- Mansuetus
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- Mansueto or Mansuetus is also the name of an early bishop of Milan and of an episcopus Brittanorum ("bishop of the Britons" [in Armorica] at the Council of Tours, 461
Saint Mansuetus (French: Mansuy) (died 375) was the first Bishop of Toul. He is thought to be of Irish or Scottish origin. After religious studies in Rome, he was sent by Pope Damasus I to evangelize Gaul, becoming the first bishop of Toul in 365.
Veneration
According to the Vita Sancti Gerardi, Bishop St. Gerard I of Toul (r. 963–994) had the relics of both Mansuetus and Aprus brought into Toul and placed in the church of St. John the Baptist while he was ill.[1]
His feast day is celebrated on September 3.
Notes
- ^ Karl Leyser, Timothy Reuter, Warriors and Churchmen in the High Middle Ages: Essays Presented to Karl Leyser (Continuum International Publishing Group: 1992), 56.
Categories:- 375 deaths
- 4th-century bishops
- Bishops in Gaul
- Bishops of Toul
- 4th-century Christian saints
- Gallo-Roman saints
- French saint stubs
- French bishop stubs
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