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Vincent Ferrer

Vincent Ferrer, OP (Valencian: Sant Vicent Ferrer [ˈsaɱ viˈsɛɱ feˈreɾ]; Spanish: San Vicente Ferrer; Italian: San Vincenzo Ferreri; German: Sankt Vinzenz Ferrer; Dutch: Sint-Vincent Ferrer; French: Saint Vincent Ferrier; 23 January 1350 – 5 April 1419) was a Valencian Dominican friar and preacher, who gained acclaim as a missionary and a logician. He is honored as a saint of the Catholic Church and other churches of Catholic traditions.


Vincent Ferrer

San Vicente Ferrer by Juan de Juanes
Priest and Confessor
Born23 January 1350
Valencia, Kingdom of Valencia
Died5 April 1419(1419-04-05) (aged 69)
Vannes, Duchy of Brittany
Venerated in
Canonized3 June 1455, Santa Maria sopra Minerva, Papal States by Pope Callixtus III
Major shrineCathedral of Vannes
Vannes, Morbihan, France, Bogo, Cebu, Philippines, Calape, Bohol, Banay-banay,[1] Lipa City, Philippines, in Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI) Diocesan Shrine in Old Town San Remigio, Antique, Philippines, Diocesan of San Vicente Ferrer, Brgy. Mamatid, Cabuyao, Philippines and IFI Cathedral in Odiongan, Romblon, Philippines.
Feast5 April
Attributes
Patronage

Early life edit

 
Inside the birthhouse of Vincent Ferrer, Valencia
 
Iglesia de San Esteban in Valencia, where Vincent Ferrer was baptized

Vincent was the fourth child of Guillem Ferrer, a notary from Palamós, and his wife, Constança Miquel, apparently from Valencia itself or Girona.[2][3][4][5]

Legends surround Vincent's birth. It was said that his father was told in a dream by a Dominican friar that his son would be famous throughout the world. His mother is said never to have experienced pain when she gave birth to him. He was named after Vincent Martyr, the patron saint of Valencia.[6] He would fast on Wednesdays and Fridays and distribute alms to the poor. He began his classical studies at the age of eight, and his study of theology and philosophy at fourteen.[7] Four years later, at the age of eighteen, Ferrer entered the Order of Preachers,[8] commonly called the Dominican Order (in England also known as "Black Friars" because of the black cloak they wear over their white habits[9]). As soon as he had entered the novitiate of the Order, though, he experienced temptations urging him to leave. Even his parents pleaded with him to do so and become a secular priest. He prayed and practiced penance to overcome these trials. Thus he succeeded in completing the year of probation and advancing to his profession.

For a period of three years, he read solely Sacred Scripture and eventually committed it to memory. He published a treatise on Dialectic Suppositions after his solemn profession, and in 1379 was ordained a Catholic priest at Barcelona. He eventually became a Master of Sacred Theology and was commissioned by the Order to deliver lectures on philosophy. He was then sent to Barcelona and eventually to the University of Lleida, where he earned his doctorate in theology.[10]

Vincent Ferrer is described as a man of medium height, with a lofty forehead and very distinct features. His hair was fair in color and tonsured. His eyes were very dark and expressive; his manner gentle. Pale was his ordinary color. His voice was strong and powerful, at times gentle, resonant, and vibrant.[6]

Western Schism edit

 
St. Vincent Ferrer, Église Saint-André (Brech)

The Western Schism (1378–1417) divided Catholicism between two, then eventually three, claimants to the papacy. Antipope Clement VII lived at Avignon in France, and Pope Urban VI in Rome. Vincent was convinced that the election of Urban was invalid, although Catherine of Siena was just as devoted a supporter of the Roman pope. In the service of Cardinal Pedro de Luna, Vincent worked to persuade Spaniards to follow Clement. When Clement died in 1394, Cardinal de Luna was elected as the second antipope successor to the Avignon papacy and took the name Benedict XIII.[11]

Vincent and his brother Boniface, General of the Carthusians, were loyal to Benedict XIII, commonly known as "Papa Luna" in Castile and Aragon.[7] He worked for Benedict XIII as apostolic penitentiary and Master of the Sacred Palace.[11] Nonetheless Vincent labored to have Benedict XIII end the schism.[10] When Benedict XIII did not resign as intended at either the Council of Pisa (1409) or the Council of Constance (1414–1418), he lost the support of the French king and of most of his cardinals, and was excommunicated as a schismatic in 1417.

