Saint Margaret
Saint Margaret is recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church and is listed in the Roman Martyrology for July 20. She was commemorated from the 12th to the 20th century wherever the Roman Rite was celebrated, but was later removed from the general calendar. In 2022, Margaret was officially added to the Episcopal Church liturgical calendar with a feast day she shares with Catherine of Alexandria and Barbara of Nicomedia on 24 November.
↻ synthesized from 2 sources
When
- First attested
- 1100 CE
- Attested period
- 1100 – 2022
- Historical notes
- Commemorated in Roman Rite from 12th to 20th century.
Relationships
- syncretized with
- Saint Marina
Mentioned by
Sources
Source passages
“She is recognised as a saint by the Catholic Church, being listed as such in the Roman Martyrology for 20 July.”
#1296 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001
“In 1428, she requested to be taken to Charles VII, later testifying that she was guided by visions from the archangel Michael, Saint Margaret, and Saint Catherine to help him save France from English domination.”
#1651 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5