St Ignatius of Loyola Sterling Round Medal Necklace by BlissZoom

St Ignatius of Loyola Sterling Round Medal Necklace by Bliss

Item# 7217RDSS-24S
$91.99
Engraved on back ($30.00):
Availability: Usually ships in 2-3 business days
This item is currently out of stock!
Bliss Catholic Religious Medals and Jewelry

St Ignatius of Loyola Round Medal Necklace

Medal Measures 1-inch tall by 7/8-inch wide.

Please choose chain.

Deluxe Gift Box

Made in the USA

Engraving on large & medium size medals, ONLY.

Engraving is available up to 4 lines 16 Letters each on the 7000 Series large medals and up to 3 lines 12 Letters each on 8000 Series medium medals. Available Type Fonts: Roman, Helvetica, Script, Monogram, & Monogram Circle. Monogram Fonts are limited to three letters.

Add words to be engraved in the box on this page and if you are using letter accent in your words please also add inscription at checkout in comments box. If your item(s) is engraved and/or personalized, the order is considered a final sale. So please double check your inscription to be engraved before you place the order. All orders that require engraving usually take 1-5 days to ship after the order is received.

Bliss Manufacturing, a more than 100-year-old, family-owned company, makes all of its jewelry in the U.S.A. And because we make all of our jewelry, we are adding new designs daily, especially Patron Saint medals. We currently offer more than 450 different Patron Saint medals.

Our jewelry is die-struck, the same way the U.S. Mint makes coins, which produces rich detail. Each Bliss medal carries a Lifetime Warranty. If for whatever reason a Bliss medal shall become tarnished, Bliss will either re-finish or replace the medal free of charge.

Saint Ignatius was a soldier who was injured in battle and was limited to resting in bed. A family member lent him a book about Saints to read while in bed. Upon recovery, he devoted himself to the Faith. He is the founder of the Society of Jesus. St. Ignatius of Loyola is the Patron Saint for Soldiers. Memorial: July 31.
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