San Damiano |
Francis obtained "San
Damiano" from the Benedictines as a permanent abode for his spiritual
daughters. It was a small rude dwelling adjoining the humble chapel, which he had
helped to rebuild with his own hands. Clare's and
Agnes' mother Hortulana, their sister Beatrice, and several other women of Assisi joined Clare and Agnes. Thus
began the Order of the Poor Ladies, or of Poor Clares, as this Second Order of St. Francis
came to be called. In the beginning, they had no written rule to follow beyond a
very short formula vitae given them by Francis.
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In 1215,
Clare, against her will,
was appointed abbess of
the convent and occupied this position for 40 years. until Her
death. In
1219 a group of Benedictine nuns in Monticelli, near Florence, asked to become Poor
Clares and Francis assigned Agnes as their abbess.
A
letter written by her to Clare after this separation is still extant, touchingly beautiful
in its simplicity and affection.
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In the same year, while Francis was in the East, Cardinal
Ugolino, then protector of the Order, drew up a written rule for the Poor Clares at
Monticelli, taking as a basis the Rule of St. Benedict. This new rule took away from the
Poor Ladies the Franciscan character of absolute poverty and made them for all
practical purposes a congregation of Benedictines. It was approved by Pope Honorius
III (Bull, "Sacrosancta", 9th Dec., 1219).
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Clare
found that the new rule allowed the holding of property in common,
therefore she courageously and successfully resisted the innovations of Ugolino.
Francis had forbidden the Poor Ladies, just as he had forbidden his friars, to possess any
worldly goods even in common. Owning nothing, they were to depend entirety upon what the
Friars Minor could beg for them.
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Full of zeal for the spread of the Order,
Agnes
established from Monticelli several monasteries of the Poor Ladies in the north of Italy,
including those of Mantua, Venice, and Padua, all of which observed the same fidelity to
the teaching of Francis and Clare, depending solely on alms, forced to have complete faith
on God to provide through people; a lack of land-based revenues was a new idea at the
time. Nothing perhaps in her character is more striking and attractive than her
loving fidelity to her eldest sister's ideals and her undying loyalty in supporting her
struggle for Seraphic Poverty.
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Clare loved music and well-composed sermons. She daily
meditated on the Passion. When she learned of the Franciscan martyrs in Morrocco in 1221,
she tried to go there to give her own life for God, but was restrained. It was to her Francis turned when in doubt, and it was she
who urged him to continue his mission to the people at a time when he thought his vocation
lay rather in a life of contemplation.
Brave and cheerful to the last, in spite of her long and painful infirmities, she caused
herself to be raised in bed and she made more than one hundred corporals, for all the
churches in the plain and on the mountains of Assisi.
Toward the end of her life, when the was too ill to attend Mass, an image of the service
would display on the wall of her cell; thus her patronage of television.
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From the outset of her religious life,
Agnes
was distinguished for such an eminent degree of virtue that her companions declared she
seemed to have discovered a new road to perfection known only to herself. As abbess, she
ruled with loving kindness and knew how to make the practice of virtue bright and
attractive to her subjects.
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Francis' death |
When in an attack of blindness and illness, St. Francis came for the
last time to visit San Damiano, Clare erected a little wattle hut for him in an olive grove close
to the monastery, and it was here that he composed his glorious "Canticle of the Sun".
In 1226, after St. Francis's death the procession which accompanied his remains from the
Porziuncola to the town stopped on the way at San Damiano in order that Clare and her
daughters might see him for the last time. So far as Clare was concerned, Francis
was always living, and nothing is, perhaps, more striking in her after-life than her
unswerving loyalty to the ideals of the Poverello, and the jealous care with which
she clung to his rule and teaching.
In 1228, Cardinal Ugolino, having meanwhile ascended the pontifical throne as Gregory
IX, came to Assisi for the canonization of Francis. He pressed
Clare to so far deviate from the practice of poverty, which had up to this time obtained
at San Damiano, as to accept some provision for the unforeseen wants of the community.
But she firmly refused.
