List of saints from Asia
This page is a list of saints, blesseds, venerables, and Servants of God from Asia, as recognized by the Roman Catholic Church. These people were born, died, or lived their religious life in any of the states or territories of Asia aside from the Philippines (which have their own page).
The history of Catholicism in Asia dates to Biblical times, with the overwhelming majority of Biblical figures spending all ot most of their lives in the Holy Land. Chronologically, the first saints of the Christian era would be the Holy Innocents, though figures from the Old Testament are similarly honored. While Catholicism has waxed and waned in various parts of the continent, it has had a continuous presence there into the twenty-first century.
Early Times
Due to the rise of Islam and the schisms leading to the establishment of Nestorian, Oriental Orthodox and Eastern Orthodox churches, the Asian saints of times before the modern era are largely concentrated in the area of the Holy Land and the time of the Roman Empire. Christianity reached as far as China and India. The following is a very partial list of those Asian-connected saints traditionally recognized by Rome.
Popes
Nine of the early popes are said to have been Asian. Three of these (Popes Constantine, John V, and John VI) have not been traditionally considered saints. The other five are:
- Pope Saint Peter (r. 30-67)
- Pope Saint Evaristus (r. 99-107)
- Pope Saint Anicetus (r. 157-168)
- Pope Saint Theodore I (r. 642-649)
- Pope Saint Gregory III (r. 731-741)
In addition, Pope Saint Sergius I was born to Syrian immigrants living in Sicily.
One pope died in Asia: Pope Saint Agapetus I (r. 535-536).
Doctors
Seven of the thirty-five Doctors of the Church were from Asia, all of them from this time period. They are:
- Saint Jerome (Palestine)
- Saint John Chrysostom (Turkey)
- Saint Basil the Great (Turkey)
- Saint Gregory of Nazianzus (Turkey)
- Saint Cyril of Jerusalem (Palestine)
- Saint John of Damascus (Syria and Palestine)
- Saint Ephrem the Syrian (Turkey)
Writers and Theologians
Many of the early writers and theologians had connections with Asia. A partial list would include:
Others
In addition to the categories above, these first centuries gave the Church many other saints, among them:
- Saint George (Turkey and Palestine)
- Saint John Maron (Syria)
- Saint Maron (Syria)
- Saint Maximus the Confessor (Palestine and Georgia)
- Saint Sabbas the Sanctified (Turkey and Palestine)
Modern Times
After the canonization of saints came to be reserved to the Papacy around AD 1000, and especially after the establishment of the Congregation of Rites in 1588, the list of official saints with Asian connections is more clear.
List of saints
The following is the list of saints, including the year in which they were canonized and the country or countries with which they are associated.
- St. Francis Xavier, Jesuit priest (1622, China, India, and Japan)
- The 26 Sainted Martyrs of Japan (1862, Japan and India)
- St. John de Brito, Jesuit priest (1947, India)
- Ss. Nikola Tavelić and three companions, Franciscan priests and martyrs (1970, Palestine)
- St. Charbel Makhluf, Maronite priest (1977, Lebanon)
- The 103 Sainted Korean Martyrs (1984, North Korea and South Korea)
- Ss. Lorenzo Ruiz and fifteen companions, Martyrs (1987, Japan and Philippines)
- The 117 Vietnamese Martyrs (1988, Vietnam)
- St. John Gabriel Perboyre, Priest of the Congregation of the Mission and martyr (1996, China)
- The 120 Martyr Saints of China (2000, China)
- St. Rafqa Pietra Choboq Ar-Rayès, Maronite nun (2001, Lebanon)
- St. Joseph Freinademetz, Priest of the Society of the Divine Word (2003, China)
- St. Nimatullah Kassab, Maronite monk (2004, Lebanon)
- St. Alphonsa of the Immaculate Conception, Franciscan sister (2008, India)
- St. Pedro Calungsod, Lay Catechist (2012, Guam/Philippines)
- St. Kuriakose Elias Chavara, Carmelite priest (2014, India)
- St. Euphrasia Eluvathingal, Carmelite sister (2014, India)
