Saint of the Day – 9 December – Saint Cyprian (Died c586) Abbot of Perigord, France, Hermit, miracle-worker. Also known as – Cyprien.
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Perigord in France, the holy Abbot Cyprian, a man of great sanctity.”
St Gregory of Tours, after calling Cyprian a man “of great sanctity,” says of him: “He has often cured lame hands, restored the use of limbs to paralytics and restored sight to the blind. Three lepers have recovered their health thanks to his anointings. And nowadays it is not uncommon for the sick to be cured by praying with faith, at his Tomb.”
Adonis, who composed the Eulogy following St Gregory, mentions him in his Martyrology on 9 December, certainly arbitrarily; Usuard placed the Feast of the holy Abbot on the same date, as well as the Churches which celebrated his memory.
Further details of Cyprian are given in the Vitae of Saint Amandus and Saint Sorus – according to these texts, three young men from Auvergne, namely Sorus, Amandus and Cyprian, at the time of Clotaire I (511-561) placed themselves under the direction of Savalone, Abbot of the Monastery of Genouillac. After three years they retired to a secluded place but then separated to live in solitude. Sorus (whose name, from then on, meant “hermit” in the Celtic language) retired to Terranova, Amand and Cyprian to places that later took their names (St Amand-de-Coly and St Cyprien, in the Dordogne). Sorus cured the King of Burgundy, Saint Guntram (561-592), of leprosy and, upon his death, was buried by Cyprian and Amand.
According to another source, Cyprian lived at the time of Carterius, the Bishop of Périgord, who participated in the Council of Mâcon in 585 – accepting these chronological data, it must be admitted that Cyprian was a contemporary of St Gregory of Tours but that he died before 587, the year in which the latter began composing the In Gloria Confessorum.

