Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

06 March, 2015

Lenten Station At The Basilica Of Saint Vitalis. Friday Of The Second Week In Lent.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text is taken from http://romanchurches.wikia.com/wiki/San Vitaleunless otherwise stated.

Friday of The Second Week in Lent.
Station at Saint Vitalis's.

Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.



The High Altar,
Santi Vitale,
Rome, Italy.
Photo: November 2006.
Photo taken by BruceJWebber; 
Transferred from en.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
Author: Bruce J Webber. Original uploader was BruceJWebber at en.wikipedia
(Wikimedia Commons)


This Station is made in the Basilica, one of the twenty-five Roman Parishes in the 5th-Century, which was dedicated to Saint Vitalis by Pope Innocent I. Saint Vitalis shed his blood at Ravenna, Italy. He was the father of the glorious Milanese Martyrs, Saint Gervasius and Saint Protasius.

The Epistle and Gospel describe to us, the one in figure, the other in Parable, the destiny of the heathen and that of the Jews. The Catechumens saw in Joseph, Christ, denied by His own people, transferring to The Church, formed henceforth by all peoples, the abundance of His Blessings. They, likewise, saw in the Parable of The Rebellious Workers in the Vineyard, the reprobation of the Jews and the election of the Gentiles.

The brothers of Joseph and the Unfaithful Workers of the Vineyard uttered the same death cries: “Come, let us kill him.” But, whilst the first repented and obtained the pardon of their victim, the second persisted in rejecting Christ, the Corner Stone, and were crushed by it (Gospel).

Let us purify ourselves by the salutary Fast of Lent, in order that we may prepare ourselves to Celebrate, in a Holy Way, the coming Easter Festivals (Collect).


File:San Vitale interior.jpg

The Basilica of San Vitale (Rome), with a Christmas Crib set up in the middle of the Nave. 
This Church is 5th-Century in origin, but underwent renovations in the 15th- and 17th-Centuries.
Photo: January 2006.
Author: Anthony M. from Rome, Italy.
(Wikimedia Commons)


San Vitale is a Minor Basilica, as well as a Parish and Titular Church, Dedicated to the legendary Martyrs, Saint Vitalis, his wife, Saint Valeria, and his sons, Saint Gervase and Saint Protase. It is located at Via Nazionale 194/B, in the rione Monti, Rome, and amounts to a fragment of an Early-5th-Century Basilica.

The full name of the Church is Santi Vitale, Valeria, Gervasio e Protasio or, alternatively, Santi Vitale e Compagni Martiri in Fovea, which is its official name.

The Church used to stand on the ancient Roman street known as the Vicus Longus, which ran between the Forum of Augustus and the Baths of Diocletian. It arrived at the latter establishment just where the Church of San Bernardo alle Terme now stands, and ran down the valley between the Quirinal and Viminal hills. There were two Tituli on it, this Church and San Ciriaco, which was near the Baths.

In The Middle Ages, the area became completely de-populated and amounted to a pocket of countryside right up to the Late-19th-Century. The Vicus Longus became the Via di San Vitale, which only ran from Via Mazzarino near Sant'Agata dei Goti to Via delle Quattro Fontane and on which the Church was the only building. However, when the Via Nazionale was built, this street was mostly destroyed. A short length survives at the Eastern end, and also towards the West, where it is known as Vicolo dei Serpenti.



  
English: Entrance to the Basilica of San Vitale, Rome.
Italiano: Roma, porta d'accesso alla basilica di San Vitale.
Photo: June 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Gregorovius
(Wikimedia Commons)


The original Dedication was to Saints Gervase and Protase, alleged Martyrs of Milan. In the 4th-Century, there were no Martyrs recorded as having suffered in that City in The Time of Persecution, and this caused a problem when it became the standard practice to Consecrate the Altar of a new Church over the Relics of a Martyr or Martyrs.

St Ambrose, the famous Bishop of Milan, claimed to have had a dream in the year 386 A.D., informing him of the existence of these two early Martyrs, and two skeletons were dug up in the locality indicated in the dream. According to a letter that the Saint wrote, there was "much blood" on the bones, and this has led to the suggestion that what was found was a Palaeolithic burial dressed in red ochre. The existence of the Martyrs rests entirely on Saint Ambrose's dream and on subsequent Miracles, and they are now listed in the Revised Roman Martyrology as Martyrs of an uncertain date, Venerated from Early Times.

After the discovery of the bones, a completely un-historical legend was fabricated to give the Martyrs a biography. According to it, their parents were Saints Vitalis and Valeria. The former was actually a Martyr of Ravenna, where the Basilica of San Vitale Commemorates him, and the latter was a very obscure Martyr of the 4th-Century, who may have been a Virgin and whose place of Martyrdom is unknown.

