Both her parents have been beatified but as of July 2013 they have not been canonized. They will be canonized in 2015 according to a recent release from the Vatican.
Please be specific as there are a number of saints named Elizabeth who are patron saints.
Your primary patron saint is that saint for whom you have been named. You also have additional patron saints and those are the saints whose memorials are celebrated on your birthday. The Calendar of Saints is available by doing an Internet search and lists all the saints who have their feast day on any particular day of the year.
There are saints named Rose and Constance but no Rosconie.There was also a Saint Rosalia if that's who you meant.
There were a lot of saints immediately after St. Peter, but the pope who followed him, who was also acclaimed a saint was Pope St. Linus (67-76).
To be canonized in the Catholic Church you should be a Catholic. There are other religions that also have saints - Orthodox, Anglican, Islam, Hindus, etc. Also, a number of saints in the Catholic Church were never Catholics - Saint Joseph, Saint John the Baptist, Saint Anne, Saint Joachim, etc.
Your primary patron saint is the saint you were named for. Click on the Patron Saint Index below and look up your name. Your secondary patron saint is the saint whose feast day falls on your birthday. Click on the Calendar of Saints below and look up the saints of your birthday.
Saint Sitha the patron saint of housework. Sitha, or Zita, was born in Italy and worked for 48 years as a maid for a wealthy Italian family. Sitha is also the patron saint for people who have lost their keys :-)
This would be St. Jude who is also the saint of lost causes. There are a lot of saints that are meant to help people get through the issues in their lives.
There are several artistic saints but the best known was probably Saint Catherine of Bologna. St. Luke, also, is said to have been an artist.
Saint Philomena (who was a child herself, only 14 when she passed away), and Saint Nicholas (also known as Santa Claus) are patron saints of children.
Yes, everyone has at least one a patron saint. The patron may be the saint for whom a person is named or a saint whose feast day falls on the birthday of the person. There are also patron saints for professions and interests. As a result, an individual may be able to consider any one of several saints as "his or her patron saint"
This would be St. Jude who is also the saint of lost causes. There are a lot of saints that are meant to help people get through the issues in their lives.