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Victor of Braga

Saint

Victor

of Braga
Interior of Sao Victor Church, in Braga, Portugal.
Diedc. 300
Braga, Portugal
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church[1]
Feast12 April

Victor of Braga (died c. 300), also known as Saint Victor (Portuguese: São Victor), was a Portuguese Christian martyr. His feast day is 12 April.

Sources

Victor's very existence has frequently been refuted. His story is based on the Breviary of Braga, which was credulous enough to admit all of the forgeries of "Julian Perez", the alleged eleventh century priest of Toledo.[2] However, a short passion from the Abbey of Santo Domingo de Silos in the Province of Burgos, written at the end of the 11th century, could reflect an ancient tradition. It says that Victor met one day with the procession that accompanied the image of a pagan god and that, confessing himself a Christian, he was sentenced to death and beheaded.[3]

Monks of Ramsgate account

The Monks of Ramsgate wrote in their Book of Saints (1921),

Victor (St.) M. (April 12)
(4th century) A victim of the persecution under Diocletian at Braga in Portugal. He was only a catechumen when arrested as a Christian, and, being almost at once beheaded, was baptised in his own blood (A.D. 300 about) [4]

Butler's account

The hagiographer Alban Butler (1710–1773) wrote in his Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Other Principal Saints under April 12,

St. Victor of Braga, Martyr

This city was a populous resort of the Romans; on which account it was watered with the blood of many martyrs in the persecution of Dioclesian. The names only of SS. Victor, Sylvester, Cucufas, Susana, and Torquatus have reached us. Their triumphs are honoured in that church, and recorded by Vasæus in his chronicle, and other Spanish historians. St. Victor, who is mentioned in the Roman Martyrology on the 12th of April, was a catechumen, who, refusing to sacrifice to idols, was condemned to lose his head, and baptized in his own blood. See F. Thomas ab Incarnatione. Hist. Portug. Sæc. 4, c. 6, p. 218.[5]

Notes

Sources