It seems that a small Church was built on the site at the end of the 4th-Century, perhaps for Milanese expatriates (the City was the Western Capital of the Roman Empire at the time). As a result of a benefaction by a lady called Vestina, who gave her name to the Titulus, it was rebuilt about 400 A.D., as a Basilica with Nave and Aisles. This was Consecrated by Pope Innocent I in 402 A.D. The Dedication to Saint Vitalis was first recorded in 499 A.D., when it was referred to as Titulus Sancti Vitalis.




Pope Saint Innocent I (401 A.D. - 417 A.D.) 
Consecrated the Basilica of San Vitale in 402 A.D.



The Church has been restored several times. The first restoration on record was that of Pope Leo III, about 800 A.D., during which he donated many precious items to the Basilica.

The most comprehensive rebuilding was that of Pope Sixtus IV, before the 1475 Jubilee. The Aisles of the Nave were demolished and the Arcades walled up, to create the rather elongated Single-Nave Church which exists now. The Apse was left untouched, but the ancient Narthex was also enclosed and converted into a Vestibule. After this, the Church was then granted to the Theatines after they were founded in 1525. However, it was then transferred to the Jesuits, in 1598, by Pope Clement VIII. They carried out a complete restoration, and used it mainly an a subsidiary Church for their Noviciate, based at Sant'Andrea al Quirinale. It is clear that the Church lacked a pastoral function at the time.

It was restored again in 1859 and has been served by Diocesan Clergy since 1873. After the construction of the Via Nazionale, the previous, very quiet, area became rapidly and completely built-up and, as a result, the Church was made parochial by Pope Leo XIII in 1884.


The new road was actually the result of a proposal by Pope Pius IX, in response to the obvious need for proper access to the City Centre from the Train Station, but the Italian Government, after 1870, mutated this into a typical straight-and-level 19th-Century Civic Boulevard. As a result, the Church, in its valley, was left well below the new road level, and is now accessed by a rather alarming flight of steps.

The Church was renovated in 1937-1938, the Narthex being restored to its original condition, and was again renovated in 1960.



File:Roma San Vitale.jpg

English: Basilica of Saints Vitalis, Valeris, Gervase and Protase.
Italian: Basilica di Santi Vitale e Compagni Martiri in Fovea.
Latin: Basilica Ss. Vitale, Valeria, Gervasio e Protasio.
Photo: September 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Gobbler
(Wikimedia Commons)


The first Cardinal Priest of the Church was Gennaro Cardinal Celio, appointed in 494 A.D., by Pope Saint Gelasius I. Saint John Cardinal Fisher, who was Martyred by King Henry VIII of England during The Reformation, was the Titular of Saint Vitale in 1535 A.D. The current Titular is His Eminence, Adam Joseph Cardinal Maida, Archbishop Emeritus of Detroit in the USA.

The Portico, or Narthex, is the most ancient part of the Church, possibly dating back to the 5th-Century. It was altered at the end of the 16th-Century, but restored to its presumed original condition in 1938. The Inscription over the entrance, with the Coat-of-Arms of Pope Sixtus IV, was, however, preserved.

The façade is very simple. The Narthex is of brick, and has solid walls at the sides and corners. In front, there are five Arches with Voussoirs of tiles on edge, and these are separated by four Marble Columns. These have debased Composite Capitals, carved in Travertine when the Narthex was built, and above these are Imposts.


Coat of arms of Adam Maida.svg

Armorial Bearings of His Eminence, 
Cardinal Maida, 
Titular of Saint Vitale.
Date: January 2013.
Source: Own work.
Author: SajoR.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The two outer Arches have Imposts only where they meet the walls, which looks odd. The roof of the Narthex is pitched and tiled, and slopes up to the absolutely plain Nave frontage, which contains a rectangular window, the sill of which is in line with the upper roofline of the Narthex. This window was apparently once an oculus.

The finely carved wooden entrance doors have two relief panels depicting the Martyrdoms of Saints Cosmas and Damian, one on each door.

The Church has a single Nave, with no Arcades, but with two Pilasters, without Capitals, near the Triumphal Arch. There are two Side-Altars either side of the Nave, which are not recessed into Chapels, but are enclosed in Aedicules, formed of a pair of Marble Corinthian Columns, supporting an Entablature and Triangular Pediment. The modern Ceiling is flat and of varnished wood, and was inserted in 1938.



Saint John Fisher, 
by en:Hans Holbein the Younger.
Date: 1497 - 1543.
Author: Hans Holbein the Younger. 
(Original uploader was Mwanner at en.wikipedia)
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Apse has been preserved from the original building. The painting it contains depicts The Ascent to Calvary, and was executed by Andrea Commodi. To the Left, Saint Vitalis is depicted being Racked, and, to the Right, he is being Buried Alive. These frescoes are by Agostino Ciampelli.

The High Altar is decorated with the Arms of the Della Rovere Family, and a painting of The Saints to whom the Church is dedicated. In front of this is the modern Altar, used for Masses facing the people, a high-quality sculptural work depicting the Triumph of the Lamb of God.

