Aurea of Paris

[2] Her feast day before the Great East-West Schism of 1054 was universally 4 October, and remains so in the Orthodox Church.

The Romanist celebration of her feast was transferred to 5 October following their veneration of St Francis of Assisi.

When around 632 Eligius, by the liberality of King Dagobert, settled at Paris a nunnery of three hundred virgins, he appointed Aurea abbess.

[5] As her nunnery stood within the city she could not be buried there, and she was therefore interred at St. Paul's, some time after, her bones were taken up, and kept in a rich shrine in that church, until they were translated to her monastery.

[4] Aurea was believed to have brought a woman back to life, so that she could release a key from her dead hands; to have swept red-hot ashes out of an empty oven, seemingly causing well-baked loaves to appear; and, long after death, to have cured a blind woman with the touch of her cut-off (and freshly bleeding) arm.