Start with a life.
The Church's history is a communion of real people. Begin with one: a martyr, a monk, a mother, a visionary. Then follow that life toward the cities, shrines, and relics you can still visit today.
A curated collection, growing as new lives and their places are mapped.
A life to begin with
Meet a saint the Church remembers.
Some days the calendar offers a feast; otherwise we hold up a life worth following. Either way, begin here.
Browse saints by feast dayThreads through the saints
Begin where a group of lives already gathers.
Saints of Rome
Apostles, martyrs, and virgins whose memory still marks the city.
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Saint Peter the Apostle
Saint Peter, one of Jesus' closest disciples, is revered as the first Pope and a martyr. -
Saint Paul the Apostle
Saint Paul, originally a persecutor of Christians, became one of the most influential apostles after -
Saint Agnes
Saint Agnes, a Roman virgin, was martyred at age 12 or 13 during Diocletian's persecution for her -
Saint Cecilia
Saint Cecilia, a Roman virgin, was martyred for her faith and is the patroness of music due to her
Monastic founders
Lives that began a rule, an order, or a way of prayer.
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Saint Benedict of Nursia
Saint Benedict of Nursia founded the Benedictine Order and wrote the Rule that shaped Western -
Saint Francis of Assisi
Saint Francis founded the Franciscan Order, embracing poverty and preaching peace, known for his love -
Saint Clare of Assisi
Saint Clare founded the Poor Clares, living in poverty and prayer, and is known for her Eucharistic
Marian visionaries
Saints to whom Our Lady appeared, and the devotions they left.
From a life, toward a place
Every saint opens onto somewhere you can go.
Saint · place · path
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From the life of Peter and Paul
Rome
City The city that keeps their tombs and the first churches of the West. -
From the life of Francis and Clare
Assisi
City A hill town still shaped by their poverty and prayer. -
From the life of Bernadette
Lourdes
City The grotto and spring where pilgrims still come to pray. -
From the life of Benedict
Monte Cassino
Abbey The mountain abbey where his Rule first took root.
Saints ready to guide a pilgrimage
Browse the saints whose places, relics, and journeys are already mapped.
By place
Cities, regions, and holy ground tied to their lives
By vocation
How they served, taught, suffered, or founded
By era
The centuries in which they lived, taught, founded, or died
By patronage
Patrons of work, need, and the turns of a life
By pilgrimage
What can still be followed, visited, or venerated
By feast day
When the Church remembers them
These filters use the places, shrines, relics, routes, and city clusters already recorded for each saint.
Witness
Era
Place
Patronage
Pilgrimage relevance
The saints we've mapped so far
Start with a name, a place, or a kind of life. Each one opens onto feast days, patronage, sacred places, and devotions still followed today.
Saint Joan of Arc
Saint Joan of Arc, a French peasant girl, led the French army to victories inspired by divine visions. She was martyred by burning at the stake.
Saint Francis of Assisi
Saint Francis founded the Franciscan Order, embracing poverty and preaching peace, known for his love of nature and stigmata.
Saint Cecilia
Saint Cecilia, a Roman virgin, was martyred for her faith and is the patroness of music due to her spiritual song.
Saint Benedict of Nursia
Saint Benedict of Nursia founded the Benedictine Order and wrote the Rule that shaped Western monasticism.
Saint Thérèse of Lisieux
Known as “The Little Flower,” Saint Therese of Lisieux embraced a simple yet profound approach to spirituality through childlike trust in God.
Saint Hildegard of Bingen
Saint Hildegard of Bingen was a visionary, composer, and polymath known for her mystical writings and contributions to natural science.
Saint Michael the Archangel
Saint Michael the Archangel is revered as the protector and leader of the heavenly armies.
Saint Joseph
Saint Joseph, the foster father of Jesus and husband of the Virgin Mary, is venerated as a model of humility, obedience, and righteousness.
Saint Agnes
Saint Agnes, a Roman virgin, was martyred at age 12 or 13 during Diocletian's persecution for her faith. She remains a symbol of purity and martyrdom.
Guided discovery
Not sure where to begin?
Answer a few thoughtful questions and Eternal Roam will suggest saints, places, and devotions to follow next.