Salvius of Albi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Salvius of Albi
St. Gregory and Salvius in front of King Chilperic I, from Grandes Chroniques de France de Charles V
BornAlbi
Died584
Venerated inCatholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Feast10 September

Salvius, Salvi or Sauve (died 584) was a bishop of Albi in Francia between 574 and 584, later venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church.[1] His feast day is 10 September.[2]

Family[edit]

He came from a powerful family within the church, which contributed many bishops in the south of France through the end and fall of the Roman Empire. He was a distant relation of Gregory of Tours who wrote his life.[3] He was also a relative of Saint Didier of Cahors.

Life[edit]

Salvius was educated in law and humanities, before becoming a lawyer in Albi. Later he became a monk and a hermit and was made bishop in 574.

As bishop he intervened with the powerful Chilperic I and stayed in Albi to take care of his flock during a famine and a plague epidemic to which he succumbed in 584.

He was buried in his monastery but his remains were later moved to the church of Saint-Salvi in Albi. Their exact location is now lost because of renovation in the 18th century.[4] After this he was venerated in the city and was later declared to be a saint.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Clément Compayré, Études historiques et documents inédits sur l'Albigeois, le Castrais, et l'ancien diocèse de Lavaur (Albi, 1841)
  2. ^ Martirologio Romano (PDF). Libreria Editrice Vaticana. 2004. p. 510. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  3. ^ Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum, Book V, 44 and 50; Book VI, 29; Book VII, 1; and Book VIII, 22
  4. ^ "Saint-Salvi". Site de la cité épiscopale d'Albi. Retrieved 12 February 2016..

External links[edit]