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Catherine of Vadstena

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Role
  
Saint

Feast
  
24 March

Parents
  
Bridget of Sweden

Attributes
  
A hind at her side

Patronage
  
Miscarriage

Name
  
Catherine Vadstena


Catherine of Vadstena wwwcatholicorgfilesimagessaints590jpg

Canonized
  
1484 (cultus confirmed) by Innocent VIII

Died
  
March 24, 1381, Vadstena, Sweden

Grandparents
  
Birger Persson, Ingeborg Bengtsdotter

Similar People
  
Bridget of Sweden, Philippa of England, Antonio Possevino, Magnus - Duke of Ostergotland

Venerated in
  
Roman Catholic Church

Saint Catherine of Sweden, Katarina av Vadstena, Catherine of Vadstena or Katarina Ulfsdotter (c. 1332 – 24 March 1381). Her father was Ulf Gudmarsson, Lord of Ulvåsa, and her mother was Saint Birgitta (known as Birgitta Birgersdotter of Finsta in her lifetime).

Contents

Life

At the age of twelve or thirteen she married Lord Eggert van Kyren, a very religious young nobleman of German descent whom she persuaded to take a vow of absolute chastity, and both lived in a state of virginity. Catherine accompanied her mother to Rome in 1349, and soon upon arrival heard news of her husband's death. Catherine is said to have written a devotional work entitled Consolation of the Soul (in medieval Swedish Siælinna tröst, or Själens tröst in modern Swedish), a dated copy from 1407 is still in existence.

She stayed on with her mother, accompanied her on several journeys, including one to the Holy Land. At the death of Bridget, Catherine returned to Sweden with her mother's body, which was buried at the great monastery of Vadstena. Catherine became head of the Brigittine convent at Vadstena Abbey, founded by her mother. Catherine took on the task of forming the community in the rule her mother had written and directing the Order of the Holy Savior, or Bridgettines. After some years, she returned to Rome to work for her mother's canonization. She stayed there five years and formed a close friendship with Catherine of Siena.

Sainthood

In 1484, Pope Innocent VIII gave permission for Catherine's veneration as a saint and her feast was assigned to 22 March in the Roman martyrology. St. Catherine is generally represented with a hind (female red deer) at her side, which is said to have come to her aid "when unchaste youths sought to ensnare her".

In 1488, Pope Innocent VIII gave permission for the translation of her relics in Vadstena. The formal beatification and canonization process, which also documented the required miracles, was never completed because of the Protestant Reformation.

  • Patron saint
  • References

    Catherine of Vadstena Wikipedia