Saint Ansgarius (Oscar), a native of Corbie (France), was a great scholar who from a very young age studied with the Benedictines in the Abbey of Corbie. While a monk, he was designated by Pope Gregory IV as a legacy for all the Scandinavian lands of Northern Europe, proclaiming the Gospel in the Denmark and Sweden. At a very young age he was bishop of Hamburg.
Years later, due to the push from the Vikings, he was forced to taking refuge in Bremen where, as bishop, he spent the last years of his life working, according to some sources, on the edition of a Bible for the poor. Fragments of this ancient Bible are preserved in the cathedral of the city. St. Oscar died in the year 865, without having seen the dream of a profound evangelization of northern Europe, but with the joy of having sown the first seed of faith in those lands.
The Church also celebrates today the patronage of St. Blaise of otorhinolaryngologists and for throat ailments. It is because, according to tradition, he once saved the life of a child who had a fish bone stuck in his throat. In the 17th century, the bishop and martyr Saint Blaise enjoyed great popularity as a protector saint against illnesses, which is why he was depicted in the imagery of the Oviedo Cathedral. In the monastery of the Pelayas, next to the cathedral, a relic of the saint is venerated, which is very popular in Paraguay.