On 17th September, 1228, the pope granted her the celebrated "Privilegium
Paupertatis", the Privilege of Poverty. The original autograph copy of
this unique "privilege", the first one of its kind ever sought for, or ever
issued by the Holy See, is preserved in the archive at Santa Chiara in Assisi.
After
the death of Pope Gregory IX, she had once more to contend for the principle of absolute
poverty, for Pope Innocent IV would fain have given the Clares a new and mitigated rule,
and the firmness with which she held to her way won over the pope.
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The two assaults |
In 1234, the army of Frederick II devastated the valley of Spoleto,
and the soldiers, preparatory to an assault upon Assisi, attacked the convent of San
Damiano. Clare, calmly rose from her sick bed,
and faced the invaders, displaying the Sacrament in a monstrance and praying.
The soldiers took flight. It is with reference to
this incident that she is generally represented in art bearing a monstrance.
Some time later, a larger force returned to storm Assisi, headed by the General Vitale di
Aversa who had not been present at the first attack, Clare, gathering her daughters
about her, knelt with them in earnest prayer that the town might be spared. Presently a
furious storm arose, causing such a panic that attackers
left. The gratitude of the Assisians, who with
one accord attributed their deliverance to Clare's intercession, increased their love for
the "Seraphic Mother".
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Clare's death |
When
Clare felt the day of her death approaching, she called her
sorrowing religious around her, reminded them of the many benefits they had received from
God and exhorted them to persevere faithfully in the observance of evangelical poverty.
Pope Innocent IV came from Perugia to visit the dying saint, who had already
received the last sacraments from the hands of Cardinal Rainaldo. Finally, two days before
her death, Innocent, no doubt at the reiterated request of the dying abbess, solemnly
confirmed the definitive Rule of the Clares (Bull, "Solet Annuere", 9th August,
1253), and thus secured to them the precious treasure of poverty which Clare, in imitation
of St. Francis, had taken for her portion from the beginning of her conversion.
Agnes, had returned from Florence to console Clare in her last illness; Leo, Angelo, and Juniper, three of
the early companions of St. Francis, were also present at Clare's death-bed
and, at her request, read aloud
the Passion of Our Lord according to St. John, even as they had done twenty-seven years
before, when Francis lay dying at the Porziuncola. On 11th August, 1253, the holy
foundress of the Poor Ladies passed peacefully away. The pope, with his court, came
to San Damiano for the saint's funeral, which partook rather of the nature of a triumphal
procession.
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Clare's tomb |
The Poor Clares desired to retain the body of their foundress among
them at San Damiano, but the magistrates of Assisi interfered and took measures to secure
for the town the venerated remains of her whose prayers, as they all believed, had on two
occasions saved it from destruction. Clare's miracles too were talked of far and
wide. It was not safe, the Assisians urged, to leave her body in a lonely spot without the
walls. She should also have a church in Assisi built in her honour.
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Meanwhile, Clare's remains were placed in the chapel of San
Giorgio (now within the
enclosure of the church of Santa Chiara), where
St. Francis's body had likewise been interred pending the erection of the Basilica of San
Francesco. On 26th September, 1255, Clare was canonized by Alexander IV, and not
long afterwards the building of her church was begun.
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On 3rd October, 1260, Clare's remains were buried deep down in the
earth, under the high altar in the new church, far out of sight and reach. After having
remained hidden for six centuries, like the remains of St. Francis, and after much search
had been made, Clare's tomb was found in 1850.
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Finally, on the 29th of
September, 1872, the saint's remains were transferred, with much pomp, by Archbishop
Pecci, afterwards Leo XIII, to the shrine, in the crypt at Santa Chiara.
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Agnes' death |
In 1253,
Agnes was summoned to San Damiano during Clare's last illness and assisted at her death and funeral.
Three months later, on 16th November of the same year, Agnes followed her eldest sister to her eternal reward, as predicted by
Clare.
Her mother Hortulana and her
sister Beatrice had already passed away. The precious remains of St. Agnes repose near the
body of her mother and sisters, in the church of St. Clare at Assisi.
God, who had favoured Agnes with many heavenly manifestations during life, glorified her
tomb after death by numerous miracles. She was canonized
in 1753 by Benedict XIV.
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