Category
page 2Angelic visionaries
Erasmus of Formiae
Christian saint and martyr
Peter Faber
Jesuit priest and evangelist

Gemma Galgani
Italian saint (1878-1903)

Dunstan
Dunstan ( – 19 May 988) was an English bishop and Benedictine monk. He was successively Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, Bishop of Worcester, Bishop of London and Archbishop of Canterbury, later canonised. His work restored monastic life in England and reformed the English Church. His 11th-century biographer Osbern, himself an artist and scribe, states that Dunstan was skilled in "making a picture and forming letters", as were other clergy of his age who reached senior rank.

John of God
Portuguese soldier turned health-care worker, canonized by the Catholic Church (1495–1550)
Cornelius the Centurion
first Gentile to convert to Christianity

Philip the Evangelist
Ancient Roman saint
Jovan Vladimir
Serbian prince of Duklja, Serbian Orthodox Christian saint (990-1016)

Joseph ben Ephraim Karo
Spanish rabbi and author on Jewish law (1488–1575)

Christina of Bolsena
Christian martyr
John of Patmos
Christian saint and author of the Book of Revelation
Edward Kelley
English alchemist
Stanislaus Kostka
Polish Jesuit, saint, secondary patron of Poland (1550–1568)
Onuphrius
Onuphrius (also Onoufrios; ) lived as a hermit in the desert of Upper Egypt in the 4th or 5th centuries. He is venerated as Saint Onuphrius in both the Roman Catholic and Eastern Catholic churches, as Venerable Onuphrius in Eastern Orthodoxy, and as Saint Nofer the Anchorite in Oriental Orthodoxy.
John Taylor
3rd President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (1808–1887)
Menas of Egypt
Egyptian saint, martyr and wonder-worker, said to have lived 285-ca. 309
William M. Branham
American Christian minister (1909–1965)

Jacob of Nisibis
Syrian saint
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego
three characters in the Book of Daniel, who survive the fiery furnace
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Richardis
Saint Richardis (), also known as Richgard, Richardis of Swabia and Richarde de Souabe in French ( 840 – 18 September, between 894 and 896 AD), was empress of the Carolingian Empire as the wife of Charles the Fat. She was renowned for her piety and was the first abbess of Andlau. Repudiated by her husband, Richardis later became a Christian model of devotion and just rule. She was canonised in 1049.
Paraskeva of the Balkans
ascetic saint
Frances of Rome
Italian mystic and religious foundress
Nicholas of Tolentino
Italian saint and mystic
Saint Mercurius
Greek soldier and Christian martyr (died 250)

Violet Gibson
Irish aristocrat noted for shooting Mussolini (1876–1956)
Hermas
2nd century Roman freedman and writer
Elizabeth of Schönau
German Benedictine visionary
Joanna, wife of Chuza
Saint of Holy land
Sylvia Browne
American author, psychic and medium (1936-2013)
Kevin of Glendalough
Irish saint
Gad
person in the Hebrew Bible; personal prophet of David (1 Sam 22:5; 2 Sam 24:11–13; 2 Sam 24:18; 1 Chron 21:18; 1 Chron 29:29)
Mary of Jesus of Ágreda
Spanish mystic nun
Emma Smith
American Mormon leader (1804-1879)

Mammes of Caesarea
semi-legendary child-martyr
Finnian of Clonard
Irish saint
Julian the Hospitaller
Roman Catholic saint
Manoah
Manoah ( Mānoaḥ) is a figure from the Book of Judges 13:1-23 and 14:2-4 of the Hebrew Bible. His name means "rest". He is the father of the judge Samson.
Adrienne von Speyr
Swiss doctor and mystic (1902–1967)
Pishoy
Pshoi, Paisius the Great, as he has been known in Europe since the 5th century AD, Bishoy, Bishūy, Bishāy or Bishiyyah, as his name is pronounced in Arabic (Coptic: Abba Pšoi / Pišoi; Greek: Ὅσιος Παΐσιος ὁ Μέγας; 320 – 417 AD), known in the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria as the Star of the Desert and the Beloved of our Good Savior, was a Coptic Desert Father. He is said to have seen Jesus, and been bodily preserved to the present day via incorruptibility at the Monastery of Saint Bishoy in the Nitrian Desert, Egypt. He is venerated by the Oriental Orthodox Churches and the Eastern

myrrhbearers
200px|thumb|White Angel, depicting myrrhbearers at Christ's grave, , [[Mileševa monastery in Serbia]]
thumb|Eastern Orthodox [[icon of the Myrrhbearing Women at the Tomb of Christ (Kizhi, Russia, 18th century)]]
thumb|Icon of Mary Magdalene as a Myrrhbearer
thumb|180px|Hagiography, fresco, of Saint Salome the Myrrhbearer in Greek Orthodox Church
Eben Alexander
American neurosurgeon
Eudokia of Heliopolis
Samarian martyr
Genesius of Rome
Roman comedian, actor and Christian martyr
Public Universal Friend
American preacher (1752–1819)
Sidney Rigdon
American Mormon leader (1793–1876)
Aubert of Avranches
Bishop of Avranches

Oliver Cowdery
American Mormon leader during the formative period of the Latter Day Saint movement (1806-1850)
Hakim ibn Hizam
companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad
Saint Sarkis the Warrior
Armenian form of Sergius
Edvige Carboni
Italian Mystic (1880-1952)
Nathan of Gaza
prophet

Franciscana Cirer
Spanish religious, founder of the congregation, blessed (1781–1855)
Stephana de Quinzanis
Italian beatified
Galgano Guidotti
Italian saint

Clotilde Micheli
ltalian nun and Blessed (1849–1911)
Nephi
a central figure of Book of Mormon; son of Lehi, the ancestor of the Nephites, and narrator of the first and second books of Nephi

Eleazar of Worms
German rabbi
Andrew of Constantinople
Eastern Orthodox saint
Guthlac of Crowland
saint of the Christian faith and British hermit
Saint Fursey
Catholic and Orthodox saint, born around 567 in Ireland and died in the Merovingian kingdom of Austrasia around 648