Constantine is only considered a saint in the Orthodox Church and was not canonized or declared a saint in the Catholic Church.
Constantine is not considered a saint in the Catholic Church, only in the Orthodox Church.
Constantine the Great, whom the Christians proclaimed Saint after the Edict of Milan at 313 AD
Constantine is not recognized as a saint in the Catholic Church so has no feast day. He is recognized as a saint in the Orthodox Church, however.
Saint Sylvester- pope in the reign of Emperor Constantine I.
Constantine the Great is not considered as a saint in the Catholic religion. While he did make a death bed conversion to Christianity his life up to that point was anything but a saintly one. He is considered a saint in the Orthodox tradition. There are a few other Catholic saints named Constantine, however.
He was the only Roman emperor who became a saint.
If you are referring to Constantine the Great, he is considered a saint only in the Orthodox Church, not in the Western Church. There are several other saints named Constantine so you need to be more specific,
There are a number of saints named Elizabeth so you need to be more specific.
There is no designated patron saint of truth since all saints proclaimed the truth.
She was proclaimed a saint by the local Catholic community of Syracuse shortly after her martyrdom. She was never formally canonized as the process was not instituted until about the 12th century.
Scholastica was a 'precongregational' saint. She was declared a saint by the early Christians based on her life of holiness. The official canonization process did not become instituted until the 12th century.
Saint Helena (Elena) was the empress who found the cross of Jesus Christ. She was the mother of Constantine the Great.