Our Lady of Montevergine
Our Lady of Montevergine
https://www.roman-catholic-saints.com/our-lady-of-montevergine.html
May 22: Our Lady of Monte Vergine, near Naples, Italy (1119)
Also known as Our Lady of Montevergine, or as “Mother Schiavona,” this image
was preserved from the flames at the monastery and church consecrated in her
honor.
A very famous Benedictine sanctuary located in the village of Montevergine in
the Campanian region of Italy is known as “Monte Vergine;” its religious
history goes back to pre-Christian times when there was a temple of Cybele
there. A chapel of the Blessed Virgin was built in the seventh century, and in the
year 1119 Saint William of Vercelli founded the monastery that still exists
high up on the mountains. Saint William was a hermit who came back to his
native Italy after making a pilgrimage to the shrine of Santiago de Compostela
in Spain.
Due to Saint William’s reputation for sanctity, many men were drawn to him
and soon there were many cells located on the mountain. The first true church
was constructed in 1126, and was dedicated to the Blessed Virgin.
Our Lady of Montevergine
In the church is a large icon of the Mother and Child “of Constantinople”
(said to have been brought to Italy by King Baldwin of Jerusalem) which came
into the possession of the monastery in 1310. King Baldwin was only able to
take away the upper portion of the large image. The dark figures on the icon of Our Lady of Montevergine stand out
strikingly from the gold background; the present lower part of the picture is a
later addition.
The image is quite large, with a height of over 12 feet and width of over 6
feet, showing the Blessed Virgin seated on a throne with the Divine Infant
Jesus seated on her lap. The image is dark, so the icon is often referred to as
one of the “Black Madonnas.” There have apparently been several renovations
made to the original painting, as in 1621 two crowns were placed on the heads
of the Virgin Mary and her child Jesus, and other additions were made in 1712
and 1778.
During World War II the church was used to hide the famed Holy Shroud of
Turin, the burial cloth of Christ. A new basilica was begun in 1952 in the
Romanesque style, and this structure was consecrated in 1961. There are over
one and one half million pilgrims yearly who come to Monte Vergine to visit Our Lady of Montevergine, most notably at
Whitsuntide. There have been numerous miracles attributed to this portrait of
the Mother of God and her Divine Son.
There is a church at Seattle, Washington, dedicated in honor of Monte
Vergine, Our Lady of the Mount, and another at New Brunswick, New Jersey.
*from The Woman in Orbit and other sources
The following is a submission from Chris, after a May 2018 visit.
We
visited 5.26.2018 with my mother-in-law, who was born in Bagnoli,
Naples in 1931. She started pilgrimages here in her teens, and continued
to visit each time she visited Naples after marrying an American Army
man in 1959. This was likely her last visit.
My prior visit was in 1986, and the grounds and museum have been greatly improved and updated.
I was stuck by two items which I would like to know more about:
1.
The incorrupt body of a monk: what is his name, and what is the story
behind his life? Is this St William of Vercelli, I think not, but don’t
recall his name.
2. The footprint of
Mary. There is a rock with an imprint of a foot that local custom
ascribes to a Marian visitation. Is there any more to this story and has
it been validated by the Church?
Thanks,Chris
A submission by Mr. Charles A. Connell, Fayetteville, NC, USA
In 1945-1946, I served as a very young soldier in the USA Army. I
was stationed for most of that time in the MTOUSA headquarters in
Caserta, Italy, north of Naples. We were a multinational army group
(American, English, Italian, French, Free Polish) responsible for Allied
forces in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations.
Our Catholic Chaplin, Fr. Kilmartin, formed a Holy Name Society unit with American and British soldiers. He arranged for many visits to pilgrimage sites in Italy, including a weekend at St. Padre Pio's monastery at San Giovanni Rotondo, where we met and talked with Padre Pio.
Our Catholic Chaplin, Fr. Kilmartin, formed a Holy Name Society unit with American and British soldiers. He arranged for many visits to pilgrimage sites in Italy, including a weekend at St. Padre Pio's monastery at San Giovanni Rotondo, where we met and talked with Padre Pio.
One
of our pilgrimages was to the Monastery of Monte Vergine, near
Avellino. We trucked up the mountainside on a cold day in the winter of
1946 after the war had ended. The monks at the monastery met us, and
showed us through the chapel, explaining its history. Afterwards, the
good monks served us spaghetti and delicious hot sauce, with glasses of
red wine. What a beautiful experience all of this was for GIs so far
away from home and loved ones!
I
recall one unique item of piety and devotion which I haven't read about
in all the literature I've seen concerning this chapel. In the center
of the chapel, on a raised, stone platform, there was the body of a
monk. He seemed to be in a deep sleep, with his arms folded on his
chest, dressed in his Benedictine habit. As I recall, we were told that
this monk had died many years ago, but his body had not corrupted. I
would be interested if anyone reading this could elaborate on this
matter.
I'm
now 87, and my time in this life is limited. For all these years, I
have retained a deep devotion to Our Lady of Monte Vergine, I call on
her for her prayers and intercession for me every evening in my final
daily prayers. There was something moving and really spiritual that we
experienced in our visit to the chapel of Our Lady of Monte Vergine, and
I'm indebted to the good priests, monks and people of Italy who
introduced us to Our Lady in her chapel.
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