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Saint Severinus the "apostle to Noricum," (died 482), though he was later claimed to have been born either in Southern Italy or in the Byzantine province of Africa, after the death of Attila, it is more certain, the mysterious high-born Severinus appeared as a traveller along the Danube in Noricum and Bavaria, preaching Christianity, procuring supplies for the starving, redeeming captives and establishing monasteries and hospices in the chaotic territories that were ravaged by the Great Migrations, sleeping on sackcloth and fasting severely. He died at Favianae, Noricum (modern Austria) singing Psalm 150. Six years after his death, his monks were driven from their abbey, and his body was taken to Italy, where it was interred at the Benedictine monastery rededicated to him, the Abbey of San Severino near Naples.
Paul the Deacon, in his 8th-century History of the Lombards,' mentions the monastery founded by Severinus at Eiferingen, at the foot of the Kalenberg, not far from Vienna:
- In these territories of the Noricans at that time was the monastery of the blessed Severinus, who, endowed with the sanctity of every abstinence, was already renowned for his many virtues, and though he dwelt in these places up to the end of his life: now however, Neapolis keeps his remains.
The Vita of Severinus was written by Euganippus (see link)
But compare Saint Severinus of Septempeda, the brother of Saint Victorinus of Camerino, and a bishop of Naples, whose feast day in celebrated on the same day, January 8.
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