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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › James_KisaiJames Kisai - Wikipedia

    James Kisai, SJ, also known as Diego Kisai (ディエゴ喜斎) or Jacobo Kisai, was a Japanese Jesuit lay brother and saint, one of the 26 Martyrs of Japan. Out of the 26, Kisai, Paul Miki, and John Soan de Goto were the only Jesuits to be executed in Nagasaki on February 5, 1597. Biography

  2. James Kisai (Iacobus Kisai 1533-1597) was one of the first Jesuit martyrs in Japan. He just happened to be in the same community when the police arrived to arrest the Jesuit Paul Miki. Although a Buddhist bonze educated him, Kisai was later baptized and married a woman who had also converted.

  3. James Kisai. In 1533, John Kisai was born into a pagan family who lived in a small village, Haga, near Okayama. He was raised as a Buddhist, but converted to Christianity as did the young woman he married.

  4. James Kisai, also known as Saint James Kisai, was a Jesuit seminarian from Japan who lived during the 16th century and suffered martyrdom for his faith. His life was significantly marked by three major events: his conversion to Christianity, his membership in the Society of Jesus, and his eventual martyrdom.

  5. Dec 9, 2021 · The side chapel of the Holy Confessors inside the baroque church of the Gesù at Casa Professa has an altarpiece dedicated to Paul Miki, John Soan of Goto, and James Kisai, three Japanese Jesuit martyrs.

  6. Learn about the life and martyrdom of St. James Kisai, a Japanese catechist who was crucified in 1597. See his image in a stained glass window at Loyola College of Baltimore, founded in 1852.

  7. Shop St. James Kisai Jesuit martyr in Japan. A native of Japan, he entered the Society of Jesus and worked as a catechist until his execution by crucifixion at the age of sixty four.