I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
Bruno of Cologne, venerated as Saint Bruno, was the founder of the Carthusians - a Latin enclosed religious order of the Catholic church. It was founded by Bruno in 1084 and includes both monks and nuns. Their motto in English means The cross is steady while the world turns.
I have included notes about both Bruno and the Carthusians (Wikipedia).
His disciples praised his three chief virtues - his great spirit of prayer, extreme mortification and devotion to th e blessed virgin.
He has long been regarded and as the patron saint of Calabria and one of the patron saints of Germany.
Saint Bruno obviously lived a very active Christian llfe in the eleventh century AD
Anthony was born Fernando Martins de Bilhoes. Upon his admission to
the the life of friars, later in life in Olivais he adopted the name Anthony ( from the name of the chapel located there and dedicated to Anthony the Great).
He was a teacher and preacher. He was so charismatic that the crowds who came to listen to him during his 9 years of ministry could not be contained in a church. They gathered in the marketplace to his attacks on usury and avarice.
He was noted by his contemporaries for his powerful preaching, expert knowledge of the scriptures and undying love for the sick and poor.
He was chosen by St. Francis of Assisi to teach theology to the friars at Padua and Bologna.
He was chosen by Pope Gregory 1X to produce a series of sermons for feast days.
He gained a major reputation as a worker of wonders and miracles
One of the best known stories about Anthony is that a novice borrowed his personal psalter without permission. The novice was compelled to return it by a terrifying apparition.
This is the reason put forward for him being the patron saint of lost property.
He died aged only 36. On his death he was one of the quickest to be canonized- less than one year of his death.
In 1946 he was proclaimed a doctor of the church by Pope Pius X11.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 Patron Saints for Today editor Elizabeth Hallam
Saint Anne according to apocrypha, as well a according to Christian and Islamic tradition, was the mother of Mary. the wife of Joachim and the maternal grandmother of Jesus.
Mary’s mother is not mentioned by name in the N.T.gospels. of the Bible.
Anne and her husband Joachim are only mentioned by name in the New Testament apocrypha in the Gospel of James.
sources
Wikipedia
The Encyclopedia of Saints Howard Loxton
Saint Eloi or Eliguis, the Limousin goldsmith, was called to Paris to make a throne for Clotaire 1. He managed to make 2 from the metal allotted, earning the friendship of the king and more commissions, eventually becoming master of the Paris mint.
His wealth enabled him to ransom slaves, build churches and monasteries and support the poor. He legislated for slaves to rest on holy days.
A counsellor and diplomat at the court of Draobert, the son of Clotaire1, he was later ordained bishop of Noyon and Tournai in 641/2.
According to legend he was forced to cut off the leg of a troublesome horse in order to shoe it but later restored it!
Patron saint of goldsmiths, blacksmiths and farriers.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 Patron saints for Today edited by Elizabeth Hallam
Saint Apollonia was one of the group of virgin saints who suffered in Alexandra during a local uprising against the Christians prior to the persecution of Decius.
According to church tradition her torture included having all her teeth violently pulled or shattered. This is why she is regarded as the patroness of dentistry and those suffering from toothache.or other dental problems.
She was probably a deaconess and held in high esteem. Men seized her and broke and repeatedly broke her teeth. They then took her outside the city and erected a pile of wood to burn her alive… She refused to repeat blasphemous against Christ. Given, at her own request, a little freedom, she sprang quickly into the fire and was burned to death.
Saint Apollonia is represented in art with pincers in which a tooth is held.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 patron Saints for Today Editor Elizabeth Hallam
I decided to find out further information about the Top 20 leaders!!
Using Wikipedia I found extra information about most of them - see breakdown on first sheet.
For Billy Graham and Martin Luther King I have already done profiles for them in TES.
For John Mark Comer I used* Pastors Bio*.
For Pope Francis there are lots of page about him on Wikipedia.
For Jim Winker I could only find a single paragraph.
I hope this helps you in your research.
While looking for a list of 21st century Christian to use to write more profiles about I came across this list of 20 Christians written by Scott Wilson for Church Ministry ED . Scott has done my homework for me.
Scott has written short notes, with a picture, about each of the 20 he chose. He gives his reasons for including 5 famous Christians who have already died because they continue to tribute and influence Christians today.
I have added a word search ( with answer sheet) to his notes.
Saint Lucy was a Roman Christian martyr who died during the Diocletianic Persecution. She is venerated at as a saint in Catholic, Anglican and Eastern Orthodox Christianity.
The single fact upon which various accounts agree is that a disappointed suitor accused her of being a Christian which resulted in her being executed during the Diocletian Persecutions.
Lucy is one of the best known virgin martyrs.
