Where is augustine of hippo buried




















His early life, however, gave no clue as to the importance he would later play in the life of the Church. Born in Africa of a pagan family, he was a follower of several heretical movements in addition to leading a sinful life before finally coming to know Christ. His mother, Saint Monica, had prayed for him throughout his life as most mothers do and her prayers were eventually answered. Hope for those of us who pray for our children, whether wayward or not! Even when he accepted Christianity, he did not immediately get baptized, since he felt that he could not live up to the standards of the religion.

Later, realizing what folly this was, he did get baptized and went on to become one of the Doctors of the Church. His writings were fortunately preserved and have been inspiration to countless others.

The relics of Saint Augustine are kept in a marble reliquary on the upper floor of the church. The Church itself has had a tumultuous history, having once been used as stables during the Napoleanic wars, which resulted in substantial damage to the structure.

Her tomb is in the Basilica of Saint Augustine in Rome. Pavia is located about 25 miles south of Milan. Train service from Milan is frequent, taking about 30 minutes. It is a short walk from the train station to the Church. We have not found many organized tours that include Pavia, but if you are traveling independently, or just have a free day in Milan, we recommend a visit. The city is very interesting in its architecture that will take you back to the middle ages, when it had towers.

Today only a few remain standing. It is also modern and home to a thriving university. Click here to find hotels in Pavia, compare prices, and read what other travelers have to say at TripAdvisor.

He was Arian, and in his hatred toward the Catholic Church he resolved to destroy it. To accomplish his purpose without recourse to a bloody persecution, he renewed the prohibition of providing successors to dioceses left vacant by the death of their Catholic bishop.

When the African prelates ignored this edict and continued to appoint titulars to the vacant sees, Trasamund seized not only the newly consecrated bishops but also their consecrators, and banished them all to Sardinia.

About two hundred bishops were thus sent into exile. Among the banished prelates were the bishops of Numidia and among these, Eugene of Carthage and Fulgentius of Ruspe. It was these latter two who conceived the idea of removing the relics of Augustine, together with his incomparable written works which had been saved from the fires of Hippo and were already of universal renown and esteem, thus saving them from the immediate danger of destruction.

The relics were then taken to a site either inside or near the Basilica of St Saturninus in Cagliari, on the island of Sardinia. The relics were placed in an urn of white marble, which is still extant and much revered because of the relics it had once contained.

Here they remained for nearly two hundred and twenty-two years, until the beginning years of the eighth century. According to Bede — , the ancient English ecclesiastical historian, the body of Augustine was moved fifty years after his death. It was taken to the city of Cagliari on the island of Sardinia by the bishops whom Huneric, a Vandal, had expelled from North Africa. Bede, wrote in his "True Martyrology," that the body of Augustine was subsequently redeemed out of the hands of the Saracens there, and deposited in the church of Saint Peter at Pavia, Italy, about the year Peter Oldrad, Archbishop of Milan, wrote a history of this second transfer of body of Augustine.

This was the case because, during this era of the Moslem invasion of Western Europe and the Islamic occupation of Spain and all of Southern Gaul, troops who were returning to Africa disembarked at Sardinia and pillaged on the island.

Luitprand, the king of the Lombards, became gravely concerned and fearful lest the relics of Augustine should suffer profanation.

In all haste he sent to the island a commission of eminent personages charged with the duty of procuring at all costs the venerable remains. They obtained the relics for sixty thousand gold crowns and returned to Genoa with the sacred remains.

Luitprand himself met the returning ship, and, together with a party of his troops, a large number of bishops and priests and a huge throng of people accompanied the remains of Augustine to Pavia where they were placed in the crypt of the Church of St. Peter of the Golden Ceiling. This was probably in the year Liutprand took care to have the body of Augustine hidden with the utmost care under a brick wall in a coffin of lead enclosed in another of silver.

Liutprand is also buried in this church. All of this was then placed within a coffin of marble, upon which in many places was engraved the name Augustinus.

In the twelfth century, Pope Honorius III pope in , who himself had been one of the Canons Regular of Saint Augustine, insisted that the church be placed in the charge of the Augustinians Canons.



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