Vincent later claimed that the Western Schism had had such a depressing effect on his mind that it caused him to be seriously ill.[12]

Religious gifts and missionary work edit

For twenty-one years he was said to have traveled to England, Scotland, Ireland, Aragon, Castile, France, Switzerland, and Italy, preaching the Gospel and converting many. Many biographers believe that he could speak only Catalan, but was endowed with the gift of tongues.[7] He was a noted preacher. Though he himself was an intellectual, his preaching style has been described as "innovative in that it incorporated a popular tone and rhetorical directness into the (by then traditional) Scholastic, thematic sermon structure".[13]

He preached to Colette of Corbie and her nuns, and it was she who told him that he would die in France. Too ill to return to Spain, he did, indeed, die in Brittany in 1419. Breton fishermen still invoke his aid in storms, and in Spain he is the patron of orphanages.[14]

Conversion of Jews and controversy edit

Vincent is said to have been responsible for the conversion of many Jews to Catholicism, often by questionable means according to the Jewish Encyclopedia; for instance, he is said to have made their lives difficult until they converted and to have "dedicated" synagogues as churches on the basis of his own authority.[15] One of his converts, a former rabbi by the name of Solomon ha-Levi, went on to become the Bishop of Cartagena and later the Archbishop of Burgos. Vincent is alleged to have contributed to anti-Semitism in Spain, as violence accompanied his visits to towns that had Jewish communities.[16]

Because of the Spanish's methods of converting Jews at the time, the means which Vincent had at his disposal were either baptism or spoliation. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, he won them over by his preaching, estimated at 25,000.[7]

Sources are contradictory concerning Vincent's achievement in converting a synagogue in Toledo, Spain, into the Church of Santa María la Blanca. One source says he preached to the mobs whose riots led to the appropriation of the synagogue and its transformation into a church in 1391;[17] a second source says he converted the Jews of the city who then changed the synagogue to a church after they embraced the Faith, but hints at the year 1411.[10] A third source identifies two distinct incidents, one in Valencia in 1391 and one in Toledo at a later date, but says that Vincent put down an uprising against Jews in one place and defused a persecution against them in the other.[18] Vincent also attended the Disputation of Tortosa (1413–14), called by Avignon Pope Benedict XIII in an effort to convert Jews to Catholicism after a debate among scholars of both religions.[16]

Compromise of Caspe edit

Vincent participated in the management of a significant political crisis in his homeland. King Martin of Aragon died in 1410 without a legitimate heir, and five potential candidates came forth to claim the throne, all with royal bloodlines. It was determined that a committee of nine respected figures, three each from Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia (the realms comprising the Crown of Aragon), would review the qualifications and select the next king. Vincent was chosen as one of the representatives of Valencia, and he voted for the Castilian prince Ferdinand of Antequera, who became the next King of Aragon.[19] On 28 June, Ferrer publicly proclaimed Ferdinand of Castile as king of Aragon.[20] The process by which Ferdinand was determined to be the next king is known as the Compromise of Caspe.

Death and legacy edit

Vincent died on 5 April 1419 at Vannes in Brittany, at the age of 69,[8] and was buried in Vannes Cathedral. He was canonized by Pope Calixtus III on 3 June 1455.[7] His feast day is celebrated on 5 April.[21]

Entities named after him include a pontifical religious institute, the Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer, and two Brazilian municipalities, São Vicente Ferrer, Maranhão, and São Vicente Ferrer, Pernambuco.[citation needed]