The walls are painted with scenes of Martyrdoms, painted in the 17th-Century, which, when you first see them, appear to be merely bucolic landscapes with views and trees. The scenes are separated by trompe-l'oeil columns painted on the flat wall. There are Inscriptions on each scene, explaining whose Martyrdom is depicted. An amusing anachronism can be seen in the Martyrdom of Saint Ignatius of Antioch - he faces the lions in a meadow, with The Colosseum in ruins in the background. This cycle of frescoes is by Tarquinio Ligustri and Andrea Comodo.

The Feast of Saint Agnes is Celebrated on 21 January, with a Triduum starting on 19 January. Saint Vitalis and Companions are Celebrated on 28 April. Saint Giuseppe Cottolengo is Celebrated on 30 April - the new Calendar places his Feast on 29 April but, since that would mean Celebrating two major Feasts in a row, the old date is used.




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05 March, 2015

Solemn Pontifical High Mass (Usus Antiquior). The Shrine Church of Saint Augustine Of England, Ramsgate, Kent. Celebrant: His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke.




The Shrine Church of Saint Augustine of England,
Ramsgate, Kent CT11 9PA,
will be the venue for a Solemn Pontifical High Mass (Usus Antiquior) at 1830 hrs
(6.30 p.m.) on Monday, 9 March 2015. Celebrant: His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke.
Photo: 15 July 2014.
Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/nationalchurchestrust/14481010378.
Author: The National Churches Trust.
(Wikimedia Commons)






His Eminence, Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke, Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta,
will Celebrate a Solemn Pontifical High Mass, at The High Altar of The Shrine of Saint Augustine, Ramsgate, Kent, at 1830 hrs, on Monday, 9 March 2015.
The Mass will be Sung by The Victoria Consort.


The following Text is from THE SHRINE OF SAINT AUGUSTINE

Many people are expected to come to see Cardinal Burke.

For navigation purposes, the Postcode of Saint Augustine’s is CT11 9PA.

Free parking is available on Royal Esplanade.

Ramsgate Railway Station is approximately one mile from Saint Augustine’s.

When you exit Ramsgate Railway Station, turn Right on to Wilfred Road, go straight across at the traffic lights, and walk the full length of Grange Road. Saint Augustine’s is on the cliff-top, as you walk towards the sea.

Buses run to Grange Road round-about from the Railway Station (The Loop), and Buses 33, 34, 42, 87, and 88 run right past Saint Augustine’s.

Lenten Station At The Basilica Di Santa Maria-In-Trastevere (Saint Mary's-Beyond-The-Tiber). Thursday Of The Second Week In Lent.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


Thursday of The Second Week in Lent.
Station at Saint Mary's-Beyond-The-Tiber.

Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.


File:Santa Maria in Trastevere front.jpg

Basilica of Santa Maria-in-Trastevere, Rome.
Photo: July 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jensens
(Wikimedia Commons)


Today's Station takes place in a Basilica erected shortly after the Peace of Constantine, by Pope Saint Julius I, and which is one of the first Churches in Rome Dedicated to The Mother of God. Mary is represented seated among The Wise Virgins, who hold their lamps. This is an allusion to the spring of oil, which gushed out at this spot shortly before The Birth of Him Whom she had the happiness of carrying in her arms, and Who is called Christ, or, The Anointed of The Lord. This was one of the twenty-five Parishes of 5th-Century Rome.

Jeremias speaks to us in the Epistle of two men, one of whom put his trust in himself and the other in God. The first dries up like the heather in the desert, and the second bears the abundant fruits of his good works.

In like manner, says the Parable of the Gospel, there were two men, one of whom enjoyed life instead of doing Penance and the other suffered. The first went to Hell, whilst the second was carried by The Angels into Abraham's bosom.

This is a symbol of Israel, who rejected Christ and was cast out, whilst the Gentiles, through Baptism and Penance, enter into The Kingdom of God.

Let us implore The Lord to grant us, by His Grace, perseverance in Prayer and Fasting, in order that we may be delivered from the enemies both of Soul and body (Collect).


File:AbsideSantaMariaTrastevereRoma.jpg

The Apse,
Basilica of Santa Maria Trastevere, 
Rome, Italy.
Photo: April 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Goldmund100
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Basilica of Our Lady-in-Trastevere (Italian: Basilica di Santa Maria-in-Trastevere) is a Titular Minor Basilica, one of the oldest Churches of Rome, perhaps the first in which Mass was openly Celebrated. The basic floor plan and wall structure of the Church date back to 340 A.D. The first Sanctuary was built between 221 A.D. and 227 A.D. by Pope Calixtus I and Pope Julius I.

The Inscription on The Episcopal Throne states that it is the first Church Dedicated to Mary, Mother of Jesus, although some claim that privilege belongs to The Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore. In its Founding, it is certainly one of the oldest Churches in the City. 

A Christian House-Church was founded here, about 220 A.D., by Pope Saint Callixtus I (217 A.D. - 222 A.D.) on the site of the Taberna Meritoria, an asylum for retired soldiers. The area was given over to Christian use by Emperor Alexander Severus, when he settled a dispute between the Christians and tavern-keepers, saying, according to The Liber Pontificalis: "I prefer that it should belong to those who honour God, whatever be their form of worship." 

