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Saint Corona


Indeed, there’s actually a St. Corona! And her remains are in Northern Italy (the site of the first Covid 19 lockdown in EU). What’s more ironic is that St. Corona is considered as one of the patron saints of pandemics. She was martyred together with Saint Victor, a Roman soldier. Their relics are held in a basilica in Anzu, Northern Italy, right in the middle of the Coronavirus pandemic. The relics of St. Victor and St. Corona have been preserved since the 9th century.

Saint Victor tortured and Saint Corona prays for him and declares herself a being a Christian

Though there’s little known about St. Corona and St. Victor, both have lived (and died) during the reign of Marcus Aurelius and that they were put to death by order of a Roman judge named Sebastian for being Christians. The 16-year old St. Corona was then married to a Roman soldier who didn’t know that she was a Christian. She came to openly declare to be one as she came to the rescue of St. Victor who was being publicly tortured through lashes that practically ripped his skin. She knelt and began to pray for him, letting him know she was there for him. Sebastian ordered the arrest and torture of St. Corona.

They tied her feet to the tops of two palm trees which were bent to the ground. When the palms were let loose she was torn apart. According to the Roman Martyrology, this happened in Syria.

Saint Corona tied atop and between two palm trees

In 1943 and again in 1981, the relics of the two saints were examined, and the bones were indeed from both a male and female. In the 1981 examination, they discovered cedar pollen, which was a typical plant from the Mediterranean basin during the time in question. Archeologists confirm that this pollen would have been present in Syria and Cyprus.

According to Aleteia, “St. Victor and St. Corona are pre-congregation saints meaning that they were recognized as saints prior to Church canonization processes being standardized. (The first saint canonized by a pope was Ulrich, the bishop of Augsburg, who died in 973. He was canonized by Pope John XV at the Lateran Council of 993. Canonization became the general law of the church under Pope Gregory IX (1227-41)).

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