Saint Peter - Patronage

Patronage

Saint Peter is the patron saint of the following categories

Workers
  • Bakers
  • Bridge builders
  • Butchers
  • Fishermen
  • Harvesters
  • Cordwainers
  • Life New Lifes
  • Horologists
  • Locksmiths
  • Cobblers
  • Masons
  • Net makers
  • Shipwrights
  • Stationers
Called for aid in
  • Frenzy
  • Foot problems
  • Fever
  • Longevity
Institutions
  • The Papacy
  • Bath Abbey
  • Berchtesgaden Provostry
  • Bishop Cotton Boys' School, Bangalore
  • Exeter College, Oxford
  • Universalist Church
  • Peterhouse, Cambridge
  • St Peter's College, Oxford
  • St Peter's College, Auckland
  • Saint Peter's College, New Jersey
  • Saint Peter's School, York
Churches and Cathedrals
  • The Papal Basilica of Saint Peter, Vatican City
  • York Minster
  • List of churches dedicated to St Peter
Locations
  • Birżebbuġa
  • Bremen
  • Brgy. San Pedro, San Pablo City
  • Worms
  • Calatrava
  • Chartres
  • Chimbote
  • Calbayog City
  • Cologne
  • Davao
  • Dunajská Streda
  • Hinton on the Green, Worcs, UK
  • Ilovik i Sveti Petar
  • Jackson
  • Köpenick
  • Las Vegas
  • Leuven
  • Leiden
  • Lessines
  • Maralal
  • Marquette
  • Moissac
  • Naumburg
  • Obermarsberg
  • Peterborough
  • Philadelphia
  • Poznań
  • Providence
  • Pubnico, Nova Scotia
  • Regensburg
  • Rome
  • Póvoa de Varzim
  • Saint Petersburg
  • Saint Pierre and Miquelon
  • San Pedro, Laguna
  • San Pedro Soloma
  • Scranton
  • Seixal Municipality
  • Sunderland
  • Sintra
  • Sint-Pieters-Rode
  • Tielt
  • Toa Baja
  • Umbria

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Famous quotes containing the word patronage:

    Each of the Arts whose office is to refine, purify, adorn, embellish and grace life is under the patronage of a Muse, no god being found worthy to preside over them.
    Eliza Farnham (1815–1864)

    She loved money, but could occasionally part with it, especially to men of learning, whose patronage she affected. She often conversed with them, and bewildered herself in their metaphysical disputes, which neither she nor they themselves understood.
    Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (1694–1773)