His relics were carried to Treviso from Altinum around 452 to safeguard them against the
Hunnish invasions, or perhaps later, when the threat came from the
Lombards rather than the Huns. Liberalis' relics may have been enshrined with those associated with the martyrs
Theonistus, Tabra, and Tabratha (
Teonisto, Tabra e Tabrata) at the cathedral of
Torcello after 639 AD. However, the presence of these martyrs’ relics in Treviso is also attested, and a strong cultus took hold there, with documentation attesting to the cultus dating from 1082 onwards. In the twelfth century, Liberalis was proclaimed patron saint of Treviso, and was patron of the cathedral, along with
Saint Peter and
Saint Paul. Liberalis became patron of
Castelfranco Veneto as a result of the fact that citizens of Treviso founded that town in 1199. In art he is either depicted with a
dalmatic or in a soldier's cloak. Duomo (Treviso) - Interior - reliquary of St Liberal.jpg|Reliquary of Liberalis of Treviso in
Treviso Cathedral Saint Libéral MBAD.jpg|
Leonardo Boldrini, 1475,
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dijon Duomo (Treviso) - interior - Capella della Madonna - San Liberale.jpg|Marble statue, sixteenth century, Treviso Cathedral Museo Civico (Treviso) - San Liberale.jpg|late fifteenth century, Civic Museums of Treviso Lotto, pala di santa cristina.jpg|
Lorenzo Lotto,
Virgin Mary, Saint Peter, Saint Christina of Bolsena, Saint Liberalis and Saint Jerome. Accademia - San Sebastiano tra i SS. Liberale e Gregorio, Francesco e Rocco, Tavola,203x201, Cat.97 Giovanni Mansueti.jpg|
Giovanni Mansueti,
Saint Sebastian and Saints Liberalis of Treviso,
Francis of Assisi and
Roch, 1494,
Gallerie dell'Accademia == References ==