Quadragesima

 Quadratus

 Quality

 Quamichan Indians

 Quam singulari

 Quantity

 Quapaw Indians

 Quarantines

 Franciscus Quaresmius

 Archdiocese of Quebec

 Province of Quebec

 Hyacinthe-Louis de Quelen

 Quem terra, pontus, sidera

 Jacopo Della Quercia

 Diocese of Querétaro

 Pasquier Quesnel

 Juan de Quevedo

 Quiche

 Quichua Indians

 Quicumque Christum Quæritis

 Councils of Quierzy

 Prayer of Quiet

 Quietism

 Diocese of Quilon

 Diocese of Quimper

 Michael Joseph Quin

 Sts. Quinctianus

 Francis Quiñones

 Quinquagesima

 Agustín Quintana

 Sts. Quiricus and Julitta

 Angelo Maria Quirini

 Sts. Quirinus

 Archdiocese of Quito

Sts. Quiricus and Julitta


Martyred under Diocletian. The names of these two martyrs, who in the early Church enjoyed a widespread veneration, are found in the "Martyrologium Hieronymianum" (ed. De Rossi-Duchesne, 79) and also in the calendars and menologies of the Greek and other Oriental Churches. According to the Acts of their martyrdom, which appeared later, and a letter of the sixth century, Julitta fled with her three-months-old child, Quiricus, from Lycaonia, when the Maximinian persecution broke out there, to Isauria and thence to Tarsus in Cilicia. She suffered martyrdom in the last-named city after her child had first been killed before her eyes. The veneration of the two martyrs was common in the West at an early date, as is proved by the chapel dedicated to them in the Church of Santa Maria Antiqua at Rome, as well as by testimony from Gaul. Their relics are said to have been brought to the monastery of Saint-Amand (Elnonense monasterium) in the Diocese of Tournai. The feast is observed on 16 June; in the Synaxarium of Constantinople it is set under the date of 15 July.

J.P. KIRSCH