A 50-metre (164-foot) statue of Ferrer was erected in Bayambang, Philippines, in 2019.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Archdiocesan Shrine & Parish of St. Vincent Ferrer". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Sant Vicent Ferrer, patró de l'antic Regne de València", by Àngel Canet Català, Vilaweb, 31 March 2008, reprinted in Normalització, (in Catalan). The author of this article references El gran llibre dels sants, by Roger Costa Solé, Ara Llibres, Barcelona, 2007, as his source. Consulted 2016-12-18.
  3. ^ Como una red. Sermones de Vicent Ferrer, by Josep-Antoni Ysern i Lagarda, University of Valencia, (in Spanish). Consulted 2016-12-18.
  4. ^ "Notas sobre esta historia", in Historia de la portentosa vida y milagros del Valenciano Apostol de Europa San Vicente Ferrer, by Francisco VIDAL Y MICÒ and Serafin Thomas MIGUEL, Valencia, 1733, p. 453 (in Spanish). Consulted 2016-12-18.
  5. ^ Dress, Clayton J. The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal, 1300–1500: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Press, 2001. ISBN 0-313-30588-9. (p. 490)
  6. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e Reinhart, Albert. "St. Vincent Ferrer". The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 15. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 10 May 2021  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  8. ^ a b "St. Vincent Ferrer". Catholic News Agency. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  9. ^ "Black friar". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  10. ^ a b c "The Lives or the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saints by Rev. Alban Butler". Ewtn.com. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  11. ^ a b Media, Franciscan (5 April 2016). "Saint Vincent Ferrer". Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  12. ^ Hogan, Stanislaus M. (1911). Saint Vincent Ferrer : O.P. Kelly – University of Toronto. London : Longmans, Green.
  13. ^ p. 238, Pelle, Stephen. "An Old Norse Homily and Two Homiletic Fragments from AM 624 4to." GRIPLA 27 (2016): 263–281.
  14. ^ Website O.P.
  15. ^ "Jewish Encyclopedia, Vincent Ferrer". Jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  16. ^ a b Poliakov, Leon (5 October 2003). The History of Anti-Semitism: From Mohammed to the Marranos – Léon Poliakov – Google Books. ISBN 0812218647. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  17. ^ Despland, Michel. (in French). Encyclopédie de l'Agora. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2007.
  18. ^ "Second Exodus". Second Exodus. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  19. ^ Soldevila, Ferran (1994) [1965]. El Compromís de Casp (resposta al Sr. Menéndez Pidal) (in Catalan). Barcelona: Rafael Dalmau Editions. ISBN 84-232-0481-2
  20. ^ Bonneaud, Pierre (1999). "Le Rôle politique des ordres militaires dans la Couronne d'Aragón pendant l'interrègne de 1410 à 1412 à travers les Anales de Zurita". Aragón en la Edad Media. 14: 131–132.
  21. ^ Drees, Clayton J. (2001). The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal, 1300–1500: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 490. ISBN 0313305889.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Vincent Ferrer". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading edit

Books edit

  • Laura Ackerman Smoller, The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby: The Cult of Saint Vincent Ferrer in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2014).
  • The Life and Miracles of St. Vincent Ferrer: The "Angel of the Apocalypse"
  • Andrew Pradel, St. Vincent Ferrer, of the Order of Friar Preachers: His life, spiritual teaching, and practical devotion, trans. by T. A. Dixon (London: R. Washbourne, 1875). (The French original received its imprimatur in 1863.)

Articles edit

  • Albert Reinhart, 'St. Vincent Ferrer' in The Catholic Encyclopedia (New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912).
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Vincent Ferrer, St" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • John Gilmary Shea, in Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints (New York: Benziger Brothers, 1894).
  • Terry H Jones, 'Saint Vincent Ferrer' in Saints.SQPN.com (Star Quest Production Network).
  • Pelle, Stephen. 2018. Fragments of an Icelandic Christmas Sermon Based on Two Sermons of Vincent Ferrer. Gripla XXIX (2018): 231–259
  • 'St. Vincent Ferrer' in Saints and Angels (Catholic Online).

