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  1. Saint Meinhard (1134 or 1136 – August 14 or October 11, 1196) was a German Augustinian canon regular and the first Bishop of Livonia. His life was described in the Chronicle of Henry of Livonia. His body rests in the now-Lutheran Riga Cathedral, as his remains were moved to Riga in 1226.

  2. Meinrad, OSB ( Latin: Meinradus, Mainradus; c. 797 – 21 January 861 AD) was a German Benedictine hermit and is revered as a Catholic and Orthodox saint. He is known as the "Martyr of Hospitality". His feast day is 21 January. Meinrad chapel on Etzel Pass. Einsiedeln Abbey.

  3. Saint Meinrad Archabbey is a Benedictine monastery founded in 1854 by monks from Einsiedeln Abbey in Switzerland and is home to 80+ monks who live, work, and pray in community.

  4. Feast Day: October 11. Death: October 12, 1196. Saint Meinards, also known as Meinhard or Meinardo, was a member of the Canons Regular of Saint Augustine. He was born around 1130 in Segeberg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Little is known about his early life, but it is believed that he received a thorough education in his youth.

  5. Saint Meinhard was a significant figure in the spread of Catholicism, particularly in the Baltic region during the 12th and 13th centuries. He is best known as the first Bishop of Livonia, an area now comprising modern-day Latvia and Estonia.

  6. priest. Saint Meinhard was a German canon regular and the first Bishop of Livonia. Career. His life was described in the Chronicle of Henry of Livonia. His body rests in the now-Lutheran Riga Cathedral. As a canon at the Segeberg Abbey, Meinhard was possibly inspired by Vicelinus missionary work among the Slavs.

  7. Life of St. Meinrad | Saint Meinrad Archabbey. Image of St. Meinrad on a mural in Memorial Lobby. Born about the year 800 in what is now Germany, Meinrad was a Benedictine monk who lived as a hermit for much of his life, dedicated to prayer and solitude.