Several pictures show her with eyes removed. She is said to have removed her eyes to discourage a persistent suitor from admiring them. When she died her eyes were some how miraculously restored. This is why Lucy is the patron saint for the blind.
She is also the patron saint of the city of Syracuse (Sicily)
St. Lucy’s day is celebrated especially in Scandinavian countries. Traditionally a young girl is dressed in a white dress with a red sash (as a symbol of martyrdom) and wears a crown or wreath of candles in her hair.
Sources
Britannica
Wikipedia
Saint Over 150 Patron Saints for Today edited by Elizabeth Hallam
Theresa of Lisieux born Marie Francoise- Therese Martin is the Patron saint for Missionaries. She is widely venerated in modern times.
She is one of 4 sisters who became a Carmelite nun in the same convent.
She was only 14 when she experienced her conversion. She entered the order
at the unusual early age of 15.
Aged 22 she became assistant to the novice mistress. She considered volunteering for missionary work in Hanoi ( now Vietnam) but contracted tuberculosis and died, aged 24, after 18 months of ’ heroic suffering’.
She is now one of the most popular saints in the history of the church although she was obscure during her lifetime.
The Story of a Soul - her autobiography. written on orders of her prioress and edited by her eldest sister Marie, was an immediate and sensational success.
Her spiritual memoir explains her theology of the ’ Little Way.’
Theresa’s immense popularity and reputation for holiness resulted in her being quickly beatified (1923)and canonized(1925) by Pope Pius X1.
In 1997 Pope John Paul 11 declared her a Doctor. of the Church.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 Patron Saints for Today edited by Elizabeth Hallam
Wolfgang is regarded as one of the three great German saints of the 10th century. He was known as the Great Almoner.
He was a gifted preacher, teacher, monk and bishop whose ability, learning and humility earned him the admiration of his contemporaries.
He exercised a strong and valuable influence at the court of the Holy Roman emperors. He was the tutor to the future emperor Henry11.
He was bishop of Regensburg in Bavaria from Christmas 972 until his death in 994. Here he improved standards of discipline and learning among the clergy and monasteries.
Towards the end of his life he withdrew as a hermit to a solitary spot in the Salzkammergut region of Upper Austria.
On his death a cult sprang up in Regensburg where many miracles of healing were recorded, notably of the stomach. He is the Patron saint for stomach pains.
Wolfgang was canonized in 1052 by Pope Leo 1X.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 Patron Saints for Today editor Elizabeth Hallam
Anthony -born Fernando Martins de Bulhoes, was raised by a wealthy family in Lisbon… He died in Padua ).
He joined the Augustine canons at an early age.
Aged 25 he joined the Franciscan friars. He adopted the name Anthony from the name of the chapel located there, dedicated to Anthony the Great.
He was sent to work work among the Muslims in Morocco. Ill health forced to return within the year to Assisi.
His exceptional teaching and preaching talents were then discovered. St. Francis of Assisi chose him to teach Theology to the friars at Padua and Bologna.
in southern France.
He then preached against the Albigensian heretics in Southern France.
Between 1227-30 he ruled the Franciscan province in northern Italy.
He then retired to Padua and Pope Gregory 1X commissioned him to write a series of sermons for Feast days
He died at the age of just 35 in 1231. he was canonized the next year ( one of the most quickly canonized saints in church history).
He is the patron saint of lost property The story is that a novice borrowed his written psalter without his permission and was compelled to return it by a terrifying apparition.
During his lifetime he gained a major reputation as a worker of wonders and miracles. He was noted by his contemporaries for his powerful preaching, expert knowledge of scriptures and undying love and devotion to the poor and the sick.
On 16th January 1946 Anthony was proclaimed a* Doctor of the Church* by Pope Pius X11.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 Patron Saints for Today editor Elizabeth Hallam
Saint Genevieve was a consecrated virgin and is the patron saint of Paris in the Catholic and Orthodox traditions. She was recognized as the patron saint of Paris in the 14th century.
She was recognized for her religious devotion at a young age. Miracles and healings happened around her from an early age.
Her prayers saved Paris from being destroyed by Attila the Hun in 451 and other wars. Her organisation of the city’s women was called a ‘prayer marathon’ and her ‘most famous feat’.
She was involved with two major constructions - a basilica for Saint Denis of Paris in 475 and the basilica dedicated to the Holy Apostles Saint Peter and Paul around c500.
Between 885 and 1791 Genevieve was publicaly invoked 153 times during emergencies,
Genevieve performed miracles both before and after her death.
Sources
Wikipedia
Saints Over 150 Patron Saints for Today Editor Elizabeth Hallam
Saint Vincent de Paul was an Occitan French Catholic priest who dedicated himself to serving the poor.I
In 1601 he was ordained as a priest and became the chaplain at court for
Henry 1V of France. He became the tutor for an aristocratic until he was accused of theft. He remained silent for 6 months until his innocence was proved. Conversion dated from this date.
