Women of the Romance Countries by John Robert Effinger
page 42 of 331 (12%)
page 42 of 331 (12%)
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the time the same ideas were continually emphasized. A collection of the
Latin appellations which were bestowed upon the Madonna during this time contains the following terms, which reveal the fervor and temper of the age: _Dei genitrix_, _virgo virginum_, _mater Christi_, _mater divinæ gratiæ_, _mater potens_, _speculum justitiæ_, _vas spirituale_, _rosa mystica_, _turris davidica_, _domus aurea_, _janua coeli_, _regina peccatorum_, _regina apostolorum_, _consolatrix afflictorum_, and _regina sanctorum omnium_. The Benedictines had consecrated themselves to the service of Mary since the time of the Crusades, and, beginning with the eleventh century, many religious orders and brotherhoods were organized in honor of Mary. The Order of the Knights of the Star was founded in 1022, and the Knights of the Lily were organized in 1048. About the middle of the twelfth century the Order of the Holy Maid of Evora and that of the Knights of Alcantara were established, and others followed. In 1149 Pope Celestine III. chartered the Order of the Holy Virgin, for the service of a hospital in Siena; in 1218, after a revelation from on high, the Order of the Holy Mary of Mercy was founded by Peter Nolascus--Raymond von Pennaforte--for the express purpose of giving aid and freedom to captives. In 1233 seven noble Florentines founded the Order of the Servants of Mercy, adopting Saint Augustine's rules of conduct, and they dwelt in the convent of the Annunziata, in Florence. In 1285 Philip Benizio founded a similar order for women, and, soon after, the pious Juliana Falconeri instituted for women a second order of the same kind. There was a constant multiplication of these orders vowed to the service of the Madonna as the centuries passed, and the idea of Madonna worship became more firmly fixed. No account of Madonna worship can be considered complete, however, |
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