Saint Castor of Apt | |
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Born | 4th century Nîmes, France |
Died | c. 420 |
Feast | 2 September |
Patronage | Apt, France |
Castor of Apt (died c. 420) was a bishop of Apt, in Gaul.
He was born in Nîmes and may have been the brother of Leontius of Fréjus. Castor was a lawyer and married to a wealthy widow. He lived in Marseilles. His wife, however, allowed him to enter the religious life; she herself entered a nunnery. Castor founded the monastery of Manauque (Monanque) in Provence which followed the monastic rule of John Cassian. He was subsequently made bishop of Apt. [1] He died of natural causes.
John Cassian wrote the De institutis coenobiorum at the request of Castor.[2]
His feast day is September 2. His relics are still preserved in the cathedral of Apt, of which he is one of the patrons.