Saint profile
St. Conrad of Parzham
1818–1894
Associated with Healing; patronage includes Patron of Capuchin friars, porters..
Biography and devotion
St. Conrad of Parzham: life, patronage, and devotion
St. Conrad of Parzham was born Johann Birndorfer on 22 December 1818 in Bavaria, Germany. Raised on a farm in a devout Catholic family, he grew up in the shadow of parish life, Marian devotion, and the rhythms of rural labor. He later became a Capuchin lay brother and is remembered as a porter, man of charity, Eucharistic devotee, and saint of hidden service.
After years of prayer and discernment, Johann entered the Capuchins and took the name Conrad. He was assigned to the friary at Altötting, one of Bavaria’s great Marian pilgrimage centers. There he served as porter for more than forty years. The position was demanding. The porter met pilgrims, the poor, children, the sick, and the troubled every day. Conrad answered the door with patience, kindness, food, counsel, and prayer.
His day was built around the Eucharist and Our Lady. He rose early, served Mass, prayed before the Blessed Sacrament whenever possible, and returned constantly to the friary door. Visitors noticed that his charity was not hurried or theatrical. He treated the poor as Christ’s friends. Children trusted him. Pilgrims came to him for blessing and advice.
Tradition remembers him for spiritual insight, prophecy, and favors granted through his prayer. His holiness was not founded on public sermons but on forty years of availability. The same door, the same bell, the same requests, the same interruptions became the path by which God formed him.
Conrad died on 21 April 1894 at Altötting. He was canonized by Pope Pius XI in 1934. His body rests in the Capuchin church at Altötting, and devotion to him remains strong among Capuchins, pilgrims, porters, students, and ordinary workers. St. Conrad’s life shows how sanctity can become visible in one place through long fidelity: a man at a door, welcoming Christ again and again in the poor.
The place of Altötting is central to his biography. Pilgrims came to the Black Madonna with gratitude, fear, sickness, poverty, and petitions. Conrad met them at the door, often before they ever reached a priest. He listened, gave food, and pointed people toward prayer. This is why his sanctity is so accessible. He transformed interruption into charity. The porter’s office, which could have been tedious or irritating, became the exact place where he met Christ in thousands of visitors.
At a glance
- Life dates
- 1818–1894
- Feast day
- Apr 21
- Patronage
- Patron of Capuchin friars, porters.
Relic in the Chasing Saints collection
A relic of St. Conrad of Parzham is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.
Reported favors
