'Ursus of Solothurn' was a
3rd century Roman Christian venerated as a
saint. He is the patron of the main
Catholic church in
Solothurn,
Switzerland, where his body is located. He was associated very early with the
Theban Legion and
Viktor of Xanten, for instance in the ''
Roman Martyrology''. The ''Life of Ursus'' was written by Saint
Eucherius of Lyon in the 5th century; it recounts that Ursus was tortured and
beheaded under Emperor
Maximian and the governor Hyrtacus for refusing to worship idols around 286. The first church dedicated to Ursus in Solothurn was probably built after Viktor's remains were taken to
Geneva in the late 5th century. His
relics are displayed in churches throughout Switzerland, and his coffin was found in 1519.
[1]
References
1. "St. Ursus". From the ''Catholic Encyclopedia''.