In 340 A.D., Pope Julius I (337 A.D. - 352 A.D.) rebuilt the Titulus Callixti on a larger scale, and it became the Titulus Iulii, commemorating his patronage. It was one of the original twenty-five Parishes in Rome.


File:SMTrast.jpg

The Altemps Chapel, 
Basilica of Santa Maria-in-Trastevere, 
Rome, Italy.
Photo: October 2005.
Picture taken by User:Torvindus.
(Wikimedia Commons)


It underwent two Restorations in the 5th- and 8th-Centuries. In 1140-1143, the Church was re-erected on its old Foundations, under Pope Innocent II. He razed the Church to the ground, along with the recently-completed tomb of his former rival, Pope Anacletus II, and arranged for his own burial on the spot formerly occupied by that tomb.

The richly-carved Ionic Capitals, re-used along its Nave, were taken either from the ruins of the Baths of Caracalla or the nearby Temple of Isis on the Janiculum. When scholarship during the 19th-Century identified the faces in their carved decoration as Isis, Serapis and Harpocrates, a Restoration under Pope Pius IX, in 1870, hammered off the offending faces.

The predecessor of the present Church was probably built in the Early-4th-Century, although that Church was the successor to one of the Tituli, those Early-Christian Basilicas that were ascribed to a patron and perhaps literally inscribed with his name. The remains of Pope Callixtus I (+222 A.D.) are preserved under The High Altar.



File:Cappella Altemps.jpg

Pope Pius IV promulgating The Bull "Benedictus Deus".
Artist: Pasquale Cati.
Fresco (1588). 
The Altemps Chapel, 
Santa Maria-in-Trastevere
Rome, Italy.
Photo: June 2004.
Source: Own work.
Author: Torvindus
(Wikimedia Commons)


Inside the Church, are a number of Late-13th-Century mosaics by Pietro Cavallini, on the subject of the Life of The Virgin (1291), centreing on a "Coronation of The Virgin" in the Apse. Domenichino's octagonal ceiling painting, "Assumption of The Virgin" (1617) fits in the coffered ceiling that he designed.

The fifth Chapel, to the Left, is the Avila Chapel, designed by Antonio Gherardi. This, and his Chapel of Santa Cecilia in San Carlo ai Catinari, are two of the most architecturally-inventive Chapels of the Late-17th-Century in Rome. The lower order of the Chapel is fairly dark and employs Borromini-like forms. In the Dome, there is an opening, or oculus, from which four Putti emerge to carry a central tempietto, all of which frames a light-filled Chamber above, illuminated by windows not visible from below.



File:Antonio Gherardi.jpg

The Avila Chapel (designed by Antonio Gherardi) 
in The Basilica di Santa Maria-in-Trastevere, Rome.
Photo: October 2005.
Picture taken by Torvindus.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Church keeps a Relic of Saint Apollonia (her head, as well as a portion of The Holy Sponge). Among those buried in the Church are the Relics of Pope Callixtus IPope Innocent IIAnti-Pope Anacletus II, Cardinal Philippe d'Alençon and Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggio.

The Romanesque Campanile is from the 12th-Century. Near the top, a Niche protects a mosaic of the Madonna and Child.


The mosaics on the façade are probably from the 12th-Century. They depict The Madonna enthroned and suckling The Child, flanked by ten women holding lamps. This image on the façade, showing Mary nursing Jesus, is an early example of a popular Late-Mediaeval and Renaissance type of image of The Virgin. The motif itself originated much earlier, with significant 7th-Century Coptic examples at Wadi Natrun, in Egypt.

The façade of the Church was restored by Carlo Fontana, in 1702, who replaced the ancient Porch with a sloping tiled Roof. The octagonal Fountain, in the Piazza in front of the Church (Piazza di Santa Maria-in-Trastevere), which already appears in a map of 1472, was also restored by Carlo Fontana.


File:Maria Trastevere Roma fc08.jpg

English: The Ceiling of The Basilica of Our Lady's-in-Trastevere, Rome.
Italiano: Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere, Roma (soffitto, un particolare).
Polski: Bazylika Najświętszej Maryi Panny na Zatybrzu w Rzymie (fragment kasetonowego sufitu).
Photo: September 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Fczarnowski
(Wikimedia Commons)


Ancient sources maintain that the Titulus Santa Mariae was established by Pope Alexander I around 112 A.D. Later traditions give the names of the early patrons of the Tituli and have retrospectively assigned them the Title of Cardinal: thus, at that time, the Cardinal-Patron of this Basilica, these traditions assert, would have been Saint CalepodiusPope Calixtus I confirmed the Titulus in 221 A.D. To honour him, it was changed into Ss. Callisti et Iuliani; it was re-named S. Mariae Trans Tiberim (Saint Mary's-Beyond-The-Tiber) by Pope Innocent II.

