For the Spanish saint, see Secundus of Abula.
Some time after the canonization of Francis Xavier in 1622, that Spanish saint became the patron of the village.
Santa Rosa Avenue in Altadena is one of many north-south running streets named for female Spanish saints.
It is named for the prominent Spanish saint, Ignatius of Loyola.
Performed by 14 dancers, the story depicts the lives of 16th-century Spanish saints and mystics.
Pictures of Spanish saints adorned the walls: male saints, stripped to the waist, bearing the marks of torture.
For the Spanish saint, see Emeterius and Celedonius.
For the Spanish saint and martyr, see Facundus and Primitivus.
Taken together, the words and music are meant to evoke in some fanciful way the daily lives and discourse of a community of 16th-century Spanish saints.
The Spanish saint lived in the church from 1544 until his death in 1556.