Marco da Montegallo

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Saint Peter's Basilica, Papal States by Pope Gregory XVI
Feast20 March
AttributesFranciscan habit
Patronage
  • Montegallo
  • Physicians
  • Married couples

Roman Catholic priest from the Order of Friars Minor.[1] He was born to a nobleman and served as a doctor in Ascoli Piceno before he was pressured into marriage in 1451 - the couple annulled their marriage after both entered the religious life. Father Marco is best known for establishing pawnshops for the poor across various Italian cities and for being a preacher of love.[2][unreliable source?][3]

His beatification received ratification on 20 September 1839 after Pope Gregory XVI confirmed the late priest's local 'cultus' - or a spontaneous and enduring popular devotion on the part of the faithful.[4] His feast is celebrated on 20 March rather than his death date of 19 March due to it being the feast of Saint Joseph.

Life

Tabula della salute, 1494
Libro dei comandamenti di Dio, 1494

Marco da Montegallo was born in 1425 in Montegallo - in the province of Ascoli Piceno - to a nobleman from the Marches of Ancona.[1]

Marco studied under the

humanist Enoch d'Ascoli and later studied at universities in both Perugia and Bologna where he received his doctorate in both law and medicine. From 1448 he worked as a doctor in his home province.[2][3]

He married Chiara de Tibaldeschi in 1451 - with great reluctance - after his father pressured him to do so but his father later died in 1452 which prompted the couple to evaluate their marriage to discuss their true life callings.

priesthood sometime in the 1450s and was at once made the superior of Santa Maria de San Severino and he held that position from 1454 to 1455.[4]
It was there that a voice said to him: "Go brother Marco and preach about love".

He - alongside Blessed

another Monte di Pietà in Perugia.[2][5] Marco founded stores in Fano in 1471 and in Arcevia
in 1483. He knew Blessed Domenico da Leonessa.

He preached across various Italian cities and in 1494 in Florence published a book while issuing another edition in Siena in 1495 while preaching for Lent.[2] The plague ravaged Camerino and he assured the people that it would cease if all the people repented from their sins and confessed in a move that prompted them all to flock to him and confess - this caused the plague epidemic to stop.[4] In 1480 he became a promoter and collector of tithes for the crusade against the Ottoman Empire after Pope Sixtus IV appointed him to that position.

The priest decided to fast in Lent in 1496 and in the middle of the Lenten season grew ill. On his deathbed he asked a companion to provide him with the sacraments for the final time and asked another to read him the words: "He bowed His head and gave up the ghost" at which point the ailing Marco died from his illness on 19 March 1496 in Vicenza.[2][3]

His remains were interred though later relocated in 1522 in the church of Saint Biagio but were later interred in a chapel in the church of San Giuliano in 1797.[4]

Beatification

Bones in an urn in Vicenza.

The ratification for the late Franciscan's local 'cultus' - or popular devotion - allowed for Pope Gregory XVI to issue a decree that conferred beatification on the late friar on 20 September 1839. His feast is not celebrated on the date of his death as is the norm but rather on 20 March because 19 March is the feast of Saint Joseph.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Blessed Mark of Montegallo". Saints SQPN. 21 March 2012. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Blessed Mark of Montegallo". Steven Wood. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  3. ^ a b c "Blessed Mark of Montegallo". Roman Catholic Saints. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d "Blessed Marco da Montegallo". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  5. . Retrieved 23 November 2017 – via UWA ebook collection.

External links