By the 12th-Century, Cardinal Deacons, as well as the Presbyters, had long been dispensed from personal service at the Tituli. Among the past Cardinal Priests holding the honorary Titulus of Santa Maria-in-Trastevere, have been the Cardinal Duke of York (whose Coat-of-Arms, topped by a Crown, rather than a Galero (Red Hat), is visible over the Screen to the Right of the Altar), James Gibbons and Pope Leo XIIJózef Glemp was the most recent Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Mariae Trans Tiberim, until his death in January 2013.






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04 March, 2015

Solemn Pontifical High Mass (Usus Antiquior). The Shrine Church of Saint Augustine Of England, Ramsgate, Kent. Celebrant: His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke.



The Shrine Church of Saint Augustine of England, 
Ramsgate, Kent CT11 9PA,
will be the venue for a Solemn Pontifical High Mass (Usus Antiquior) at 1830 hrs
(6.30 p.m.) on Monday, 9 March 2015. Celebrant: His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke.
Photo: 15 July 2014.
Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/nationalchurchestrust/14481010378.
Author: The National Churches Trust.
(Wikimedia Commons)






His Eminence, Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke, Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta,
will Celebrate a Solemn Pontifical High Mass, at The High Altar of The Shrine of Saint Augustine, Ramsgate, Kent, at 1830 hrs, on Monday, 9 March 2015.
The Mass will be Sung by The Victoria Consort.


The following Text is from THE SHRINE OF SAINT AUGUSTINE

Many people are expected to come to see Cardinal Burke.
For navigation purposes, the Postcode of Saint Augustine’s is CT11 9PA.

Free parking is available on Royal Esplanade.

Ramsgate Railway Station is approximately one mile from Saint Augustine’s.
When you exit Ramsgate Railway Station, turn Right on to Wilfred Road, go straight across at the traffic lights, and walk the full length of Grange Road. Saint Augustine’s is on the cliff-top, as you walk towards the sea.

Buses run to Grange Road round-about from the Railway Station (The Loop), and Buses 33, 34, 42, 87, and 88 run right past Saint Augustine’s.

Lenten Station At Santa Cecilia-In-Trastevere. Wednesday Of The Second Week In Lent.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


Wednesday of The Second Week in Lent.
Station at Saint Cecilia's.

Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.


File:Santa-Maria-In-Trastevere-Interior.jpg

Interior of Santa Cecilia-in-Trastevere, Rome.
Photo: 2007-05-19 (original upload date).
Source: Originally from en.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
Author: Original uploader was Dreamword at en.wikipedia
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Station is at the Sanctuary where the body of the illustrious Roman Virgin, Saint Cecilia, rests. It was there she lived and died a Martyr. In the 5th-Century, this Church was mentioned as one of the most celebrated Parochial or Titular Churches of Rome. It is situated in Trastevere. It was customary to read in this Church the Gospel, in which Jesus tells a woman it is necessary to drink His Chalice, if one is to participate in His Glory.

We read, at the Epistle, the Prayer of Mardochai, in favour of the Jewish people, whom the impious Aman had determined to destroy. He implored The Lord to turn their sadness into joy. The Christian people, in the same way, are mourning in their Lenten Penance and are looking forward to the Holy Paschal joys. But, to deserve them, as the Gospel tells us, we must first drink the Chalice of The One Who came to shed His blood to Redeem us, and Who will make us sharers in His Resurrection, if we die to our sins.

Let us abstain from the food which sustains our bodies, and from the vices which poison our Souls (Collect).


File:048SCeciliaTrastevere.jpg

Basilica di Santa Cecilia-in-Trastevere.
Photo: January 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: MarkusMark.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:St Cecilia's Martyrdom.jpg

The Martyrdom of Saint Cecilia, 
by Stefano Maderno (1575 - 1636), 
Church of Saint Cecilia, Rome.
One of the most famous examples of Baroque sculpture.
Photo: January 2005.
Source: Flickr
Reviewer: Andre Engels.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Ciborium of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere.JPG

The Ciborium,
Church of Santa Cecilia-in-Trastevere,
Rome, Italy.
Attributed to Arnolfo di Cambio.
Photo: June 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Ktulu.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Santa Cecilia Crypt Chapel.JPG

The Crypt Chapel of Santa Cecilia.
Photo: December 2006.
Source: Porkister
Author: Claudiu Georgescu.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The first Church on this site was founded probably in the 3rd-Century A.D., by Pope Urban I; it was devoted to the Roman Martyr, Cecilia, Martyred, it is said, under Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander.

By the Late-5th-Century, at the Synod of 499 A.D. of Pope Symmachus, the Church is indicated with the Titulus Ceciliae. Tradition holds that the Church was built over the house of the Saint.

The Baptistery associated with this Church, together with the remains of a Roman house of the early Empire, was found during excavations under the Chapel of the Relics. On 22 November, 545 A.D., Pope Vigilius was Celebrating the Saint in the Church, when the Emissary of Empress Theodora, Antemi Scribone, captured him.