External links edit

  •   Media related to Saint Vincent Ferrer at Wikimedia Commons

vincent, ferrer, valencian, sant, vicent, ferrer, ˈsaɱ, viˈsɛɱ, feˈreɾ, spanish, vicente, ferrer, italian, vincenzo, ferreri, german, sankt, vinzenz, ferrer, dutch, sint, french, saint, vincent, ferrier, january, 1350, april, 1419, valencian, dominican, friar,. Vincent Ferrer OP Valencian Sant Vicent Ferrer ˈsaɱ viˈsɛɱ feˈreɾ Spanish San Vicente Ferrer Italian San Vincenzo Ferreri German Sankt Vinzenz Ferrer Dutch Sint Vincent Ferrer French Saint Vincent Ferrier 23 January 1350 5 April 1419 was a Valencian Dominican friar and preacher who gained acclaim as a missionary and a logician He is honored as a saint of the Catholic Church and other churches of Catholic traditions SaintVincent FerrerOPSan Vicente Ferrer by Juan de JuanesPriest and ConfessorBorn23 January 1350Valencia Kingdom of ValenciaDied5 April 1419 1419 04 05 aged 69 Vannes Duchy of BrittanyVenerated inCatholic ChurchAnglican CommunionCanonized3 June 1455 Santa Maria sopra Minerva Papal States by Pope Callixtus IIIMajor shrineCathedral of VannesVannes Morbihan France Bogo Cebu Philippines Calape Bohol Banay banay 1 Lipa City Philippines in Iglesia Filipina Independiente IFI Diocesan Shrine in Old Town San Remigio Antique Philippines Diocesan of San Vicente Ferrer Brgy Mamatid Cabuyao Philippines and IFI Cathedral in Odiongan Romblon Philippines Feast5 AprilAttributesDominican habitTongue of flamePulpitTrumpetWingsBiblePatronageArchdiocese of ValenciaValenciaCataloniaFranceSpainCabuyao Laguna Philippines Leganes Iloilo PhilippinesBuildersPrisonersConstruction workersPlumbersFishermenSpanish orphanages Contents 1 Early life 2 Western Schism 3 Religious gifts and missionary work 4 Conversion of Jews and controversy 5 Compromise of Caspe 6 Death and legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Books 9 2 Articles 10 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Inside the birthhouse of Vincent Ferrer Valencia nbsp Iglesia de San Esteban in Valencia where Vincent Ferrer was baptizedVincent was the fourth child of Guillem Ferrer a notary from Palamos and his wife Constanca Miquel apparently from Valencia itself or Girona 2 3 4 5 Legends surround Vincent s birth It was said that his father was told in a dream by a Dominican friar that his son would be famous throughout the world His mother is said never to have experienced pain when she gave birth to him He was named after Vincent Martyr the patron saint of Valencia 6 He would fast on Wednesdays and Fridays and distribute alms to the poor He began his classical studies at the age of eight and his study of theology and philosophy at fourteen 7 Four years later at the age of eighteen Ferrer entered the Order of Preachers 8 commonly called the Dominican Order in England also known as Black Friars because of the black cloak they wear over their white habits 9 As soon as he had entered the novitiate of the Order though he experienced temptations urging him to leave Even his parents pleaded with him to do so and become a secular priest He prayed and practiced penance to overcome these trials Thus he succeeded in completing the year of probation and advancing to his profession For a period of three years he read solely Sacred Scripture and eventually committed it to memory He published a treatise on Dialectic Suppositions after his solemn profession and in 1379 was ordained a Catholic priest at Barcelona He eventually became a Master of Sacred Theology and was commissioned by the Order to deliver lectures on philosophy He was then sent to Barcelona and eventually to the University of Lleida where he earned his doctorate in theology 10 Vincent Ferrer is described as a man of medium height with a lofty forehead and very distinct features His hair was fair in color and tonsured His eyes were very dark and expressive his manner gentle Pale was his ordinary color His voice was strong and powerful at times gentle resonant and vibrant 6 Western Schism edit nbsp St Vincent Ferrer Eglise Saint Andre Brech The Western Schism 1378 1417 divided Catholicism between two then eventually three claimants to the papacy Antipope Clement VII lived at Avignon in France and Pope Urban VI in Rome Vincent was convinced that the election of Urban was invalid although Catherine of Siena was just as devoted a supporter of the Roman pope In the service of Cardinal Pedro de Luna Vincent worked to persuade Spaniards to follow Clement When Clement died in 1394 Cardinal de Luna was elected as the second antipope successor to the