Her relics were discovered on May 24, 1802, in the catacomb of Saint Priscilla on the Via Salaria in Rome along with some tiles that had written on them that the body was that of a martyr named Philomena. The relics were translated to Mugnano, Italy on 10 August 1805.
Little is known of her life, and the information we have was received by private revelation from her. Martyred at about age 14 in the early days of the Church.
She was canonized by Pope Gregory XVI (Pope of the Catholic Church from 1831 to 1846) but her name was removed from the general calendar in 1961 by Pope John XXIII. Continued devotion is permitted.
According to legend, the Roman Emperor Diocletian ordered the death of Philomena. After several attempted executions that failed he ordered her to be beheaded. However, this is based on a personal revelation and has no basis in historic fact. Virtually nothing is known about Philomena and she is not officially considered a saint. She has never been canonized and her veneration is limited to Mungano, Itay, only.
Philomena's feast day is August 11
St Philomena's Catholic High School for Girls was created in 1893.
Yes, St. Philomena is still recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church.
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.
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.