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・ Peter Osgood
・ Peter Oskam
・ Peter Obi
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・ Peter Oborne
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Peter of Alcantara
・ Peter of Alexandria
・ Peter of Anagni
・ Peter of Ancarano
・ Peter of Aquila
・ Peter of Aragon
・ Peter of Aragon (heir of Sicily)
・ Peter of Aragon, Count of Alburquerque
・ Peter of Aspelt
・ Peter of Atroa
・ Peter of Auvergne
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・ Peter of Benevento
・ Peter of Bergamo
・ Peter of Blois


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Peter of Alcantara : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter of Alcantara

Saint Peter of Alcantara, O.F.M. ((スペイン語:San Pedro de Alcántara)) (1499 – October
18, 1562), was a Spanish Franciscan friar canonized in 1699.
==Biography==
He was born at Alcántara, Province of Cáceres, Extremadura, Spain. His father, Peter Garavita, was the governor of Alcántara, and his mother was of the noble family of Sanabia. He decided to join the Franciscans at the age of 16 shortly after he was sent to university in Salamanca by his stepfather.〔("St Peter of Alcantara", Diocese of Shrewsbury )〕
Returning home, he became a Franciscan friar of the Stricter Observance in the friary at Manxaretes, Extremadura, in 1515. At the age of twenty-two he was sent to found a new community of the Stricter Observance at Badajoz. He was ordained a priest in 1524, and the following year was appointed Guardian of the friary of St. Mary of the Angels at Robredillo, Old Castile. A few years later he began preaching with much success. He preferred to preach to the poor; his sermons, taken largely from the Prophets and Sapiential Books, breathe the tenderest human sympathy. At the time Peter entered the Order, the reform of the "Discalced Friars" consisted of the Custody of the friaries in Spain and Santa Maria Pietatis in Portugal, all subject to the Minister General of the Observants.〔(Reagan, Nicholas. "St. Peter of Alcántara." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 6 Aug. 2013 )〕
In 1538 Peter was made minister provincial of the Franciscan province of St Gabriel of Estremadura but resigned when his plans to enforce severe rules among the friars were opposed,〔 and he retired with John of Avila into the mountains of Arrábida in Portugal, where he joined Friar Martim de Santa Maria in a life of eremitical solitude. Soon, though, other friars came to join him, and several little communities were established. Peter was chosen guardian and Master of novices at the friary of Palhais, Barreiro. In 1560 these communities were erected into the Province of Arrábida.〔
Returning to Spain in 1553 he spent two more years in solitude; then he journeyed barefoot to Rome and obtained permission of Julius III to found some poor friaries in Spain under the jurisdiction of the Minister General of the Conventuals.〔(Butler, Alban. ''The Lives of the Saints'', Vol.X (1866) )〕 Friaries were established at Pedrosa, Plasencia and elsewhere; in 1556 they were made a commissariat, with Peter as Commissary, and in 1561 a religious Province under the title of St Joseph. Not discouraged by the opposition and ill-success his efforts at reform had met with in St Gabriel Province, Peter drew up the constitutions of the new province with even greater severity. The reform spread rapidly into other provinces of Spain and Portugal.
In 1562 the Province of St Joseph was put under the jurisdiction of the Minister General of the Observants, and two new custodies were formed: St. John Baptist in Valencia and St Simon in Galicia (see Friars Minor). His success was so remarkable that St Francis Borgia once wrote to him: "Your remarkable success is a special comfort to me."〔
In St. Teresa of Jesus, Peter perceived a soul chosen of God for a great work, and her success in the reform of Carmel (see Carmelites) was in great measure due to his counsel, encouragement and defense. It was a letter from Peter (dated April 14, 1562) that encouraged her to found her first monastery at Avila, August 24 of that year. St. Teresa's autobiography is the source of much of our information regarding Peter's life, work, the gift of miracles and prophecy. According to St. Teresa of Ávila, it was a very common thing for him to take food only once in three days, and that sometimes he would go a week without eating.〔(The Franciscan Book Of Saints, ed. by Marion Habig, OFM, Franciscan Herald Press, 1959 )〕
He was a man of remarkable austerity and poverty who travelled throughout Spain preaching the Gospel to the poor. He wrote a ''Treatise on Prayer and Meditation'', which was considered a masterpiece by St. Teresa, St. Francis de Sales and Louis of Granada.〔
While in prayer and contemplation, he was often seen in ecstasies and levitation. In his deathbed, he was offered a glass of water which he refused, saying that ''"Even my Lord Jesus Christ thirsted on the Cross..."'' He died while on his knees in prayer on October 18, 1562 in a monastery at Arenas (now Arenas de San Pedro, Province of Ávila, Old Castile).

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