Avignon papacy and took the name Benedict XIII 11 Vincent and his brother Boniface General of the Carthusians were loyal to Benedict XIII commonly known as Papa Luna in Castile and Aragon 7 He worked for Benedict XIII as apostolic penitentiary and Master of the Sacred Palace 11 Nonetheless Vincent labored to have Benedict XIII end the schism 10 When Benedict XIII did not resign as intended at either the Council of Pisa 1409 or the Council of Constance 1414 1418 he lost the support of the French king and of most of his cardinals and was excommunicated as a schismatic in 1417 Vincent later claimed that the Western Schism had had such a depressing effect on his mind that it caused him to be seriously ill 12 Religious gifts and missionary work editFor twenty one years he was said to have traveled to England Scotland Ireland Aragon Castile France Switzerland and Italy preaching the Gospel and converting many Many biographers believe that he could speak only Catalan but was endowed with the gift of tongues 7 He was a noted preacher Though he himself was an intellectual his preaching style has been described as innovative in that it incorporated a popular tone and rhetorical directness into the by then traditional Scholastic thematic sermon structure 13 He preached to Colette of Corbie and her nuns and it was she who told him that he would die in France Too ill to return to Spain he did indeed die in Brittany in 1419 Breton fishermen still invoke his aid in storms and in Spain he is the patron of orphanages 14 Conversion of Jews and controversy editVincent is said to have been responsible for the conversion of many Jews to Catholicism often by questionable means according to the Jewish Encyclopedia for instance he is said to have made their lives difficult until they converted and to have dedicated synagogues as churches on the basis of his own authority 15 One of his converts a former rabbi by the name of Solomon ha Levi went on to become the Bishop of Cartagena and later the Archbishop of Burgos Vincent is alleged to have contributed to anti Semitism in Spain as violence accompanied his visits to towns that had Jewish communities 16 Because of the Spanish s methods of converting Jews at the time the means which Vincent had at his disposal were either baptism or spoliation According to the Catholic Encyclopedia he won them over by his preaching estimated at 25 000 7 Sources are contradictory concerning Vincent s achievement in converting a synagogue in Toledo Spain into the Church of Santa Maria la Blanca One source says he preached to the mobs whose riots led to the appropriation of the synagogue and its transformation into a church in 1391 17 a second source says he converted the Jews of the city who then changed the synagogue to a church after they embraced the Faith but hints at the year 1411 10 A third source identifies two distinct incidents one in Valencia in 1391 and one in Toledo at a later date but says that Vincent put down an uprising against Jews in one place and defused a persecution against them in the other 18 Vincent also attended the Disputation of Tortosa 1413 14 called by Avignon Pope Benedict XIII in an effort to convert Jews to Catholicism after a debate among scholars of both religions 16 Compromise of Caspe editVincent participated in the management of a significant political crisis in his homeland King Martin of Aragon died in 1410 without a legitimate heir and five potential candidates came forth to claim the throne all with royal bloodlines It was determined that a committee of nine respected figures three each from Aragon Catalonia and Valencia the realms comprising the Crown of Aragon would review the qualifications and select the next king Vincent was chosen as one of the representatives of Valencia and he voted for the Castilian prince Ferdinand of Antequera who became the next King of Aragon 19 On 28 June Ferrer publicly proclaimed Ferdinand of Castile as king of Aragon 20 The process by which Ferdinand was determined to be the next king is known as the Compromise of Caspe Death and legacy editVincent died on 5 April 1419 at Vannes in Brittany at the age of 69 8 and was buried in Vannes Cathedral He was canonized by Pope Calixtus III on 3 June 1455 7 His feast day is celebrated on 5 April 21 Entities named after him include a pontifical religious institute the Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer and two Brazilian municipalities Sao Vicente Ferrer Maranhao and Sao Vicente Ferrer Pernambuco citation needed A 50 metre 164 foot statue of Ferrer was erected in