July 9th 7th century

Saint Itherius of Nevers

Bishop of Nevers

Feast
July 9th
Death
vers 695 ou 696 (naturelle)
Latin name
Itherius
Categories
bishop , confessor

Originally from the Loiret region, Saint Ithier was a 7th-century Bishop of Nevers, renowned for his holiness and medical knowledge. After a life of retreat and miraculous healings, he was called to lead the Diocese of Nevers around 690. His cult, marked by numerous translations of relics, remains active in Nogent-sur-Vernisson and the Berry region.

Guided reading

6 reading sections

SAINT ITHIER, BISHOP OF NEVERS (695).

Life 01 / 06

Origins and formation

Originally from Nogent-sur-Vernisson, Ithier dedicated himself to the study of morality and medicine to heal both souls and bodies.

Saint Ithier (Itherius) was originally from Nogent-sur-Vernisson Nogent-sur-Vernisson Birthplace and burial place of the saint. , between La Bossière and Montargis (Loiret). To a lively faith and an exemplary holiness, he joined varied and extensive knowledge. Not content with devoting himself to the study of morality, he had wanted to work with ardor on physics, which included medicine, in order to be doubly useful to his neighbor, by providing them with the health of the soul and that of the body.

Miracle 02 / 06

Renown and retirement

His reputation as a healer attracted crowds, prompting him to withdraw into solitude to preserve his humility in the face of the success of his remedies.

From all sides people flocked to him, and the sick returned relieved of their infirmities, because God blessed the remedies of his servant. As for him, far from attributing to himself the glory of the healings he performed, he urged the sick whom he had healed to reserve all their gratitude for God. However, fearing that vainglory might take hold of his heart, he withdrew to a deserted and uncultivated place. Soon his retreat was discovered, and people came to him from all parts as before.

Life 03 / 06

Episcopate in Nevers

Called by the clergy and the people, he became bishop of Nevers around 690 and continued his miracles upon his entry into the city.

The report of his holiness and the wonders he performed reached Nevers , whos Nevers The saint's first episcopal see. e Churc h was widowed by the l'Église était veuve Ecclesiastical institution led by Ithier. death of its bishop. The clergy and the people asked for Ithier to replace him. The latter, fearing to resist the divine will, consented. He was therefore ordained priest and received the pontifical unction around 690. Upon entering his episcopal city, he met at the gates of the city a man who had been crippled for many long years; he healed him on the spot of his infirmities; he also delivered a possessed person on this occasion. After having made the virtues that had been noticed in him in his retreat shine upon the pontifical seat, he died full of merits, around the year 695 or 696.

Cult 04 / 06

Local cult in Nogent

A fountain and a cross mark the site of his youth in Nogent, becoming a center of pilgrimage for the sick and for processions.

The inhabitants o f Noge Nogent Birthplace and burial place of the saint. nt point out, at the edge of this parish, a fountain near which, they assert, was the dwelling of Saint Ithier's parents. It is there that the Saint spent the first years of his life. A cross has been planted there and, for many centuries, the inhabitants of Nogent and the surrounding areas have gone there in procession during public calamities. The sick also flock there to obtain, through the intercession of the holy bishop, the healing of their ailments.

Cult 05 / 06

Liturgical variations

The dates of his feast vary between the dioceses of Sens, Orléans, and Nevers, testifying to the complex history of his relics.

The feast of Saint Ithier was celebrated in Nogent on June 17, when this parish was part of the diocese of Sens; since it has depended on that of Orléans, the feast of Saint Ithier only takes place on July 9. The ancient martyrology of Nevers marks his death on the 25th of the same month; however, his feast is celebrated in the diocese of Nevers on July 8. This variation must have been the result of several translations of the relics of our Saint.

Legacy 06 / 06

Relics and historical vicissitudes

Dying in Berry, his relics circulated between Nogent, Sully, and Les Aix-d'Angillon before being dispersed by the Huguenots.

It seems certain that he died in Berry; his Berry Historical province where the saint settled. body was transported to Nogent, his native land. In the 11th century, his cult was already widespread. Several churches in Berry were placed under his invocation, among others the collegiate church of Saint-Ithier in Les Aix-d'Angillon. In 1403, John, Du Jean, duc de Berry Son of King John, donor of the reliquary of the hand of Saint Thomas at Saint-Denis. ke of Berry, gave to this collegiate church a portion of the head and an arm of the holy bishop, relics he had obtained from the prior of Nogent . The collegiat Sully-sur-Loire Location housing a collegiate church dedicated to the saint and preserving his relics. e church of Sully-sur-Loire also recognized him as its patron. When the Huguenots entered Nogent, they dispersed the relics of the holy bishop. Before the Revolution of 1793, there remained in Nogent only a single finger that had been brought back there in 1656 from the treasury of the collegiate church of Sully-sur-Loire.

T aken from th Mgr Crennier Author of the Hagiologie Nécernaire. e Hagiologie Nécernaire, by Mgr Crennier.

Official source Les Petits Bollandistes, by Mgr Paul GUÉRIN, chamberlain to His Holiness Pius IX.

Annexes & related entities

Structured data for exploration: events, miracles, quotes, places, attributes, patronages, and important entities cited in the text.

Key Events

  1. Studies in ethics and physics (medicine)
  2. Retreat to a desert place to flee vainglory
  3. Election to the episcopal see of Nevers
  4. Priestly ordination and episcopal consecration around 690
  5. Healing of a paralyzed man and deliverance of a possessed person at the gates of Nevers
  6. Died in Berry and translation of the body to Nogent

Miracles

  1. Healing of a crippled man at the gates of Nevers
  2. Deliverance of a possessed person
  3. Numerous healings through medicine blessed by God
  4. Healing properties of the Nogent fountain

Important entities

Ranked by relevance in the text