We know virtually nothing about Pope Saint Victor I. In fact, his name was removed from the Calendar of Saints and his cult suppressed in 1969 because so little was know about him. Some sources say he was a martyr but even that is uncertain.
He was a pope,did a lot to reform liturgy,and did a lot twords helping missonary
He was appointed bishop of Hippo by the pope in 395.
Saint Alexius of Rome died as a martyr in the early 5th century and was declared a saint soon afterwards by the Catholic community. He was not canonized as the official process of canonization was not fully instituted until the 12th century. Today, only the pope can declare a saint after a lengthy investigation by the Sacred Congregation for the causes of saints.
Pope St. Leo the Great is a "pre-congregational" saint. In other words, he would have been proclaimed a saint by popular acclamation and devotion long before there was an established process within the church for canonization.
he preformed many miricles for people and after he died Pope Gregory declared him as a saint!!
AD189
Saint Patrick was never a pope.
He would have been appointed to the position by the pope. In the case of Saint Nicholas, that was probably Pope Saint Sylvester I.
Pope Victor I was the son of a man named Felix, but little else is known of his early life. 14th pope, reigning during a period of lull in the persecutions of the Church. His name was removed from the calendar and his cult suppressed in 1969.
The date of Pope Saint Victor's birth is not known but he died in the year 199.
He would have been appointed to the position by the pope. In the case of Saint Nicholas, that was probably Pope Saint Sylvester I.
Pope Saint Nicholas I, the Great, was canonized on May 8, 868, by Pope Adrian II.
Saint Adelaide of Burgundy was canonized in the year 1097 by Pope Urban II.
He was appointed bishop of Hippo by the pope in 395.
Saint Rita of Cascia was canonized on May 24, 1900, by Pope Leo XIII.
Pope St. Martin is a saint but not a patron saint.
She was canonized a saint on March 26, 1267, by Pope Clement IV.