Augusta of Treviso

Saint Augusta of Treviso, also known as Augusta of Ceneda, Augusta of Tarvisium, or Augusta of Serravalle, is venerated as a virgin martyr.[3]

Saint Augusta of Treviso
The relics of Saint Augusta. Sanctuary of Santa Augusta, Vittorio Veneto, Italy.
Martyr
Died~5th Century
Serravalle, Vittorio Veneto, Italy
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Major shrineSanctuary of Santa Augusta, Serravalle, Vittorio Veneto.
FeastMarch 27; August 1 (translation of relics); August 22 (discovery of relics)
AttributesSword;[1] funeral pyre; wheel;[1] depicted with her father, in the act of her father killing her[1][2]
PatronageCeneda, Italy

Her Acts were written in the 16th century by Minuccio Minucci di Serravalle, who was secretary to Pope Clement VIII and Protonotary apostolic.[3] According to her legendary Acts, Augusta was the daughter of Matrucus, pagan chief of the Alemanni.[3] Matrucus had conquered the Friulians, who had been Christianized, and ruled over them.[3]

Augusta converted to Christianity secretly. Her father had sent spies to watch over her, and one day, when he discovered her praying, he imprisoned her, and then knocked out all of her teeth.[4] Her enraged father then tortured and decapitated her with his sword at Serravalle, a district of the present-day Vittorio Veneto, around 100 AD.[3] Some sources state that her death took place in the 5th century.[1][2]

Veneration

The hill where Augusta's relics are said to have been found

.

De' Minucci's Acts were included in a volume entitled De probatis sanctorum historiis, a hagiographic study by the 16th century German scholar Laurentius Surius (Lorenz Sauer, Laurence Suhr, Lorenzo Surio), and were published at Cologne.[3] Her name is listed in Ferrarius’ Catalogue of Saints, but not in the Roman Martyrology.[4] August 1 was the day in which the translation of her relics was celebrated, and August 22 the invention (discovery) of her relics, but the main feast day is March 27.[4]

Augusta’s relics are said to have been found a few years after her death on the hill called Santa Augusta after her, which overlooks Serravalle.[3] A church dedicated to her was built in the 5th century.[3]

References

  1. "Saints of March 27". Saint Patrick Catholic Church Saint of the Day. 2008. Retrieved September 2, 2011.
  2. "Saint Augusta of Treviso". Patron Saints Index. 2011. Archived from the original on July 31, 2011. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
  3. Antonio Borrelli (2003). "Santa Augusta di Serravalle". Santi e beati. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
  4. Sabine Baring-Gould, The lives of the saints, Volume 3 (J. Hodges, 1872), 483.
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