St. Andrew was not canonized. He was proclaimed a saint by early
Christians because of his martyrdom. The canonization process did not
come into existence until the 12th century. In the primitive Church,
martyrs were immediately recognized as witnessing to the perfection of
Christian life on earth, having shown the ultimate proof of their love for
Christ by the offering of their lives. By the sacrifice of their lives
for Christ, they attained Heaven in eternal glory and were indissolubly
united to the Lord, the Head of the Mystical Body.
erm........ I DONT CARE hehe
St. Stephen the Protomartyr of the Christian Faith, became a Saint due to his martyrdom, and he was canonized at the time, as Christians themselves by popular acclamation canonized a Saint, which was at that time, reserved only to Martyrs.
St. Stephen. See chapters 6 and 7 of the Acts of the Apostles. Interesting sidenote: as St. Stephen was being stoned, the stoners laid their cloaks at the foot of a young man named Saul, later to become St. Paul.
He was canonized in 1083 A.D by Pope Gregory
St. Francis Xavier was canonized with fellow missionary St. Ignatius in 1622.
St. Eligius was canonized in the Pre-Congregation era. This was when people were often canonized because of their popularity while they were alive.
St. Etheldreda was canonized by Pope Celestine III in 1198.
St. Anselm was canonized in 1494.
St. Stephen's Day, or the Feast of St. Stephen, is a Christian saint's day celebrated on 26 December in the Western Church and 27 December in the Eastern Church.Hope this helps.
There are thousands of canonized saints, not just five.
No, Saint Patrick was never formally canonized
Yes, St. Odilia was canonized. She is known as a patron saint of the blind and visual difficulties.
St. Clare of Assisi was canonized on September 26, 1255, by Pope Alexander IV.