Bayambang Philippines in 2019 See also editMonastery of Sant Jeroni de Cotalba Saint Vincent Ferrer patron saint archive Statues of Saints Vincent Ferrer and Procopius Charles BridgePortals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Saints nbsp SpainReferences edit Archdiocesan Shrine amp Parish of St Vincent Ferrer www facebook com Retrieved 17 September 2020 Sant Vicent Ferrer patro de l antic Regne de Valencia by Angel Canet Catala Vilaweb 31 March 2008 reprinted in Normalitzacio in Catalan The author of this article references El gran llibre dels sants by Roger Costa Sole Ara Llibres Barcelona 2007 as his source Consulted 2016 12 18 Como una red Sermones de Vicent Ferrer by Josep Antoni Ysern i Lagarda University of Valencia in Spanish Consulted 2016 12 18 Notas sobre esta historia in Historia de la portentosa vida y milagros del Valenciano Apostol de Europa San Vicente Ferrer by Francisco VIDAL Y MICO and Serafin Thomas MIGUEL Valencia 1733 p 453 in Spanish Consulted 2016 12 18 Dress Clayton J The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal 1300 1500 A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Press 2001 ISBN 0 313 30588 9 p 490 a b Minnaji O P Cora Biography The Life of St Vincent Ferrer The Wonder Worker The Church of St Vincent Ferrer NYC Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2014 a b c d e Reinhart Albert St Vincent Ferrer The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 15 New York Robert Appleton Company 1912 10 May 2021 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b St Vincent Ferrer Catholic News Agency Retrieved 28 August 2020 Black friar Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b c The Lives or the Fathers Martyrs and Other Principal Saints by Rev Alban Butler Ewtn com Retrieved 17 December 2012 a b Media Franciscan 5 April 2016 Saint Vincent Ferrer Retrieved 17 September 2020 Hogan Stanislaus M 1911 Saint Vincent Ferrer O P Kelly University of Toronto London Longmans Green p 238 Pelle Stephen An Old Norse Homily and Two Homiletic Fragments from AM 624 4to GRIPLA 27 2016 263 281 Website O P Jewish Encyclopedia Vincent Ferrer Jewishencyclopedia com Retrieved 17 December 2012 a b Poliakov Leon 5 October 2003 The History of Anti Semitism From Mohammed to the Marranos Leon Poliakov Google Books ISBN 0812218647 Retrieved 17 December 2012 Despland Michel La religion en Occident Grandes ou petites verites in French Encyclopedie de l Agora Archived from the original on 2 April 2012 Retrieved 26 August 2007 Second Exodus Second Exodus Retrieved 28 August 2020 Soldevila Ferran 1994 1965 El Compromis de Casp resposta al Sr Menendez Pidal in Catalan Barcelona Rafael Dalmau Editions ISBN 84 232 0481 2 Bonneaud Pierre 1999 Le Role politique des ordres militaires dans la Couronne d Aragon pendant l interregne de 1410 a 1412 a travers les Anales de Zurita Aragon en la Edad Media 14 131 132 Drees Clayton J 2001 The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal 1300 1500 A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 490 ISBN 0313305889 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 St Vincent Ferrer Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading editBooks edit Laura Ackerman Smoller The Saint and the Chopped Up Baby The Cult of Saint Vincent Ferrer in Medieval and Early Modern Europe Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 2014 The Life and Miracles of St Vincent Ferrer The Angel of the Apocalypse Andrew Pradel St Vincent Ferrer of the Order of Friar Preachers His life spiritual teaching and practical devotion trans by T A Dixon London R Washbourne 1875 The French original received its imprimatur in 1863 Articles edit Albert Reinhart St Vincent Ferrer in The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company 1912 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Vincent Ferrer St Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press John Gilmary Shea Saint Vincent Ferrer in Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints New York Benziger Brothers 1894 Terry H Jones Saint Vincent Ferrer in Saints SQPN com Star Quest Production Network Pelle Stephen 2018 Fragments of an Icelandic Christmas Sermon Based on Two Sermons of Vincent Ferrer Gripla XXIX 2018 231 259 St Vincent Ferrer in Saints and Angels Catholic Online External links edit nbsp Media related to Saint Vincent Ferrer at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vincent Ferrer amp oldid 1178320858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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