Pope Paschal I rebuilt the Church in 822 A.D., and moved here the Relics of Saint Cecilia from the Catacombs of Saint Calixtus. More Restorations followed in the 18th-Century.



File:Roma-santa cecilia-cripta.jpg

The Crypt of Santa Cecilia-in-Trastevere.
Photo: 2005-06-01.
Photographer: tieseb
Original Source: Flickr.com
Original Photo: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)


With the death of Carlo Maria Martini, in 2012, there is currently no Cardinal Priest assigned to the Titulus S. Caeciliae. Among the previous Titulars are Pope Stephen III, Adam Easton, Thomas Wolsey and Giuseppe Maria Doria Pamphili.

Among the artefacts remaining, from the 13th-Century, are a mural painting, depicting The Final Judgment (1289-1293), by Pietro Cavallini, in the Choir of The Monks, and the Ciborium (1293) in the Presbytery, by Arnolfo di Cambio. The Gothic Ciborium is surrounded by four Marble Columns, White and Black, decorated with statuettes of Angels, Saints, Prophets, and Evangelists. The Apse has remains of 9th-Century mosaics, depicting The Redeemer with Saints Paul, Cecilia, Paschal I, Peter, Valerian, and Agatha.


File:Trastevere - s Cecilia - interno e coretti 1000568.JPG

Italiano: Roma, Santa Cecilia in Trastevere: 
Interno verso l'ingresso e coretti delle monache in luogo dell'organo.
English: Interior of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere. 
Looking towards the Organ Loft.
Photo: December 2006.
User: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)


Among the most remarkable works, is the graphic Altar sculpture of Saint Cecilia (1600) by the Late-Renaissance sculptor, Stefano Maderno. The pavement in front of the statue encloses a marble slab, with Maderno's sworn statement that he has recorded the body as he saw it when the tomb was opened in 1599. 

The statue depicts the three axe strokes described in the 5th-Century account of her Martyrdom. It also is meant to underscore the incorruptibility of her body (an attribute of some Saints), which miraculously still had congealed blood after Centuries. 

The Crypt is also noteworthy, decorated in the Cosmatesque style, containing the Relics of Saint Cecilia and her husband, Saint Valerian.




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03 March, 2015

O Sanctissima.



English: The Assumption of The Blessed Virgin Mary.
Deutsch: Maria Himmelfahrt, Hochaltar für St. Maria Gloriosa dei Frari in Venedig.
Français: L'Assomption de la Vierge.
Artist: Titian (1490–1576).
Date: 1516-1518.
Source/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei. DVD-ROM, 2002.
ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
(Wikimedia Commons)



"O Sanctissima".
Available on YouTube at


O Sanctissima, o piíssima,
dulcis Virgo María!
Mater amáta, intemeráta,
Ora, ora pro nobis.

Tu solátium et refúgium,
Virgo Mater María!
Quidquid optámus, per te sperámus,
Ora, ora pro nobis.

Ecce débiles, per quam flébiles,
Salva nos, o María!
Tolle languóres, sana dolóres,
Ora, ora pro nobis.

Virgo, réspice; Máter, ádspice,
Audi nos, o María!
Tu medicina, porta divina,
Ora, ora pro nobis.


This is a Roman Catholic Latin Hymn to The Blessed Virgin. The Latin version is usually sung in Catholic Churches on Marian Feast Days.

It is an old Sicilian Melody.

Es un himno católico romano en latín a la Santísima Virgen. Se afirma que la melodía del himno es siciliano. La melodía es a veces llamado Himno Marineros siciliano o Himno Marineros.

La versión latina no se suele escuchar en Navidad, pero más a menudo se canta en las iglesias católicas en los días de fiesta mariana.

Es una Antigua Melodía Siciliana.

Lenten Station At The Basilica Of Santa Balbina. Tuesday Of The Second Week In Lent.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


Tuesday of The Second Week in Lent.
Station at Saint Balbina's.

Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.


File:230SBalbina.JPG

Italiano: Roma - Chiesa di S. Balbina.
English: Basilica of Saint Balbina,
Rome, Italy.
Photo: October 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: MarkusMark
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Lenten Station is at The Sanctuary of Saint Balbina, a Roman Virgin who lived in the 2nd-Century and whose remains lie under the Altar with those of her father, the Martyr Saint Quirinus. This Church, which stands on a slope of The Aventine, was, in the 5th-Century, one of the twenty-five Parish Churches of Rome. Formerly, it was the house of a Roman lady, named Balbina, who was Martyred during the Persecution of Emperor Trajan.

The reason for the choice of this Church is explained by the Epistle, which speaks of the widow of Sarephta. Thus, is celebrated, the Faith of one who transformed her residence into a Church.


File:San Saba - santa Balbina interno 1000904.JPG

ItalianoSanta Balbina a Roma: Interno. 
English: Interior of The Basilica of Saint Balbina, Rome.
Photo: January 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)


Jesus declares in the Gospel that the Jews, who taught the Law of Moses, did not observe it. On the other hand, the Kingdom of God is open to the heathen, who, by Baptism, become Disciples of Christ and do His works.

