St. Bridget of Sweden


Feast: July 23. St. Bridget was the daughter of the royal Prince of Sweden,
named Birger, and of Ingeburdis, a descendent of the Gothic kings. From these
pious parents she inherited a great love for the Passion of Our Lord. Her
father consecrated all Fridays to special acts of penance, and from her
childhood St. Bridget loved to meditate upon the Passion of Christ. In
obedience to her father, at the age of sixteen she married Ulfo, Prince of
Nericia in Sweden, by whom she had eight children, the last of whom, Catherine,
is now honored among the saints. Later, the holy couple bound themselves by a
vow of chastity and made a pilgrimage to Compostela in Galicia. On their return
to Sweden, Ulfo, with his wife's consent, entered a Cistercian monastery, where
he died soon after, in the odor of sanctity. After his death St. Bridget
renounced her rank of Princess and changed her habit. In 1344, she built the
great monastery of Wastein, which became the motherhouse of a new Order, that
of the Brigittines. She next undertook a pilgrimage to Rome and to Palestine.
Having satisfied her devotion at the holy places sanctified by the life and
Passion of Our Redeemer, she returned to Rome, where she lived a year longer.
During this time, she was sorely afflicted by sickness, but endured it with
heroic patience and resignation. Her son, Birger, and her daughter, Catherine,
were with her in her last moments. Having giving them her final instructions,
she received the Last Sacraments and died in 1373. She is the patroness of
Sweden.
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/4730/birgitta.htm
With grateful thanks to Catholic
Online.