition.
  16. He was born in Thessaloniki in 1042, in the reign of Empress Zoë Porphyrogenita. After being ordained in Thessaloniki, he departed for the Thebaid in Egypt, where he lived-out the rest of his life ascetically in a cave.
  17. See: (in Russian) Георгий (Конисский). Википедии. (Russian Wikipedia).
  18. See: (in Russian) Иоанн Оленевский. Википедии. (Russian Wikipedia).
  19. See: (in Russian) Далмат Исетский. Википедии. (Russian Wikipedia).
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References

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