Saint Roman is the smallest and northernmost community in the country of Monaco. It neighbors Larvotto Terano. Larvotto Terano is a small town in the country of Monaco. ...
On the edge of the Vaucluse, looking onto the border with the Drome and dozing between Bollène and Vaison-la-Romaine, Saint-Romain-de-Malegarde is a former outpost of the order of the Knights Templar, built on the left bank of the Aygues on the northern border of the Comtat Venaissin.
The top of the old village is built on a hill, where the streets are steep and narrow. The bottom of the village has absorbed new buildings such as the school and the mairie. In the surrounding area you can discover a botanical trail and the beautiful valley of the Aygues, from Nyons to Orange. Thanks to a few footpaths around the village, you can also admire the landscape of the foothills of the Alps and the Ardèche.
To visit Saint-Romain-de-Malegarde walk up its lanes, which become narrower and narrower as you penetrate into the village. Don't miss the parish church in the centre of the village, dating back to the 13th century. Its façade is decorated with an 18th century sundial and a Maltese cross.
As if to move closer to the heavens, the climb continues to the highest point of the village, where you will find the remains of its ancient 12th century château. All that remains is three towers. The middle one is a a troglodyte part of the former fortress.
Only a few hundred people live in the village all year round. Most of the inhabitants are wine-growers and cultivate appellation contrôlée " Côtes du Rhône " vineyards. You'll find few shops in the village, but there is a friendly bar-restaurant that enlivens the village somewhat. However, don't be fooled by the village's peaceful appearance. As soon as the fine weather arrives, its population doubles or even quadruples in the high season.
Saint John was consecrated the third bishop of Châlon-sur-Saône by Saint Patiens of Lyons (Benedictines).
Saint Tudy was a hermit who founded monasteries and evangelized in Brittany, where place-names and dedications memorialize his activity or that of his disciples in areas such as Île-Tudy on the mouth of the Odet (Finistère), near Quimper.
Abbot of Saint Peter de Montes, and disciple and successor of Saint Gennadius as bishop of Astorga, Spain (Benedictines).
Saint Patrick arrived at the hill of Slane (pronounced Slay-ne), at the opposite extremity of the valley from Tara, on Easter Eve, and on the summit of the hill kindled the Paschal fire.
When Saint Patrick, at the close of the ceremony, saw the blood flow, and asked him why he had been silent, he replied, with genuine heroism, that he thought it might be part of the ceremony, a penalty for the joyous blessings of the Faith that were imparted.
The saint admired his heroism, and, taking the chieftain's shield, inscribed on it a cross with the same point of the crozier, and promised that that shield would be the signal of countless spiritual and temporal triumphs.