Saint Ursula was the daughter of a Christian King in Britain and was granted a three year postponement of a marriage she did not wish, to a pagan prince. With ten ladies in waiting, each attended by a thousand maidens, she embarked on a voyage across the North sea, sailed up the Rhine to Basle, Switzerland, and then went to Rome. On their way back, they were all massacred by pagan Huns at Cologne when Ursula refused to marry their chieftain.
The Order of Ursulines, founded in 1535 by St. Angela de Merici, and especially devoted to the education of young girls, had also helped to spread throughout the world the name of St. Ursula.
The faithless Vatican II sect which tramples on the blood of the martyrs, rejects St. Ursula, mocks these events. The Vatican II sect religion did a way with her feast day in 1969 under antipope Paul VI, the founder of the Vatican II denomination.