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Philip of Jesus

Novohispanic Catholic missionary


Novohispanic Catholic missionary

FieldValue
honorific_prefixSaint
nameFelipe de Jesús
birth_date1572
death_date5 February 1597 (aged 24–25)
feast_day5 February
venerated_inRoman Catholic Church
imageFelipeJesusVirreinato.JPG
captionA statue of Philip of Jesus at the Museo de Virreinato, Tepotzotlán
birth_placeMexico City, Viceroyalty of New Spain (now Mexico)
death_placeNagasaki, Japan
death_causeAsphyxia
titlesMartyr
beatified_date14 September 1627
beatified_placeVatican City
beatified_byPope Urban VIII
canonized_date8 June 1862
canonized_placeVatican City
canonized_byPope Pius IX
attributesspear, palm branch, cross
patronageMexico City; Colima (city); Nagasaki; Santa Cruz del Quiché; Ozatlán; El Viso del Alcor
honorific_suffixOFM
Note

Philip of Jesus, OFM (Spanish: Felipe de Jesús; 1572 – 1597) was a Spanish Franciscan missionary who became one of the Twenty-six Martyrs of Japan. He is the first Mexican Catholic saint and is the patron saint of Mexico City.

Life

Felipe de las Casas Ruiz was born in Mexico City in 1572. His parents had recently emigrated from Spain. He joined the Reformed Franciscans of the Province of St. Didacus, founded in Mexico by Peter Baptista, with whom he suffered martyrdom later. After some months in the Order, Philip grew tired of religious life, and left the Franciscans. He took up a mercantile career, and went to the Philippines, another Spanish colony, where he led a secular life. Later he desired to re-enter the Franciscans and was again admitted at Manila in 1590.

After some years it was determined that he was ready for ordination and sent to Mexico for this, since the episcopal see of Manila was vacant at that time, and thus no bishop was available locally to ordain him. He sailed on the San Felipe on 12 July 1596, but a storm drove the vessel upon the coast of Japan.

The governor of the province confiscated the ship and imprisoned its crew and passengers, among whom were Franciscan friar, Juan de Zamorra, as well as three other friars, two Augustinians and a Dominican. The discovery of soldiers, cannon and ammunition on the ship led to the suspicion that it was intended for the conquest of Japan, and that the missionaries were merely to prepare the way for the soldiers. This was also said by one of the crew, and it enraged the Japanese Taikō, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, generally called Taicosama by Europeans. In consequence, he commanded on December 8, 1596, the arrest of the Franciscans in the friary at Miako, now Kyoto, where Philip had gone.

The friars were all kept prisoners in the friary until 30 December, when they were transferred to the city prison. There were six Franciscan friars, seventeen Japanese Franciscan tertiaries and the Japanese Jesuit Paul Miki, with his two native servants. The ears of the prisoners were cropped on 3 January 1597, and they were paraded through the streets of Kyoto; on 21 January, they were taken to Osaka, and thence to Nagasaki, which they reached on 5 February 1597. They were taken to a mountain near Nagasaki city, "Mount of the Martyrs", bound upon crosses, after which they were pierced with spears.

The bones of Philip were brought to Mexico City in 1598.

Beatification and canonization

Philip was beatified within the Roman Catholic church in 1627 by Urban VIII, and, with his companions, canonized 8 June, 1862, by Pius IX. He is the patron saint of Mexico City, the capital of Mexico as well as its largest city.

References

Sources

References

  1. Ronald J. Morgan, ''Spanish American Saints and the Rhetoric of Identity, 1600–1810.'' Tucson: University of Arizona Press 2002, pp. 143-169
  2. [https://www.roots.gov.sg/Collection-Landing/listing/1483585 "Figure of St Philip de Jesus", National Heritage Board, Singapore]
  3. [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12006b.htm Bihl, Michael. "St. Philip of Jesus." The Catholic Encyclopedia] Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 28 July 2018
  4. Boxer, C. R.. (1951). "The Christian Century in Japan: 1549–1650". University of California Press.
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