- St. Joseph Vaz, Oratorian priest (2015, India and Sri Lanka)
- St. Mariam Baouardy, Discalced Carmelite (2015, Palestine)
- St. Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas, Sister of the Dominican Sisters of the Most Holy Rosary of Jerusalem (2015, Palestine)
- St. Mother Teresa, Missionary of Charity (2016, India)
List of blesseds
- The 205 Blessed Martyrs of Japan (Japan and Korea)
- The Blessed Martyrs of Cuncolim (India)
- The Blessed Martyrs of Songkhon (Thailand and Laos)
- Bl. Gabriele Allegra, Franciscan priest (China)
- Bl. Andrew of Phú Yên, layman and martyr (Vietnam)
- Bl. Maria Theresa Chiramel, Nun (India)
- Bl. Vladimir Ghika, Priest and martyr (Turkey)
- Bl. Khalil al-Haddad, Capuchin priest (Lebanon)
- Bl. Thevarparampil Kunjachan, Priest (India)
- Bl. Nikholas Buykoet Krisbamrung, Priest and martyr (Thailand)
- Bl. Isidore Ngei Ko Lat, Layman and martyr (Myanmar)
- Bl. Salvatore Lilli, Franciscan priest and martyr, and seven companions, laymen and martyrs (Turkey)
- Bl. Ignatius Maloyan, Archbishop and martyr (Turkey)
- Bl. Mary of the Passion, Franciscan Missionary of Mary (India)
- Bl. Stephen Nehmé, Maronite monk (Lebanon)
- Bl. Assunta Maria Pallotta, Franciscan Missionary of Mary (China)
- Bl. Paul Yun Ji-chung and 123 companions of the Korean Martyrs (South Korea and China)
- Bl. Devasahayam Pillai, Layman and martyr (India)
- Bl. Manuel Ruiz Lopez and ten companions, Franciscan priests, brothers and laymen, martyrs (Syria)
- Bl. Maurice Tornay, Augustinian priest and martyr (China)
- Bl. Mario Vergara, PIME priest and martyr (Myanmar)
- Bl. Clement Vismara, PIME priest (Myanmar)
List of venerables
- Ven. Mother Ignacia del Espiritu Santo, Foundress of the Religious of the Virgin Mary (Philippines)
- Ven. Aurelian of The Blessed Sacrament, Discalced Carmelite priest (India)
- Ven. Romano Bottegal, Trappist priest (Lebanon)
- Ven. Vincent Cimatti, Salesian priest (Japan)
- Ven. Estafan al-Dwayhi, Patriarch of Antioch of the Maronites (Lebanon)
- Ven. Joseph Hartmann, Capuchin priest (India)
- Ven. Mathew Kadalikkattil, priest (India)
- Ven. Satoko Kitahara, laywoman (Japan)
- Ven. Thomas Kurialachery, Eparch of Changanacherry of the Syro-Malabarese (India)
- Ven. Sophia Leeves, Discalced Carmelite (Turkey)
- Ven. Selim Abu Mrad, Basilian Salvatorian priest (Lebanon)
- Ven. Fernanda Riva, Canossian sister (India)
- Ven. Agnelo de Souza, Priest of the Missionary Society of Saint Francis Xavier of Pilar (India)
- Ven. Siman Sruji, Salesian brother (Palestine)
- Ven. Vladislav Bukovinskij, Secular priest (Kazakhstan)
- Ven. Mary Jane Wilson, Religious of the Franciscan Sisters of Our Lady of Victory (India)
- Ven. Zacarias of Saint Teresa, Carmelite priest (India)
- Ven. Mario Borzaga and 16 companions, laymen and martyrs (Laos)
List of Servants of God
- Servant of God Matteo Ricci, priest of the Society of Jesus (China)
- Servant of God Xu Guangqi, scholar-official, scientist (China)
- Servant of God Flavian LaPlante, priest of the Congregation of the Holy Cross (Bangladesh)
- Servant of God Thomas Cooray, cardinal, archbishop of Colombo (Sri Lanka)
- Servant of God Marcel Nguyễn Tân Văn, Redemptorist lay brother (Vietnam)
- Servant of God François-Xavier Nguyễn Văn Thuận, bishop, cardinal, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace (Vietnam)
- Servant of God Theotonius Amal Ganguly, archbishop of Dhaka
- Servant of God Alfredo Obviar, bishop of Lucena, (Philippines)
Other open causes
Others have been proposed for beatification, and may have active groups supporting their causes. These include:
- Gerard A. Donovan, Maryknoll priest and martyr (China)[1]
See also
- Roman Catholicism in Asia
- List of American saints and beatified people
- List of Filipino Saints, Blesseds, and Servants of God
- Catholic Church in India
References
- "Hagiography Circle"
- O'Malley, Vincent J. (2007). Saints of Asia. Our Sunday Visitor. ISBN 978-1-59276-173-9.