The Epistle tells of Elias going to a heathen widow woman of Sarephta to ask for nourishment, when a drought had fallen on impenitent Israel. The widow took two pieces of wood, typical of The Cross of Jesus, and prepared a hearth cake for The Prophet and one for herself.. Her compassion was rewarded, for never after did she want for bread. Whereas the Jews suffer from the scarcity, the Gentiles, as a reward for their fidelity, receive daily The Eucharistic Bread, which applies to them the merits gained for them by The Saviour on The Cross.

Let us Pray that God may grant us the Grace of perseverance in the observance of The Fast, of which He has set us an example (Collect).



and Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Balbinae, Rome.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Santa Balbina is a Basilica Church in Rome, devoted to Saint Balbina. It was built in the 4th-Century, over the house of consul Lucius Fabius Cilo, on The Aventine Hill, behind The Baths of Caracalla. Possibly the ancient Titulus Tigridae, the Basilica was consecrated by Pope Gregory I.

The adjoining Monastery has a commanding Mediaeval Defence Tower. Inside the Basilica, there is a very fine Episcopal Chair, with a Cosmatesque decoration, from the 13th-Century. The Church was heavily restored in the 1930s, when frescoes were discovered on the side walls from the 9th-Century to the 14th-Century.



File:External Ornaments of a Cardinal Bishop.svg

External Ornaments of a Cardinal who is a Bishop.
Date: 26 May 2011.
Source: Own work, elements by Heralder and Alekjds.
Author: Adelbrecht.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Baroque frescoes in the Apse, and the triumphal Arch, were painted by Anastasio Fontebuoni in 1599. The Arch is decorated with the figures of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, while, in the Apse, we can see Saint Balbina between other Martyrs. An ancient Sarcophagus was also discovered during the Restoration. It is now used as a Font.



There is a strong connection between the Basilica of Santa Balbina, Rome, and Hungary. 
In 1270, the first known Hungarian Cardinal, István Váncsa, was buried in the Basilica. 
The current Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Balbinae is Péter Erdő
(Wikimedia Commons)


In 1270, the first known Hungarian Cardinal, István Váncsa, was buried in the Basilica. Another 13th-Century Hungarian Clergyman, Pál, Bishop of Paphos, erected an Altar in the Church for Saint Nicholas. Both the Altar and the Grave disappeared during later Centuries, but a Plaque Commemorates the Offerings of Pál.

The Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Balbinae is Péter ErdőArchbishop of Esztergom. According to Péter Erdő, the Hungarian connections of this Church played a part in Pope John Paul II's decision when he chose Santa Balbina for Archbishop Erdő's
 Titular Church. The Cardinal also recommended Hungarian Pilgrims to visit the Basilica and said he feels a special responsibility for the building. Among the previous Titulars are Alfonso de la Cueva, marqués de Bedmar, and Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros.

Father Simpliciano of The Nativity Founded The Congregation of The Franciscan Sisters of The Sacred Heart here.





St Andrew Daily Missal (Traditional Mass)

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02 March, 2015

The Opening Of Tower Bridge. 30 June 1894.



The Prince of Wales (later, King Edward VII) opened Tower Bridge on 30 June 1894, in a ceremony of great splendour, recorded by William Lionel Wyllie in one of his best-known paintings.
Illustration: THE TELEGRAPH
Photo: Guildhall Art Gallery.

Lenten Station At The Basilica Of Saint Clement. Monday Of The Second Week In Lent.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


Monday of The Second Week in Lent.
Station at Saint Clement's.

Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.


File:Roma San Clemente BW 1.JPG

English: Basilica of Saint Clement, Rome.
Italian: Basilica di San Clemente al Laterano
Photo: May 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Berthold Werner
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Station is at the Church of Saint Clement, built above the very house of the third successor of Saint Peter, whose name is found in The Canon of The Mass. This Sanctuary, a Parish of Rome in the 5th-Century, is a most faithful example of an old Roman Basilica, although it was rebuilt in the 11th-Century. There are found, under the Altar, the remains of The Holy Martyr and of Saint Ignatius of Antioch.

Our Lord foretells in the Gospel that the Jews will lift Him up on The Cross, and thrice He asserts that they will die in their sin, because they have not believed in Him and done His works.

The wrath of God, which fell a first time on Jerusalem at the time of the Captivity of Babylon (Epistle), was renewed against Israel at the burning of the Temple. Like guilty Christians, they would only be able to return to The Lord by Penance, while the heathen are called, instead, to believe in Jesus, to become part of His people by Baptism.

“Let us mortify our flesh by Abstinence from food and let us Fast from sin by following Justice” (Collect).


