Portal:Catholic Church/Patron Archive/June 10 2007

St. Landericus (or Landry) was a Roman Catholic Bishop of Paris, a sincere and dedicated servant of God. He was well known for his great love for the poor and the lowly. As Bishop of Paris, from 650-661, he labored zealously to improve their lot. First he sold all his possessions to be able to feed the hungry. When he had sold all his possessions to relieve the hungry of the poor during a famine, he began to sell property of the Church, vessels and furniture. St. Landericus also cared for the sick. In these times, the sick poor were not really cared for. These lived in little hostels where they depended on the charity of the rich, without any certainty of provisioning. To provide regular maintenance, Landericus founded the city's first real hospital, dedicated to St. Christopher. This was the origin of the famous Hotel-Dieu. Searching for a possibility to provide spiritual help for his people, Landericus welcomed the Benedictines into his diocese and encouraged them to set up the Abbey of Denis. In 653, in company with twenty-three other bishops, he signed the foundation charter granted by King Clovis to the Abbey. He died about 661 after having commissioned the monk Marculfus to compile a collection of Ecclesiastical Formulas