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Engratia

Engratia is venerated as a virgin martyr and saint. Tradition states that she was martyred with eighteen companions in 303 AD.

History
Although her martyrdom is traditionally placed around 303 during the Diocletianic Persecution, more recently it is considered probable that she died during the persecution of Valerian (254-260). ==Legend==
Legend
Engratia was a native of Braga who had been promised in marriage to a nobleman of Roussillon. He sent as her escort to Gaul her uncle Lupercius (sometimes identified with the Luperculus who was a bishop of Eauze) and a suite of sixteen noblemen and a servant named Julie or Julia. Upon reaching Zaragoza, they learned of the persecution of Christians there by the governor Dacian, who reigned in the time of the emperors Diocletian and Maximian. She attempted to dissuade him from his persecution, but was whipped and imprisoned when it was discovered that she was a Christian. She died of her wounds. Her companions were decapitated. ==Martyrs of Zaragoza==
Martyrs of Zaragoza
Many others, called the Martyrs of Zaragoza, were martyred at the same time. • Successus, Martial, Urban, Quintilian, Publius, Fronto, Felix, Cecilian, Evodius, Primitivus, Apodemius, and • four men all sharing the name Saturninus. who, according to St. Eugenius II of Toledo would be Jenaro, Casiano, Matutino and Fausto. • Januarius ==Veneration==
Veneration
Prudentius, a native of Zaragoza, wrote a hymn in honour of these martyrs, and lists their names, and describes the terrible tortures suffered by Encratis (Engratia). An important cult arose around these saints. Engratia was certainly the most venerated of the group, and her cult was diffused throughout Spain and the Pyrenees. Engracia was declared patroness of the city of Saragossa in 1480. During a synod held at Zaragoza in 592, the church dedicated to her there was reconsecrated, an act celebrated on 3 November, which sometimes served as an alternate feast day. The Church of Santa Engrácia in Lisbon is dedicated to her. The Church of Santa Engracia de Zaragoza was built on the spot where Engratia and her companions were said to have been martyred. It was destroyed in the Spanish War of Independence, with only the crypt and the doorway being left. It was rebuilt in the late 19th or early 20th century, and served as a parish church. == Gallery ==
Gallery
File:B.Bermejo ret.Sta.Engracia arrest 4117.jpg|Arrest of Santa Engràcia, Bartolomé Bermejo, from the Altarpiece of Santa Engràcia (1472 - 1477) File:Saint Engracia mg 0032.jpg|Saint Engracia, workshop of Francisco de Zurbarán, 1650 File:Santa Engracia, Museo de Bellas Artes de Sevilla.jpg|Saint Engracia, workshop of Francisco de Zurbarán, 1650, for the Hospital de las Cinco Llagas File:Tabla panel derecho retablo de la Virgen de Jerónimo Cosida.jpg|Saint Engratia on the right panel of the altarpiece of the Virgin in the Museum of Zaragoza, Jerónimo Cosida, 1560 File:Santa Engracia (Museo Cerralbo, Madrid).jpg|Sanint Engracia, Bartolomé de San Antonio File:1868, Mugeres célebres de España y Portugal, Santa Engracia, AB195 0149.jpg|Saint Engratia, Famous women of Spain and Portugal, 1868 == References ==
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