The first story of the lesser known Saint-René began when the Italian
Saint Maurilius, the bishop of the French city of
Angers (
Anjou) in the 5th century, was one day called to assist a moribund child. Unfortunately he was detained by a pressing task in the church, and arrived too late to minister the sacrament of
baptism to the child. Feeling responsible for the loss, Maurice decided to
expiate it, and left Angers in secret and embarked upon a ship, throwing the keys to the cathedral's treasury into the high seas. He then went further to
England, to work as the royal
gardener. Meanwhile, the inhabitants of Angers had found the keys inside the
liver of a big fish which was caught by the local fishermen. They traced the whereabouts of the bishop to England and convinced him to return to their city. Arriving at Angers, Maurilius prayed at the dead child's tomb, and, in a
miracle, the child resuscitated, smiling, "fresh as the flowers growing on the
tomb". Because of this Maurilius baptized the boy as
Renatus. The tradition is based on a late life of St. Maurilius written in 905 by the deacon Archinald, and circulated under the name of Gregory of Tours, and it seems to have no real foundation. Renatus later succeeded Maurilius as the
bishop of Angers, and came to sainthood himself, later as Saint
René (French for
reborn). Saint-René is mostly venerated in France on November 12. ==Saint Renatus of Sorrento (San Renato di Sorrento)==