February 2
The Purification of Mary and the
Presentation of Our Lord (Candlemas)
672
Saint Chad of Mercia, a 7th century Anglo-Saxon
churchman who became abbot of several monasteries, bishop of
the Northumbrians and later
bishop of the Mercians and Lindsey People, died.
767
Alcuin
(ca. 735–804), the academic who would later play a large
role in establishing schools under Charlemagne, became
headmaster of York Cathedral School.
962
Pope John XII (ca 937–964) crowned
Otto the Great (912–973) as Holy Roman Emperor, the first in
nearly forty years.
1467
Columba of Rieti (d.
20 May
1501), a
Dominican tertiary
mystic renowned for her spiritual advice
and fantastic miracles, was born.
1594
Giovanni Pierluigi da
Palestrina, gifted composer of medieval church music, church
musician, religious composer and Italian choirmaster, died
(b. ca. 1525).
1613
Noël Chabanel, French Jesuit missionary at
Sainte-Marie among the Hurons, and one of the
Canadian Martyrs was born (d. 8 December 1649).
1619 Tobias Clausnitzer, hymnist, was born (d.
7 May 1684).
1649
Pope Benedict XIII was born (d. 21 February 1730).
1745 Popular British
philanthropist, poet and dramatist
Hannah More was born at
Stapleton, near Bristol, England (d. 7 September 1833).
1769
Pope Clement XIII died (b. 7 March 1693).
1784
Henry Alline
(b. 1748), colonial American Free Will Baptist evangelist,
died.
1807
Eliza Agnew,
Presbyterian missionary, was born in
New York City (d. 14 June 1883).
1822
Carl Johann Hermann
Fick, a charter member of the Missouri Synod, was born in
Doenhausen, Hannover, Germany (d. 30 April 1885, Boston).
1832 Twenty-three-year-old
Baptist seminary student
Samuel Francis Smith
(1808–1895) wrote the lyrics to
“America.”
1835
Albert Kuhn, president
of the Minnesota Synod, was born in Saint Gallen canton,
Switzerland (d. 1 May 1915).
1841
Friedrich Wilhelm August
Notz, professor of Greek and Hebrew at Northwestern
College (Watertown, Wisconsin), was born in Lehren-Steinsfeld, near Weinsberg,
Wuerttemberg (d. 16 December 1922).
1841
Charles Henkel,
who translated the Augsburg Confession into English in the
early 1830s, died (b. 17/18 May 1798).
1881 The
Christian Endeavor
Society was founded by Rev. Francis E. Clark in the
Williston Congregational Church, Portland, Maine.
1882 The Roman Catholic
Church permitted the organization of the
Knights of
Columbus, bowing to an increasing national interest in
fraternal groups.
1895
Theodore Näther
(1866–1904) opened
Missouri Synod mission work at Krishnagiri, India.
1895
Adoniram Judson Gordon (b. 13 April 1836), American
Baptist clergyman, died.
1952
Charles Frederick
William Dallmann president of the English Synod of
Missouri (1899–1901) and
vice-president of the LCMS (1926–1932),
died (b. 22 December 1862).
1981
Roy A. Suelflow,
missionary in China and Japan Bible School, president of
Concordia Seminary (Taiwan), Concordia College (Milwaukee,
Wisconsin) and Concordia Seminary (Saint Louis, Missouri),
died (b. 24 March 1918, Germantown, Wisconsin).