File:Interior of San Clemente, Rome.JPG

Interior of the Basilica di San Clemente, 
Rome, Italy.
Photo: March 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Sixtus
Permission: GFDL
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Basilica of Saint Clement (Italian: Basilica di San Clemente al Laterano) is a Roman Catholic Minor Basilica, Dedicated to Pope Clement I, located in RomeItaly. Archaeologically-speaking, the structure is a three-tiered complex of buildings: 


(1)      The present Basilica, built just before the year 1100, during the Height of the Middle Ages

(2)      Beneath the present Basilica, is a 4th-Century Basilica that had been converted out of the home of a Roman nobleman, part of which had, in the 1st-Century, briefly served as an early Church, and the basement of which had, in the 2nd-Century, briefly served as a mithraeum;

(3)      The home of the Roman nobleman had been built on the foundations of a Republican-era building that had been destroyed in The Great Fire of 64 A.D.


File:Roma San Clemente BW 2.JPG

Ceiling of the Basilica of Saint Clement, Rome.
Photo: May 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Berthold Werner
(Wikimedia Commons)


This ancient Church was transformed over the Centuries from a private home, that was the site of clandestine Christian worship in the 1st-Century, to a grand public Basilica by the 6th-Century, reflecting the emerging Catholic Church's growing legitimacy and power. 

The archaeological traces of the Basilica's history were discovered in the 1860s by Joseph Mullooly, Lector in Sacred Theology, beginning in 1849 at the College of Saint Thomas in Rome, the future Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum.


The lowest levels of the present Basilica are remnants of the Foundation of a Republican-era building that was destroyed in The Great Fire of 64 A.D. An industrial building, possibly the Imperial Mint of Rome, was built on the site during the "Flavian" Period and, shortly thereafter, a "domus", or multi-level house, alongside it, separated form the industrial building by a narrow alleyway. 

About a hundred years later (circa 200 A.D.), the central room of the domus was re-modelled for use as part of a mithraeum, that is, as part of a sanctuary of the cult of Mithras. The main cult room (the speleum, "cave", which is about 9.6 m long and 6 m wide, was discovered in 1867, but could not be investigated until 1914, due to lack of drainage. The "exedra", the shallow Apse at the far end of the low vaulted space, was trimmed with pumice to render it more cave-like.


File:Mithreum San Clemente.jpg

English: Mithraeum, under the Basilica of Saint Clement, in Rome.
Italiano: Mitreo sottostante la basilica di San Clemente a Roma.
Русский: Митреум под базиликой святого Климента.
Date: 2006-12-17 12-22 Rom.
Source: Uploaded on Flickr as 2006-12-17 12-22 
Author: Allie Caulfield
(Wikimedia Commons)


Central to the main room of the sanctuary, was found an altar, in the shape of a sarcophagus, and with the main cult relief of the tauroctony, Mithras slaying a bull, on its front face. The torch-bearers, Cautes and Cautopates, appear on, respectively, the left and right faces of the same monument. 

A dedicatory inscription identifies the donor as one pater Cnaeus Arrius Claudianus, perhaps of the same clan as Titus Arrius Antoninus' mother. Other monuments discovered in the sanctuary include a bust of Sol, kept in the sanctuary in a niche near the entrance, and a figure of "Mithras petra generix, i.e. "Mithras born of the rock".


File:San clemente fresco.jpg

Saint Cyril and Saint Methodius
bring the body of Saint Clement to Rome.
11th-Century fresco in the Basilica di San Clemente, Rome.
Source/Photographer: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Fragments of statuary of the two torch-bearers were also found . One of the rooms adjoining the main chamber has two oblong brickwork enclosures, one of which was used as a ritual refuse pit for remnants of the cult meal.

All three monuments, mentioned above, are still on display in the mithraeum. A fourth monument, – a statue of Saint Peter found in the speleum's vestibule and still on display there – is not of the mysteries.






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01 March, 2015

Happy Saint David's Day. Hapus Dydd Gwyl Dewi.



Cymraeg (Welsh): Baner Dewi Sant.
Image: August 2006.
Source: Altered from Image:Flag of Cornwall.svg.
Author: User:Stemonitis
(Wikimedia Commons)




Saint David's Day.
Available on YouTube at

1 March is Saint David's Day. 
He brought Christianity to Wales in the 6th Century A.D. 
Saint David (Dewi Sant) is the Patron Saint of Wales 
and 1 March is the Welsh National Day. 
This is an edited version of 'Songs of Praise' 24/02/2013. 
The final song is sung by Rhys Meirion, in Welsh, 
accompanied by a traditional Welsh Harp. 
The Welsh name for the City of Saint David's is Tyddewi.


File:Jesus Chapel St David.jpg

Cymraeg (Welsh): Darlun o Ddewi Sant ar ffenestr lliw yng Nghapel Coleg 
yr Iesu, Rhydychen. 19eg ganrif hwyr.
English: Stained-Glass Window in Jesus College Chapel, Oxford, 
showing Saint David. 
Late-19th-Century.
Photo: June 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Casper Gutman.
(Wikimedia Commons)

HAPUS DYDD GWYL DEWI.

HAPPY SAINT DAVID'S DAY.

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