Saint Irene: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
ClueBot NG (talk | contribs) m Reverting possible vandalism by 2A02:C7F:9C37:AF00:BC3B:64F2:274C:F6A8 to version by Wikisian. Report False Positive? Thanks, ClueBot NG. (3614030) (Bot) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Saint Irene''' may refer to: |
'''Saint Irene''' may refer to: |
||
* [[Irene of Thessalonica]], one of the virgin sisters, feast day April 5 |
* [[Irene of Thessalonica]], one of the virgin sisters, feast day April 5 she was a good damn god |
||
* [[Irene of Rome]] (died c. 288), wife of martyr [[Castulus|Saint Castulus]], feast day January 22 |
* [[Irene of Rome]] (died c. 288), wife of martyr [[Castulus|Saint Castulus]], feast day January 22 |
||
* [[Irene of Tomar]] (died c. 653), of Portugal, feast day October 20 |
* [[Irene of Tomar]] (died c. 653), of Portugal, feast day October 20 |
Revision as of 15:29, 3 April 2019
Saint Irene may refer to:
- Irene of Thessalonica, one of the virgin sisters, feast day April 5 she was a good damn god
- Irene of Rome (died c. 288), wife of martyr Saint Castulus, feast day January 22
- Irene of Tomar (died c. 653), of Portugal, feast day October 20
- Irene of Macedonia (4th century), considered great-martyr with feast day May 5 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics) in Eastern Orthodox churches
- Irene of Athens, Byzantine Empress, feast day August 9
- Irene of Cappadocia, abbess, feast day July 28 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics) in Eastern Orthodox churches
- Irene of Hungary, empress (died 1134), feast day August 13 in Eastern Orthodox churches
- Hagia Irene church in Istanbul is often called "St Irene", although it is actually named after the "Holy (Divine) Peace"