Cecilia's St. Cecilia was also a Cecily (prosperous 3 rd century, Rome [Italy], 22 November festival), a patron saint of music, one of the most famous Roman martyrs of the Early Church. One of the most discussed in history
According to the legend of the latter half of the 5th century, she was a nobility when he was a child and swore to God about her virgin. When she got married to her will, the Holy Spirit of the future and then infidels, she said he wanted the angel of God to continue as a virgin. If he is allowed to see an angel, he promises to respect this wish. She replied that if he had been baptized he would do so. After he returned from baptism, he found Cecilia talking with the angel. Then she converted his brother Tiburtius, and he also saw an angel. They cried in front of her. She assigned her property to the poor and made her a prestigious al - makius who commanded it to burn her. When the flame did not hurt her, she was beheaded
Cecilia was buried in St. Kalst 's underground cemetery near Rome. In the beginning of the 9th century, Pope Paschal found her cheap relic in the St. Praetextatus' s cemetery and transferred them to Rome now to the church of Trastevere who took her name. She became a patron saint of musicians and music; in art, she is often used as an organ
At the age of 11, Mr. Matthew moved to St. Cecilia's junior high school, nickel's Matari Catholic church's boarding school. Maathai studied in St. Cecilia for 4 years. In the meantime she was fluent in English and converted to a Catholic. She was involved in Mary Legion, whose members tried to "serve God by serving the human race". During her stay in St. Cecilia she was protected by an ongoing Mao Zedong uprising and her mother was forced to move from her home to an urgent village in Ichita. When she finished studying in 1956, she was first elected in the class and was allowed to enter Lorem 's Loreto high school in Kenya, the only Catholic lady' s high school.
Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia is one of the oldest music institutions in the world, with headquarters in Italy. Located in Rome's Auditorium Parco della Musica, it was published by Sixtus V in 1585 and cites two famous saints in the history of Western music. That name is St. Cecilia, the patron saint of music. For centuries, it has developed into an internationally renowned university built as a "congregation" or "association" - a so-called religious guild - and active with music scholarship. Students with a famous music organizing music school will do music education (as a music school) (with an active choir and a symphonic orchestra)