For the rest of his life he combined his working with the rich and fashionable and with looking after outcasts, the sick and poverty stricken, galley slaves and abandoned children.
He founded the* Cgngregation of the Mission or the Vincentians. He was zealous in conducting retreats for clergy for when the local clergy’s .morals were flagging. He was a pioneer in seminary education.
He founded the* Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent of Paul
He was renown for his compassion, humility and generosity.
He is the namesake of the Vincentian Family of organisations.
Vincent was beatified in 1729 and canonized in 1737.
In 1883 Pope Leo X11 named patron of all charitable societies.
He is now venerated as a saint by both the Catholic Church and Anglican Communion.
Note ‘occitan’ is a romance language spoken in Southern France
Sources
Wikipedia
The Encyclopedia of Saints by Howard Loxton
*Saints Over 150 Patron Saints for Today * editor Elizabeth Hallam
Saint Brigid of Kildare or Saint Brigid of Ireland is the patroness saint (mother saint) of Ireland. She is one of the three national saints with Patrick and Columba.
According to medieval Irish hagiographies she was the abbess who founded the important abbey of Kildare (Cill Dara).
It is said that she was buried at the high altar of the original Kildare Cathedral and a tomb raised over her adorned with gems and precious stones and crowns of gold and silver.
On February 1st Brigid Crosses are weaved ( see picture).
In 2023 it became a public holiday in the Republic of Ireland.The feast is shared with Dar Lugdach who tradition says was her student, close companion and successor.
(There is a debate whether Brigid was a real person- read the notes.)
Source
Wikipedia
I was thinking of creating some junior material about Mary Seacole when I found National Geographic For Kids had already created this resource.
See also notes on Kofoworota Abeni Pratt - first black Nigerian nurse in NHS
David Woodroffe, a professional illustrator, has created some very good clip art for my Easter resource.
The Holy week sheet looks briefly at Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday. I have created a page listing the personalities and the order of events from the Last Supper to Christ’s appearance, following his resurrection to two disciples on the road to Emmaus.
The Poetry Aid can be used to create a poem or even a hymn to celebrate Easter. The fourteen stages of the cross has been deal with clip art. The main personalities have been included in a word search. The Easter diary can be written up on the ‘blank’ sheet.
Children are often asked to see how many words they can find in a topical word - eg. Easter. I have enclosed four sheets, a lesson outline, a pupil sheet and two answer sheets.
(I have included Pancake Day because I did not want to set up a resource of just two pages. )
St. Augustine of Canterbury I think is the ' forgotten' saint of England. He is not to be confused with St. Augustine of Hippo. He is sometimes called' the Apostle of England' or' St. Augustine the less'.
He was chosen by Pope Gregory to lead a mission to Britain. His task was to Christianize King Ethelbert and his kingdom of Kent from Anglo Saxon Paganism.
In the short time he was in England (597- 604 AD) he laid the foundations for the Church of England. He was the first Archbishop of Canterbury.
I have put together some information about Augustine with a 'gap' sheet, a simple crossword and word search, plus an answer sheet.
John Wesley is the founder of Methodism - the Methodist church.
Until the age of 35 John Wesley was a 'normal' Christian. He had grown up in a Christian family and had become a clergyman but something was missing.
On May 24th 1738 he had his 'spiritual birthday'. Today we talk about being 'born again'. His outlook on life changed dramatically. His sermons were no longer ordinary, congregations found them disturbing and he, along with others, were banned from preaching in church. He became a field preacher and his statue outside the New Room sees him astride his horse.
For nearly fifty years he was out in the open, in all weathers, preaching the Good News. He kept a Journal, preached many sermons, wrote many books
and even a dictionary. He brought the message that 'love casts out fear' to his listeners.
I have created time line and written about his life in brief using Wikipedia and a Ladybird book. The book is called John Wesley, Founder of Methodism
ISBN 0946550654. It is published by Methodist Publishing House, 4 John Wesley Road, Peterborough price £2. It is a typical ladybird book - writing with a very full text and well illustrated - see examples included.
I start with St. Nicholas - history and legends, letter to Father Christmas ideas, clip art for best copy and word search and one page on Advent.
Christmas has a list of nativity characters, poetry aid, three journeys, 'How many words can you find in Christmas' and Diary Aid.
Epiphany has one page. There are several clip art pictures to use.
This is the story of how Gladys Aylward, a missionary in China during the second World War, helped Chinese orphans safely across a mountain.
When she returned to England she realised a film had been written showing her life and a book called The Small Woman had been published.
On Google, and Youtube there is a great deal of information about how from her humble beginnings as a housemaid/domestic help became a successful missionary.