Baltimore, Md., 28 January, 2025 / 12:55 pm (ACI Africa).
The Dicastery of the Causes of Saints has promulgated a decree recognizing that five Spanish Franciscans were killed “in odium fidei” (“in hatred of the faith”) in 1597 — specifically for defending the sanctity of marriage. Monday’s announcement paves the way for the beatification of the missionaries, who have been known collectively as the “Georgia Martyrs” for decades.
Members of the Guale tribe of Native Americans killed Father Pedro de Corpa, Father Blas Rodríguez, Father Miguel de Añon, Brother Antonio de Badajóz, and Father Francisco de Veráscola — all members of the Order of Friars Minor — during a four-day period in what was then Spanish Florida. The first martyr died on the feast of the Exultation of the Holy Cross (Sept. 14) in 1597. The third and fourth died on a Franciscan feast day — the feast of St. Francis of Assisi receiving the stigmata (Sept. 17).
Martyrs for the Gospel and for the sacrament of marriage
Father de Corpa had angered Juanillo, a Christian convert and heir of the main tribal chief, after the Franciscan rebuked his decision to take on a second wife — thus violating both his baptismal and wedding vows. The convert recruited warriors to raid four Franciscan missions in Guale territory, according to the official website for the Georgia Martyrs. They struck down de Corpa after dawn on Sept. 14 at the mission of Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (Our Lady of Guadalupe), which was near present-day Darien, Georgia.
The band of Guales then moved on to Rodríguez’s mission outpost of Santa Clara about 12 miles away near present-day Eulonia, Georgia. They killed him on Sept. 16. The following day, they murdered Añon and de Badajoz at their mission, Santa Catalina, on nearby St. Catherine’s Island.






