Juan Jacobo Fernandez Explained

Bl. Juan Jacobo Fernandez
Birth Date:July 25, 1808
Death Date:July 9, 1860
Feast Day:July 10
Venerated In:Roman Catholic Church
Death Place:Damascus, Syria
Titles:Martyr
Beatified Date:October 10, 1926
Beatified By:Pope Pius XI

Juan Jacobo Fernandez (July 25, 1808, Moire, Ourense, Spain – July 9, 1860, Damascus, Syria) was a Franciscan friar of the convent of Herbón who was a martyr who achieved beatification.[1]

He was martyred in Damascus when seven Spanish monks and an Austrian were assassinated on July 9, 1860, during an uprising by Turks and Druze against Christians. Fernandez was thrown from the tile roof of the church. Still alive, he fervently prayed to God that He would accept his sacrifice, until he was killed with a knife.[2]

After their deaths, the names of Manuel Ruiz, Carmelo Volta,, Nicanor Ascanio, Pedro Soler, Nicolás María Alberca, Francisco Pinazo and Juan Jacobo Fernández were beatified October 10, 1926[3] and are honoured yearly on 10 July.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Manuel Ruiz Lopez and 7 Companion Martyrs from the Fransciscan Friars Minor of Damascus along with Fransis, 'Abd Al-Muti and Rufayil Masabki . FaithWeb . February 17, 2010.
  2. http://www.franciscanos.org/santoral/manuelruiz.html "Beatos Manuel Ruiz y siete compañeros, Mártires", Santoral Franciscano
  3. Book: Anderson, Gerald H. . Biographical dictionary of Christian missions . 582 . 978-0-8028-4680-8 . November 1999. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company .