Saint of the Day – 3 December – St Lucius, King and Bishop (Died c200) Patronages of Liechtenstein, the City and Diocese of Chur, Switzerland, Llandaff, Wales, the Diocese of Vaduz, Liechtenstein. Also known as – Lucius Curiensis, Luzi, Luzius…Lucius of Chur, … of Coire … of Briton.
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Coire, in Switzerland, St Lucius, King of the Britons, who was the first of those Kings who received the faith of Christ, in the time of Pope Eleutherius.”
According to the Legendary Life, Lucius went from England to Rhaetia in the 2nd Century where he became a missionaryand Bishop and Hermit.
It states that he was Martyred there around 200, (although the Roman Martyrology does not accord him this title), by the pagan Governor.
Since ancient times, it was believed that the Saint died on December. A Monastery was soon built over his Tomb. The Reliquary Crypt from the Merovingian era has survived to this day.
Cult evidence dates to the 8th Century and extended to the Diocese of the King Bishop of Chur which also included Tyrol and to the neighbouring Diocese of Constance and Sion. Recent research shows that the Saint later lived as a Hermit on the Luziensteig but nothing else is known. Relics of the saint are found in many Churches of the Diocese of Chur and in several Monasteries.

