TarsiciusThe spelling in the 4th-century poem of Pope Damasus I and in the Roman Martyrology or TarcisiusThe spelling in Wiseman's Fabiola was a martyr of the early Christianity church who lived in the 3rd century. The little that is known about him comes from a metrical inscription by Pope Damasus I, who was pope in the second half of the 4th century.
Nothing else definite is known concerning Tarcisius. Since Damasus compares him to Stephen, he may have been a deacon; however, a 6th-century account makes him an acolyte. According to one version of the detailed legend that developed later, Tarcisius was a young boy during one of the fierce 3rd-century Roman persecutions, probably during the reign of Emperor Valerian (253–259). One day, he was entrusted with the task of bringing the Eucharist to condemned Christians in prison. He preferred death at the hands of a mob rather than deliver to them the Blessed Sacrament which he was carrying.
The municipality of Saint-Tharcisius in Quebec, Canada, is named after him, as well as a 35 kilogram (77 lb) bell in the Stephansdom in Vienna, Austria.
A Catholic church on London Road, Camberley UK is dedicated to St Tarcisius.
The St. Tarcisius parish in Framingham, Massachusetts was founded in 1907 by Father Pietro Maschi.
The St. Tarcissus parish in Chicago, Illinois, was established in 1926, with dedicated in 1954. The parish was combined in 2020 with two other parishes on Chicago's north side to form the new St. Elizabeth of the Trinity Parish, with St. Tarcissus designated the parish church (and the other two churches relegated to "profane but not sordid use" in 2021).
Saint José Sánchez del Río was nicknamed "Tarcisius".
When an insane gang pressed saintly Tarcisius, who was carrying the sacraments of Christ, to display them to the profane, he preferred to be killed and give up his life rather than betray to rabid dogs the heavenly body.
Veneration
Patronage
Legacy
Poem by Damasus
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