"In 1861, Reverend Mother Saint John Facemaz, Superior General of the Congregation, during a visit to the Holy City, obtained... the body of the child-martyr, St. Aurelia... The principal well-preserved bones are encased in a waxen figure clothed in Roman tunic and mantle, and the smaller ones are sealed in a metallic case, near which is placed the Vas Sanguinis, the vial of blood found in the
"In 1861, Reverend Mother Saint John Facemaz, Superior General of the Congregation, during a visit to the Holy City, obtained... the body of the child-martyr, St. Aurelia... The principal well-preserved bones are encased in a waxen figure clothed in Roman tunic and mantle, and the smaller ones are sealed in a metallic case, near which is placed the Vas Sanguinis, the vial of blood found in the
"Foremost among these are the entire bodies of nine martyrs, six of which occupy prominent places in the chapel at the Mother House... The body of Saint Nerusia Euticia, a young Roman noblewoman of the second century, was taken from the Cemetery of Saint Calipodius July 16, 1801. It reposes in a sarcophagus of rich wood and plate glass. The skeleton is held together with gauze, through which the
"Foremost among these are the entire bodies of nine martyrs, six of which occupy prominent places in the chapel at the Mother House... The body of St. Discolius, a boy of twelve years, was removed from the cemetery of St. Agnes in 1802. The stone slab accompanying it bears a hand, a bird, and the inscription 'Discolius in Pace,' all rudely carved."